06 May 2025

GERMISTON HISTORY

THE MEYER FAMILY
It is claimed that Johan Georg MEYER (1816-1856) bought the farm Elandsfontein in exchange for an ox-wagon. He had trekked up from Prince Albert 1835 with the Andries Hendrik POTGIETER trek. He staked out three farms: Kliprivier, Elandsfontein and Swartkoppies. He left another trekker, Jacob SMIT, in charge of the farms, while he went back to Prince Albert to sell his farm and fetch his family. He had married Hester Christina Elizabeth MULDER in 1840. After not getting suitable offers, he abandoned the farm and returned to the Transvaal. In 1845 the family settled at Elandsfontein alongside the Natalspruit river and built a farmhouse (present day corner of Hendrik Potgieter Street and 10th Avenue in Alberton). The family cemetery was where the traffic circle in 9th Avenue stands today. The first burial was Cornelius Floris Johann MEYER who died in 1851, aged 10, in a freak snow storm while collecting firewood near the Jukskei River. He was the oldest son of Johan and Hester Christina Elizabeth MULDER.

In 1855 the family trekked to Prince Albert to visit family. On the way back Johan died near Colesburg in October 1856. His eldest son, Johannes Petrus (aka Jan), was 13 years old. The four boys and five daughters and their mother carried on with the return trek. In 1858 Hester married Abraham VILJOEN and he took charge of the farms. The farm Kliprivier was ceded to Jacob SMIT on 25 July 1859. Hester and Abraham's child Jacomina Hendina died in 1862, aged 2 years. Abraham died in 1894. The executor of his estate gave 300 morgen to his widow Hester. She had this land transferred to her four daughters after the Anglo-Boer War and then sold the land to Alberton Estate Syndicate who established the town of Alberton. Alberton was proclaimed a town in 1903 and named for General Hennie ALBERTS, chairman of the syndicate, and the town of Prince Albert in hounour of the MEYER family. After the war, Hester lived with her daughter Wilhermina BEZUIDENHOUT on the farm De Rust in Heidelburg. She died in 1912.

August SIMMER and John JACK circa 1889
JACK & SIMMER
In 1885 half of the original farm, Elandsfontein, was acquired by two merchants, John JACK and August SIMMER, who ran a trading store at Lake Chrissie. John was born in 1849 on the farm Germiston near Glasgow, Scotland. The DINWIDDIE family had owned the Germiston manor in Scotland since the early 1700s. August was from Vacha in Germany. John and August travelled from Durban to Lake Chrissie in 1882 on their way to the Witwatersrand to seek their fortune. They erected sandstone buildings in Lake Chrissie including stables, a gin depot and a small hotel. The hotel was a small 3-room building and remains largely untouched since its original construction, still offering accommodation at the John Jack Inn.

In August 1887, John registered the Simmer & Jack Gold Mining Co. The company included George FARRAR, whose family imported drilling equipment, and Harry STRUBEN who from 1884 had run a small gold mine in Roodepoort. The company was listed in 1924 and became one of the Reef’s most solid mining companies until it was delisted in April 2013.

The village of Germiston was established in 1886 and named after John's birthplace in Scotland. It was officially declared a town in 1903 and a city in 1950. In 1921, the world's largest gold refinery was established in Germiston. Most of the western world's gold passes through Rand Refinery. Gold mining in Germiston eventually ended, but the refinery remains busy.

