Ch. 7: The Great White Camps

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THE GREAT WHITE CAMPS
191
Only a few months from the day when the first diamond was picked up near du Toit's pan, the camp at Dorstfontein was proudly claiming the title of the " City of the Pan." A spacious market square was laid out on the ground between the pan
and the ridge covered with diamond diggers, and around this square were ranged the white walls of the aspiring camp. Streets radiating from the central square gave open access to the market-place, and the white tent blocks were soon dotted near the square with shops of brick and iron and wood, rivalling the pioneer diamond-digging town of Klip-drift on the Vaal.1
Klip-drift struggled on with the best face possible, making much of its position of vantage as the distributing market of all camp supplies from the South African Republic; but its day of ascendancy soon flitted away never to return. In September, 1871, its chief standard-bearer, the Diamond News, moved to the " City of the Pan," and there was no question from that time of the preeminence of the " dry diggings," although a rival paper, the Diamond Field, bore up for a time under the sinking fortunes of Klip-drift. Before the end of the year 1871, Dutoitspan boasted " many large hotels," " immense stores,"
1 "The Diamond Diggings of South Africa," Charles Alfred Payton, London, 1872.
Ch. 7: The Great White Camps Page of 449 Ch. 7: The Great White Camps
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