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Botswana Accommodation
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Francistown Botswana
As one of the oldest towns in Botswana and site of southern Africa's
first gold rush, Francistown, home to 92,500 people, is a typical
frontier town, strategically placed as the gateway to the north,
with all the main roads to Gaborone, Zimbabwe, Maun and Kazungula
passing through it. It manages to maintain its character despite
being Botswana's second-largest urban centre and "Capital of
the North".
With the rapid influx of people, Daniel Francis - after who Francistown
was named - organised the establishment of the town. Initially the
town consisted of just one main street lined with bustling western-style
saloons and supply stores running parallel to the "Cape to
Cairo" railway line. Many of these old shafts and dumps now
litter the urban sprawl, most whose history has long been forgotten,
along with the dreams of early pioneers. But the excitement of the
times is preserved in the evocative names of some of the mines which
remain; 'Phoenix', 'Bonanza', 'Jim's Luck', 'Lady Mary' and 'White
Elephant' to name but a few. It is not only the mine names which
tell a story, the main street in Francistown is still called 'Blue
Jacket Street', and is dedicated to the memory of an old prospector,
Sam Andersen.
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Evidence of human habitation goes back for 80,000 years. In the
1820s, the Ndebele stormed through before coming to rest near Bulawayo,
bringing their influences and taxation to the Kalanga territory
of north-eastern Botswana.
The first European to visit Nyangabgwe (the nearest village to
present-day Francistown) was missionary Robert Moffat.
He was followed by Karl Mauch, who discovered gold along the Tati
River in 1867, followed soon thereafter with more deposits in the
Francistown area itself. Francistown was the site of southern Africa's
first "gold-rush". Area hailed as the Ophir of Africa,
was rushed by prospectors and adventurers alike to stake their claim
of fame and fortune, many coming from as far as Australia and America. |
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Sam was famous before arriving in Botswana as having been the first man
to walk, with little more than his prospecting wheelbarrow, right across
Australia's Western Desert. Yet he is immortalized in Francistown for
the blue denim jacket that he always wore.
The gold in eastern Botswana is a complicated mix of narrow reefs, which
made it very difficult for the early miners to extract, and by the 1940's
much of the small scale operations had ceased, leaving the larger mines,
which now merely sustain their operations hoping for new finds and an
improvement in the gold price.
But today more fortunes are found in Francistown's couple of casinos than
in the shallow shafts, and the real buzz is in the city's nightlife. The
city boasts a range of good restaurants, sophisticated shopping malls,
cinema, night clubs (jazz club called New Yorker), a couple of excellent
hotels which offer fully equipped conference facilities, one of the largest
referral hospitals in Botswana, an extensive library, sports facilities,
well-kept parks and colourful markets.
Nowadays, the city is experiencing an economic boom. In the last few years
Francistown has had a near total facelift - to the point that much of
its original dusty frontier town atmosphere has disappeared.
There are a large number of hotels, lodges, guest houses and camps in
Francistown. If you are en route to or from Zimbabwe, consider a few nights
at Modumela Lodge. It is situated 65 km north-east of Francistown and
the sign is just 5km east of the small town of Tseshebe on the road to
Bulawayo. The fees are per chalet and are reasonable. The lodge is situated
on a game farm and they offer a variety of activities such as walks, horse-riding,
rock-climbing, absailing etc.
Have you visited this area? If so please share your experience and photographs
with us, we would love to include them on this webpage to help future
visitors to this area.
Email
: bookbotswana@madbookings.com
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