CHURCHES
Germiston Presbyterian Church was the first church to be established in Germiston in 1890, in a wood and iron building on the corner of President and Church Streets, opposite the Clement Mine Shaft which was opened in 1893. John JACK had given the four stands (from President to Meyer Streets) and 500 Pounds for construction. The church stand was later leased out and the wood and iron church building was physically lifted by hundreds Simmer & Jack mine labourers and moved to the adjacent stand in Church Street. During the Anglo-Boer War, services were held for troops by Major MURRAY. In 1902 it was decided to build a new church on Broad Street (later renamed Odendaal Street). A water well existed on the site, which is directly below the present day altar. In October 1904 an advert was placed in the Rand Daily Mail. It offered a first prize of 50 Pounds and a second prize of 25 Pounds for the best church design. A.W. SIMPSON, of 30 Empire Road in Johannesburg, won the competition. The prize money was held back until the builder’s quotes had been received. The contract was awarded to Smith & Saunders on 24 February 1905. The 50 pound prize as well as the 148 pound architectural fee was paid to Simpson. The cornerstone was laid on 15 March 1905 by Viscount Alfred MILNER, the Colonial Secretary. The silver trowel used for the stone laying was purchased from Mr Bold, the local jeweller. The first church service was held on 08 October 1905, conducted by Reverend John SMITH of Pietermaritzburg and Reverend John SCOTT previously from Yeoville. The official opening and dedication of the church to St. Andrew took place on 27 January 1906. Lord SELBORNE, the High Commissioner for South Africa, performed the ceremony which was attended by the mayor James BLANE and his wife Isabella Mary, John JACK and his wife Jane, and many of the 230 church members. In 1951 the nmae was changed from Germiston Presbyterian Church to St Andrews's Presbyterian Church of Germiston.

The Anglican Parish of Germiston was founded in 1897. Prior to the parish being formally established, it was a mission chapelry of the parish of Boksburg, which had been established in 1890. Baptismal, confirmation and marriage records show that mission work existed prior to 1890, going back to the founding of Germiston in 1886. At that time the work of the mission priests fell under the jurisdiction of the diocese of Pretoria. Originally the parish consisted of the Parish Church of St Boniface (present day inner city of Germiston). The present church building in Meyer Street is the second on the site, designed by Sir Herbert BAKER and built in 1910. The original church was a tin building with a concrete and stone foundation.

ALEXANDER HOTEL
The Alexander Hotel on the corner of President and Jack Streets was partly designed by Sir Herbert BAKER. It was built in 1912 by Alexander STUART who died when the RMS Lusitania was torpedoed in World War I on 07 May 1915. He was born in Banffshire, Scotland. He went to the USA at an early age, where he started working in construction. He emigrated to South Africa in the 1890s with his brothers John and Robert and two sisters Annie and Helen. The family settled in Germiston. One of his sisters, Annie Rhind STUART, married the local doctor, Dr Howard Charles SPAULDING in January 1904 in the Presbyterian church. The other sister was unmarried in 1915 and later moved to New Zealand. John STUART became a Germiston town councillor.

Alexander worked as a builder and cartage contractor in Germiston in partnership with Mr GRATTAN. When the Anglo-Boer War broke out, he joined the Railway Pioneer Regiment and fought for the British, attaining the rank of Captain. In 1901 he married married Petronella Wilhelmina, the widow of Boer commandant General Gerhardus Hendricus GRAVETT. After the war, he started up his business agin on his own.

In 1915, Alexander travelled to the United States with his stepson Jerry GRAVETT. Alexander was originally booked on the Cameronia, but when that ship was requisitioned, he was transferred to Lusitania. Jerry was not listed as a passenger on the Lusitania. Jerry been in England for a couple of years studying for a medical degree and his destination may have been England and not the USA. Alexander was on a business trip as intended starting an iron foundry in Germiston, and had inspected several foundries in Great Britain and ordered machinery. At the time of the sinking, Alexander's father was 86 years old and living in Scotland. The cemetery in Marnoch in the Scottish Midlands has memorials to various family members. Alexander was the principal supporter of the Germiston Rugby Club, contributing funds. The Germiston Tennis Club was also supported by him. The news of the sinking of the Lusitania sparked off a wave of anti-German riots on the East Rand. Several German-owned businesses were burnt down in Germiston, Boksburg and Benoni.

