This is a cache that was created to be part of the Gauteng Power
Series (GPS). The Gauteng Power Series (GPS) was created to offer
Cachers the opportunity to achieve personal caching goals by using
Grand Personal Selection (GPS) to decide how to hunt and find these
caches, all in one day, or one by one over a period of time.
Remember to Go Physically Safely (GPS) when you Grope, Peek and
Search (GPS)
The caches hidden on this stretch of the GPS series are all
close to busy roads, not recommended for small children. We tried
to hide the caches keeping parking in mind as close to GZ as
possible, but as always please rather be safe than sorry!
Voortrekker monument View
Parking is close to GZ
Andries Hendrik Potgieter (19 December 1792 - 16 December 1852) was
a Voortrekker leader.
He served as the first head of state of Potchefstroom from 1840 and
1845 and also as the first head of state of Zoutpansberg from 1845
to 1852. Potgieter was born in the Tarkastad district of the Cape
Colony, the second child of Petronella Margaretha and Hermanus
Potgieter. He grew up to be a wealthy sheep farmer and fought in
the Fourth and Fifth Frontier Wars. However, like many other Boers
– farmers of Dutch, French, and German descent living in the
Cape Colony – he decided to leave the colony in 1834. Delayed
by the Sixth Frontier War, Potgieter and a group of Voortrekkers
under his leadership left in 1835. Other treks under Louis
Trichardt and Johannes Hendrik Janse van Rensburg had preceded him.
The Voortrekkers' spiritual leader, Sarel Arnoldus Cilliers, later
joined Potgieter's trek. Potgieter and his party moved inland to
the present Free State, where they signed a treaty with the leader
of the Barolong, Moroka. The treaty stipulated that Potgieter would
protect the Baralong against the Matabele raiders, in exchange for
land. The tract of land was from the Vet River to the Vaal River.
The Matabele leader, Mzilikazi, was threatened by the white
incursion into what he saw as his sphere of influence, which led to
the Matabele's attack on the Potgieter laager in October, 1836, at
Vegkop, near the present-day town of Heilbron. The attack was
beaten off, but the Matabele made off with most of the trekker
oxen, crucial draught animals for the wagons. The combined trek
groups of Piet Retief and Gerrit Maritz came to Potgieter's rescue.
Moroka also helped with oxen. His group joined up with Retief and
Maritz at Thaba Nchu, where they formed a Voortrekker government
and decided to move to Natal. Potgieter was not in favour of this
plan and stayed behind in the Free State. In
1838, after Piet Retief and his party were killed by Dingane, and
other Voortrekker parties were attacked at the Bloukrans- and
Bushmen's Rivers, Potgieter and another leader, Pieter Lafras Uys
assembled a military force. To prevent schism and discord, the new
Voortrekker leader in Natal, Maritz, diplomatically pronounced that
both Uys and Potgieter were to be in command. However, a struggle
between the hot-headed Uys and Potgieter ensued. The divided force
was lured into an ambush by the Zulus at Italeni, and both Uys and
his son Dirkie, were killed. The surrounded and outnumbered force
fled. Potgieter was criticized for his actions, and the force was
called "Die Vlugkommado" or Flight Commando. He was further
accused, unjustly, of causing the death of Uys by deliberately
leading the force into the ambush. He left Natal for good soon
afterwards and moved to the Transvaal.
Potgieter subsequently went on to found Potchefstroom (named after
him) and served as its first head of state of the Potchefstroom
Republic between 1840 and 1845. Later, in 1845, he also founded
Ohrigstad (originally named Andries-Ohrigstad after Potgieter
himself and George Ohrig) as a trading station. Owing to a malaria
outbreak, the town had to be abandoned. The inhabitants, including
Potgieter, moved to the Soutpansberg area, where he founded the
town Zoutpansbergdorp (which means 'Salt Pan Mountain Town'),
renamed Schoemansdal, changed to Kamatsamo in 2005.
A quick and easy roadside cache, should take less than a
minute.