Friday, March 20, 2015

Our Heritage Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth

Picture source unknown

Prince Alfred's Guard Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth

Prince Alfreds Guard regiment S Africa  
#0589
the colours being handed over to the mayor at town hall Port Elizabeth 1969.

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army. A reserve unit,The Regiment is located in the city of Port Elizabeth.

Prince Alfred's Guard was established on 19 September 1856 as the Port Elizabeth Volunteer Rifle Corps. In 1860 the title Prince Alfred's Guard was assumed unofficially (after Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh) and on 11 July 1874 this name was officially sanctioned as Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard. The name was later changed to Prince Alfred's Guard.

It has fought in all the major wars South Africa has been involved in Including WWII where it fought alongside the 24th Guards Brigade

Picture source and quotation:





Prince Alfred's Guard Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth

Prince Alfreds Guard regiment , South Africa 1968   #20021
At this parade the colours were handed over to the Mayor for safe keeping.

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army. As a reserve unit, it has a status roughly equivalent to that of a British Territorial Army or United States Army National Guard unit. The Regiment is located in the city of Port Elizabeth.

Prince Alfred's Guard was established on 19 September 1856 as the Port Elizabeth Volunteer Rifle Corps. In 1860 the title Prince Alfred's Guard was assumed unofficially (after Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh) and on 11 July 1874 this name was officially sanctioned as Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard. The name was later changed to Prince Alfred's Guard.

It has fought in all the major wars South Africa has been involved in Including WWII where it fought alongside the 24th Guards Brigade



Prince Alfred's Guard Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) 1969 

20019
At this parade the colours were handed over to the Mayor for safe keeping.

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army. As a reserve unit, it has a status roughly equivalent to that of a British Territorial Army or United States Army National Guard unit. The Regiment is located in the city of Port Elizabeth.

Prince Alfred's Guard was established on 19 September 1856 as the Port Elizabeth Volunteer Rifle Corps. In 1860 the title Prince Alfred's Guard was assumed unofficially (after Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh) and on 11 July 1874 this name was officially sanctioned as Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard. The name was later changed to Prince Alfred's Guard.

It has fought in all the major wars South Africa has been involved in Including WWII where it fought alongside the 24th Guards Brigade




Prince Alfred's Gaurd Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth


Grey High cadets & Prince Alfreds Guard regiment, South Africa 1961
The scene outside St Mary’s church where the Queens and regimental colours were laid up when S Africa became a republic. I was with the Grey High cadets in the extreme right of the picture wearing the awful German ski type caps we had to wear.

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army. A reserve unit, the Regiment is located in the city of Port Elizabeth.

Prince Alfred's Guard was established on 19 September 1856 as the Port Elizabeth Volunteer Rifle Corps. In 1860 the title Prince Alfred's Guard was assumed unofficially (after Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh) and on 11 July 1874 this name was officially sanctioned as Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard. The name was later changed to Prince Alfred's Guard.

It has fought in all the major wars South Africa has been involved in Including WWII where it fought alongside the 24th Guards Brigade


Prince Alfred's Gaurd Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth

Prince Alfreds Guard, South Africa 1968 #000001
The regiment with their colour on their anniversary parade. At the time the regiment was almost entirely national servicemen. The men wear the SA version of the British battle dress with beret. At the time they were armour equipped with Centurion tanks

Prince Alfred's Guard (PAG) is an infantry regiment of the South African Army a reserve unit. The Regiment is located in the city of Port Elizabeth.

Prince Alfred's Guard was established on 19 September 1856 as the Port Elizabeth Volunteer Rifle Corps. In 1860 the title Prince Alfred's Guard was assumed unofficially (after Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh) and on 11 July 1874 this name was officially sanctioned as Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard. The name was later changed to Prince Alfred's Guard.

It has fought in all the major wars South Africa has been involved in Including WWII where it fought alongside the 24th Guards Brigade





St George's Park March Past Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth



About 1,000 men from the Permanent Force, ACF, and schools' cadet bands took part in the march past at the united service at the Crusader Grounds today.

For the Boys -Algoa Bay Port Elizabeth


Thursday, March 19, 2015

Cecil John Rhodes Visits Port Elizabeth




Cecil John Rhodes

My View

It came as no surprise to hear that the ANC has decided that the Rhodes Statue has no place on the University of Cape Town campus. For everyone who is politically astute, it is well known that there is a power struggle for the Western Cape, and the ANC has taken off the gloves. Typically the ANC are seeking a divisive tool by which to create a fault line between Christian minorities and their freshly imported spawn from the Eastern Cape to grow their numbers. There is a simple litmus test which indicates whether the ANC is involved, If it’s anti - white then IT IS the ANC.

This is an often repeated methodology where filthy politicians, you know the kind I am talking about, use their security network to find and create divisive issues within the South African social fabric, black against white. Typically it will be the odd school racial incident magnified and debated to the nth degree, or “Christian bigotry”, or cultural differences”, or “language” issues, or “racist monuments”, or the wrong street names, or city names of racist European cultures, etc. Sometimes this is done to upset the opposition (read enemies), or to extol black culture, or simply to make changes as an exercise of their “power”, yet other times to slander Christian minorities to create dissonance in that community.

 A 1896 picture of Cecil John Rhodes in Port Elizabeth
Picture source and quotation: http://www.kemptalk.com/prehistory.htm

There is nothing incredibly deep in African culture.   Just know that it emanates from filthy politicians who declare nothing as sacred, only their own self indulgence.

These issues being foisted on people are totalitarian in nature, meaning that only blacks have a choice in all matters.  This will soon be discovered in the land invasions which are coming by other means, including anything else they can conjure up.

African totalitarianism is both anthropological by nature, and imported from various socialist quarters around the world.

Therefore it is the Rhodes Statue in the Western Cape now, to be followed by the Rhodes Memorial.  This will all be hotly debated on ANC TV channels with lots of planted Jokers in the pack to further their agenda. My suggestion now is for the ANC and their masses of blacks to run along quickly and replace the statue as soon as possible.......with a shower head, or one of the many African War Lords they can choose from. Perhaps they can put a bust of one of the St James Church massacred Christian victims from Cape Town on the Rhodes mantle, or the bust of one of their necklaced victims from one of their “Free the World” campaigns.

Whether Cecil John Rhodes is removed or stays stupid lives on in Africa.