GERMISTON LAKE
Victoria Lake is commonly known as Germiston Lake. It was named after the Victoria Falls, not Queen Victoria. The lake was originally used as a source of drinking water for the city. The Transvaal Power Company was registered in 1910 and became Eskom in 1948. Eskom donated the land to the Victoria Lake Club in the 1930s. The land where the Sea Scouts and canoeing boathouses are built, plus some land on the other side of the main road, forms part of that donation. Initially only the Scouts had a boat shed in the bay area. The boathouse was built in the 1930s on the site of the current bridge and the shed. Rowing was the first water sport to officially become resident in 1906 when small clinker-built boats were used for competition and leisure. Sailing began in about 1910 when 20-foot Scows were used until World War I temporarily stopped leisure activity at the lake. After the war, sailing started up again in the late 1920s when Rand Airport was built. The sport was popular with the nearby aviation workers. The bridge was built in 1948 for the South African Sailing Championships to be used for starting and finishing races. Canoeing began unofficially in the 1960s and officially in 1981. Rowing and sailing merged into the Victoria Lake Club in the 1940s. The club is also home to the all-time South African School Rowing Champions, St Benedict's College. Almost 50 years after rowing first began at the lake, Jeppe High School for Boys and St Benedict’s College built the first sheds in 1987. In the 1990s more sheds were built and other schools became involved.
RAND AIRPORT

The construction of Rand Airport, a privately owned civil airport, started in 1920. It was officially opened in 1931. It was the main airport for Johannesburg, but the city outgrew it and replaced the airport with Palmietfontein Airport in 1948 (which was replaced by Jan Smuts International Airport in 1952). The ownership of the airport originally consisted of 23 private shareholders.

In 1917, Major Allister MILLER landed on Germiston Golf Course and decided that the area close by would be suitable as an airfield. In February 1929 160 hectares (400 acres) of land was set aside for the Germiston Public Aerodrome, as part of an agreement between Germiston Town Council, Elandsfontein Estate Company and the Rand Refinery. Later that year, the Germiston Town Council gained full control. Imperial Airways added South Africa to their schedule and made Germiston their base, with Rand Refinery exporting its refined gold by air. The airline received a £400 000 subsidy from both the South African and UK governments over five years.

In November 1929, the Germiston Town Council bought a further 280 ha (700 acres) of land, after permission was given by the Mining Commissioner, as the land was owned by the Simmer and Jack mine. The Johannesburg and Germiston Town Councils formed a joint committee on 14 November 1930 and £85 000 was set aside for a large and small hangar, administrative buildings, a workshop, floodlights and cottages. The airport was officially opened on 21 December 1931 by the Governor-General Earl of Clarendon and owned jointly by the Germiston and Johannesburg Town Councils. In 1932, Captain Royal (Roy) Victor Nash MAKEPEACE became its manager. Roy became a pilot in 1917 and shortly afterwards founded the Aero Club of South Africa. In World War I he was an infantryman with the 1st SAI, D Company before being transferred to the Royal Flying Corps and commissioned. As an infantryman, he was awarded the Military Medal for bravery after single-handedly taking five German soldiers prisoner. He served with the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) and Royal Air Force (RAF) from October 1917 to June 1919) before returning to live in Germiston. He was born in Wales in 1899 and died in 1989 in England.

Roy MAKEPEACE
Rand Airport became the headquarters of South African Airways (SAA) when the airline's head office was moved from Durban to Rand Airport on 01 July 1935. By 1938, development costs had reached £200 000 and losses £20 000, a cost the Germiston Town Council could no longer afford. It sold its share to the Johannesburg City Council. The final transfer took place in 1944.

In early 1939, the Union Defence Force took control of Rand Airport and by May 1940, all commercial flights ended. The training schools based at Rand trained pilots for the war effort and the facilities were extended with fifteen additional hangars. By 1944, a limited number of internal commercial flights resumed from the airport. In 1948 SAA moved its headquarters to Palmietfontein Airport because of runway length constraints.

Rand Airport grew quickly after World War II ended. In 1975, with 133 135 recorded aircraft movements, Rand Airport was the busiest airport in the southern hemisphere. Today, Rand Airport caters largely for light aircraft, flying schools, air charter operators, aircraft maintenance organisations, and is home to the South African Airways Museum.

SCHOOLS
Germiston's oldest high school is part of the combined St Catherine's School. The Catholic school was founded by the Dominican Sisters under the leadership of Mother Rose NYLAND in the city centre in 1908. It relocated to Piercy Avenue in Parkhill Gardens in the 1940s.

Germiston High School was founded alongside Victoria Lake. From the 1940s to 1963, the girls were based in Fourth Avenue in Lambton, at what was known as Germiston Girls' High School, whilst the boys remained at the 1917 campus as Germiston Boys' High School. In 1964, due to the need to relocate the Afrikaans Delville Primary School, the girls were moved back to combine with the boys in the original buildings. Famous past pupils include Dr Sydney BRENNER, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize. The Germiston Boys' High School cadet band was one of the most successful in South Africa from 1952 to 1964, often recording an average mark of 99% in music performance, drumming, bugle and trumpet ensemble, drill, dress and discipline. The school also had a large music centre for a number of years, which grew due to the work of the late George BURGESS and included jazz and concert bands.

WITS RIFLES
The Witwatersrand Rifles Regiment is a mechanised infantry regiment based in Germiston. The reserve unit is commonly known as the Wits Rifles and was formed by proclamation on 01 May 1903. It absorbed the members of the Railway Pioneer Regiment and the Rand Rifles, both of which had fought in the Anglo-Boer War (1899–1902). In 1907 the regiment absorbed the Transvaal Light Infantry Regiment.

Carnegie Library, Germiston
CARNEGIE LIBRARY

The Carnegie Germiston Library was made possible by the Carnegie Corporation, a philanthropic trust based in the USA. Andrew CARNEGIE established the Carnegie Corporation in 1911 to promote the advancement of knowledge and understanding. The Corporation has supported libraries around the world for over a century, funding the contruction of libraries in English-speaking countries. Between 1883 and 1929, 2,509 libraries were constructed of which 12 were built in South Africa - Harrismith (1907), Hopetown (1908), Muizenberg (1909), Barberton (1911), Moorreesburg (1911), Standerton (1911), Potchefstroom (1912), Benoni (1913), Newcastle (1913), Germiston (1915) and Krugersdorp (1917).

The requests for the corporation to fund a library came from the towns and cities. The first proposals to establish a library in Germiston date to 1905. The first municipal library was established in a small room in the municipal office in 1909. The construction of the Germiston Carnegie Library was given the go-ahead on 16 March 1915 with a grant of $26 407, the largest amount for a Carnegie Library in South Africa. The library, designed by the municipal engineer James BRIGHT (1872-1944), was opened in 1922.

Dumisani Masilela Civic Theatre
The library has seen much neglect and vandalism. At one time it became a restaurant, then a club and by 2013 was derelict when a fire broke out and destroyed what remained of the library. Only the outer walls remain. The original main entrance doors were put into safekeeping with the municipality. In 2015 the municipality decided to convert what remained of the building into a 400-seat theatre for the performing arts, although such a plan dates back to 2010. The project was completed in 2016 and named the Dumisani Masilela Civic Theatre. Dumisani MASILELA was an actor who was killed during an attempted hijacking in 2017.

WELL-KNOWN RESIDENTS
Albert JOHANNESON, professional footballer and first black player to play in the FA Cup
André NEL, South African cricket fast bowler
Andre WATSON, rugby referee
Arlene DICKINSON, South African-Canadian entrepreneur
Bobby LOCKE, professional golfer
Daisy Louisa DE MELKER, nurse that poisoned two husbands and a son
Dr Sydney BRENNER, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Ernie ELS, professional golfer, attended Delville Primary School and Jan de Klerk High School.
Helen SUZMAN, politician
Jeannie DE GOUVEIA (aka Jeannie D), TV presenter, media personality, founder of Finery Gin.
John CUNDILL, journalist and playwright
Marie WARDER, journalist who went on to champion the cause of hemochromatosis
Mimi COETZEE, opera singer, attended Delville Laerskool
Neville COLMAN, hematologist and DNA expert
Pierre ISSA, Lebanese-South African footballer
Stanley SKEWES, mathematician
Trevor DENMAN, American sportscaster in thoroughbred horse racing
Viv VERMAAK, award-winning investigative journalist, writer and director


02 May 2025

PRIMROSE CEMETERY, GERMISTON

Primrose Cemetery in Germiston dates back to 1893. It is the second oldest cemetery in the greater Johannesburg region, after Braamfontein Cemetery. Its 20,000+ graves tell stories of the early gold mining days, an Anglo-Boer War battle, the 1914 Rebellion, the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, and the 1922 Rand Revolt. It includes a military Garden of Remembrance.

The first burial was recorded as R. LAMBERT on 25 June 1893. There is no existing gravestone. There is Ettie Fanny Ross RUSSELL who was born circa 1868 in Cape Town. She married Robert James Ernest LAMBERT (1860 – 1922) on 28 April 1886 in Vrede. She died on 24 June 1893 in Germiston.

On Christmas Day 1896, the CROSBIE family was enjoying a picnic at Primrose Dam when the dam wall collapsed. Six of their children drowned:
Adelaide Jane (1880-1896)
Frances Ellen (1885-1896)
Kate Anne (1889-1896)
Albert (1891-1896)
Francis (1893-1896)
Baby (1896-1896), age 2 months.
They were buried in Primrose Cemetery.
Three children survived:
James Pierce born on 23 June 1879 in Kimberley, died on 25 August 1958 at Addington Hospital, Durban.
Janet Mary born on 26 August 1884 in Kimberley, died on 20 May 1979 in Bergville. Married Charles Cummins HAINE on 03 March 1908 in Germiston.
William Thomas born on 15 July 1887, died in 1980. Married Amy Mary ASPELING on 28 April 1914. He was working at Rose Deep Gold Mine, Germiston, in 1914.
The children's parents, Francis (aka Frank) CROSBIE and Janet FISHER, were married on 02 July 1878 in Kimberley, South Africa.
Janet died on 14 January 1904 at the home of Thomas BELL in Belgravia, Johannesburg and was also buried in Primrose Cemetery. Her last residential address was Rose Deep Gold Mine, Germiston.
Their father married Florence Montagu RICHARDS on 10 August 1908 in Durban. She died in 1920.
Francis was born in 1857 in Newchurch, Rossendale, Lancashire, England, and died on 28 May 1943 at Germiston Hospital. His last residential address was Hotel Alexander in President Street, Germiston.

The military Garden of Remembrance contain the remains of 544 Imperial soldiers from the Anglo-Boer War, of which 181 died in battle or from their wounds. The remains of soldiers who died at Bakenlaagte, Bethal, Boschmanskop, Devon, Leslie, Nooitgedacht, Oshoek, Elandsfontein and Springs were also reinterred here. Two monuments erected by the National Monuments Council list the names and regiments of the Imperial soldiers buried here. 

Gerhardus Hendrikus Johannes GRAVETT was born on 28 June 1858 in Alexandria, Cape Colony. He was the grandson of George GRAVETT, an 1820 Settler from Rustington, Sussex, England. In 1888 he was living in Elandsfontein, Germiston, and was a transport rider building a successful business. He married Petronella Wilhelmina OOSTHUIZEN. They had two sons and three daughters. When the Anglo-Boer War broke out, Gerhardus joined the Boers as an ordinary burgher. He served with distinction on the Colesberg front, where he was elected field cornet. He was promoted to commandant and led the Boer retreat from the Orange River through the eastern Free State. He took part in the battle of Donkerhoek in June 1900. His men were known as Gravett’s Guinea Fowls. He was heavily involved in the Boer attempts to prevent the British capture of the Eastern railway line. In August 1900 he participated in the Battle of Bergendal and was promoted to a fighting General in charge of the Boksburg Commando. The Boksburg Commando was mobilised on 27 September 1899 and was made up of 1,050 Boers and about 300 black agterryers. Gerhardus saw action in Natal, the Free State, the Cape Colony and the Western Transvaal. He suffered serious shrapnel wounds on 12 October 1900 while on commando near Roosenekal. A Dr. NEETHLING attended to him but without much-needed medicines he contracted bronchitis. He was buried in Primrose. His gravestone also commemorates his son Richard Edward GRAVETT (15 May 1893 - 20 October 1903). 

Lieutenant-Colonel George BENSON is the highest rank buried in Primrose. He was killed at the Battle of Bakenlaagte on 30 October 1901, which was the last major battle in the Eastern Transvaal. He was the commander of No. 3 flying column based at Middelburg in the Eastern Transvaal. His unit was tasked with burning farms and taking Boer prisoners to Brugspruit station (present day Cluwer) for transportation to concentration camps. On 24 October 1901, 800 burghers ambushed the rearguard of the column and 14 of Benson's men were killed or wounded. On 30 October, various Boer commandos under the command of General Louis BOTHA gathered to attack Benson’s unit near Bakenlaagte. Seventy seven of Benson’s men were killed with another 161 wounded. Fifty two Boers were killed and wounded. Captain Eyre LLOYD of the 2nd Coldstream Guards was also killed, after leaving the Imperial camp to go save his commander, despite being wounded along the way. 

There is a monument to the Queen’s Bays Regiment in memory of the soldiers who died in battle on 01 April 1902. The battle involved 312 men of the Queen's Bays and 40 National Scouts who were stationed at Springs. The Imperial soldiers planned to raid what they thought was a small Boer laager, but instead came across a large Boer laager consisting of about 800 men near Boschman’s Kop (near present day Devon). Other Imperial forces monuments are the 84th Battery Royal Field Artillery Memorial and the King's Royal Rifles Mounted Infantry Memorial. 

James BLANE

Germiston's first mayor, James BLANE, is also buried here. He was a mining engineer / manager and died on 10 April 1909 at home on New Goch Mine of stomach cancer. He also owned Bultfontein farm in Kroonstad district, on which he kept cattle. The farm was sold on auction after his death. He was born on 01 March 1866 in Louden Kirk, Galston, Ayrshire, Scotland, the son of Robert BLANE (1834 – 1896) and Agnes McLAUCHLAND (1835 – 1886). He married Isabella Mary RYAN on 13 April 1891 in the Presbyterian Church, East London. They had six children: 
Agnes Elizabeth BLANE (born 1892) 
Gladys Beryl BLANE (born 1894) 
James Starr BLANE (1897 – 1961) 
Robert BLANE (1900 – 1993) 
Gordon John BLANE (1902 – 1902, Glencairn Gold Mine) 
Isabella Marrion BLANE (born 1904)

A monument commemorates Germiston men who died while serving in World War I. An obelisk commemorates Knights Deep Gold Mine employees who died in World War I. Private James COWARD of the South African Infantry 1st Regiment died on 09 April 1917 at the Battle of Arras. He was 25 years old and was the son of Anne COWARD of 10 Long Street, Germiston. His gravestone had a memorial plaque known as Dead Man's Penny, which has been been stolen. The Dead Man's Penny was issued to the families of soldiers of the British Empire who were killed in battle during World War I. The round bronze plaque was inscribed with "He died for freedom and honour" and the soldier's name. 

Captain Jacobus Everhardus NOLTE was shot and killed at Treurfontein (present day Coligny) in October 1914 and was buried in Primrose. He was married to Francina Stephina GROBLER who died in 1976. He had served with the Boksburg Commando in both Natal and the Transvaal during the Anglo-Boer War. After the war, he became a successful lawyer in Heidelberg and owned the farm Driefontein in Heidelberg district. He joined the Heidelberg Commando and by 1914 he held the rank of Captain. He was on active service fighting the 1914 rebels in the Western Transvaal. While near Treurfontein, a group of six mounted rebels approached the commandos under a white flag. The commandos were under Commandant Louwrens NOLTE. The rebels stopped about 500 yards from the commandos and signalled with their hats. Commandant NOLTE wanted to fight but his brother Captain NOLTE called for calm. The captain wrote a note to the effect that the commandant wanted to know what the rebels’ intentions were, and if bloodshed could be avoided. Captain NOLTE took off his revolver and, unarmed, walked towards the rebels with the note held high in his hand. He gave the note to someone on his left, just before someone to his right fired three shots instantly killing him. The government forces charged the rebels and captured a few hundred, killing 13 and wounding 36. A rebel, Field Cornet Hendrik Cornelis Wilhelmus VERMAAS (aka Hennie Natreen) was charged with the murder of Captain NOLTE, but was acquitted because the State could not prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Dr. Herbert John ORFORD of Klerksdorp had Nolte’s body exhumed and examined. Vermaas was charged with treason for his part in the Rebellion and sent to the Fort in Johannesburg. He died on 23 August 1948 at Witpoort, Ottosdal district. 

In the Dutch Reformed section, there are two gravestones noting the cause of death as myntering (silicosis). Petrus Cornelis Johannes POTGIETER died on 22 September 1918, and Johannes Andreas SWANEPOEL died on 14 October 1911. Petrus was married to Martha Maria LANDMAN. Johannes was married to Jacomina Christina POTGIETER. Myntering was known as miners’ phthisis. The underground miners were exposed to silica dust. 

Some gravestones name the mine where the deceased worked, such as Simmer and Jack, Village Deep, Glen Deep, Jupiter, Glencairn Main Reef, New Rietfontein, May Consolidated, Witwatersrand Deep, Bantjes, Rose Deep and Ginsberg. Forbes MERVYN-SMITH died in a mining accident at Knights Deep Mine in 1917. He was married to Lilian BROWN who died on 22 October 1918 during the Spanish flu pandemic. 

Dr. Howard Charles SPAULDING nursed many of Germiston's sick and dying during the Spanish flu pandemic, before he too died on 14 October 1918 at the government hospital in Germiston. He was buried in Primrose. He was from the coal mining town of Virden in Illinois, United States, having arrived in South Africa before the Anglo-Boer War and offered his services as doctor to the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek government. He married Annie Rhind STUART in January 1904 in the Presbyterian church in Germiston. Annie was born in Scotland. Three of her brothers had also settled in Germiston. Her older brother Alexander, who was a builder, married Petronella Wilhelmina, the widow of Boer commandant General Gerhardus Hendricus GRAVETT. Another brother, John, became a Germiston Town Councilor. By 1918, Howard and Annie had five daughters and one son. After the death of her husband, Annie married George MATHERS, an electrical engineer, and had another daughter. 

Privates George BROWN and Albert Vernon HIGHAM share a gravestone, both of the Transvaal Scottish Regiment who were killed at Dunswart Railway Crossing on 10 March 1922 during the 1922 Rand Revolt. The gravestone was was erected by the Regiment in 1970. George was a clerk in civilian life. Albert was a commercial traveller in civilian life, and the son of Gertrude HIGHAM of Germiston. Tjaart Johannes VAN DER WALT was killed in action at at Brixton Ridge on 12 March 1922 while serving with the Railways and Harbours Brigade. He was married to Theresa Allan Jane SHOOTER. Sergeant James TANNER of the South African Railways died on 10 March 1922 from gunshot wounds. He was a Guard Inspector with the Railways. He was married to Annie BEITH. Lance-Sergeant Paulus Petrus JOUBERT of the South African Police was shot during the night of 11 March 1922 when on his way to Germiston with colleagues to arrest suspicious men in Germiston. He was married to Maria Magdalena SMIT. 

2020

There have been many instances of vandalism and neglect at the cemetery. In mid-2020 one of the cemetery gates was stolen and the main gate was damaged while being forcibly opened. There was a fire in the cemetery store room in June 2020, and the cemetery office in a separate building had a bonfire in the middle of the room. All records of burials pre-1970, kept in the storeroom, were destroyed in the fire. Both cemetery buildings had been broken into and all equipment stolen. The Jewish Ohel was broken into and the palisade fence systematically stolen. In the past, the Jewish community had a garden service clear the Jewish section of overgrowth, weeds, and litter. The Jewish section was consecrated on 11 August 1907. 

2020

In January 2023, the city council did a clean-up at the cemetery. In April 2025, the City of Ekurhuleni blamed the cemetery's unkempt state on recent rainfall and lack of manpower to maintain the cemetery, after residents raised concerns. They found the cemetery had overgrown grass and bushes covering the graves. Some of the tall headstones were only partially visible. Other grievances included the overgrown trees, missing gates and broken palisade fencing. Vandalism of facilities is one of the biggest challenges that the city is confronted with. Safety at the cemeteries due to their state is also a major concern. I recently drove past Primrose Cemetery, and was saddened to see that it was again overgrown and unkempt.

March 2025