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Coordinates: 33°38′49″S 19°25′55″E / 33.647°S 19.432°E / -33.647; 19.432
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==Creating an Economy==
==Creating an Economy==
[[Image:Worcester_2009_005.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Old Söhgne College 1929]]
[[Image:Worcester_2009_005.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Old Söhgne College 1929]]
George Parker owned a shop and managed the first [[Post Office]] on the south side of town, from 1824 to 1860. His salary as Post Master was about 24 [[ZAR]] per year, and as Shopkeeper, by ordinance, he had to supply twelve months worth of credit to clients. The town of Worcester was founded as an Administrative seat and to create a church and central market place for the frontier farmers. With the market established, Scottish artisans settled in town, bringing their skills as tinsmiths, coppersmiths, blacksmiths, shoemakers etc. By the mid 1830s the Colonial interior was starting to open up and Worcester as frontier town would gain by this. The first economic boon would come in the form of livestock trading and fresh produce farming followed by the development of a wagon industry. Due to the fact that Worcester was the last town before the Karoo interior, hotels and shops started to spring up to replenish travellers. With a solid foundation for economic development laid by 1845, it was time for Worcester to move forward.
George Parker owned a shop and managed the first [[Post Office]] on the south side of town, from 1824 to 1860. His salary as Post Master was about 24 [[ZAR]] per year, and as Shopkeeper, by ordinance, he had to supply twelve months worth of credit to clients. The town of Worcester was founded as an administrative seat and to create a church and central market place for the frontier farmers. With the market established, Scottish artisans settled in town, bringing their skills as tinsmiths, coppersmiths, blacksmiths, shoemakers etc. By the mid 1830s the Colonial interior was starting to open up and Worcester as frontier town would gain by this. The first economic boon would come in the form of livestock trading and fresh produce farming followed by the development of a wagon industry. Due to the fact that Worcester was the last town before the Karoo interior, hotels and shops started to spring up to replenish travellers. With a solid foundation for economic development laid by 1845 and the road across the Bainskloof pass completed in 1852, bringing quicker access to Cape Town, it was time for Worcester to move forward.


==Financial development==
==Financial development==

Revision as of 09:59, 5 November 2009

File:Worcester 2009 004.jpg
Drostdy
Dutch Reformed Church

Worcester is a town in the Western Cape, South Africa. It is located 120 km north-east of Cape Town on the N1 highway north to Johannesburg.

Being the largest town in the Western Cape's interior region, it serves as the administrative capitol of the Breede Valley Local Municipality and as regional headquarters for most Central- and Provincial Government Departments. The town also serves as the hub of the Western Cape's interior commercial, distribution and retail activity with a Shopping Mall, well developed Central Business District and infrastructure.

The Breede Valley Local Municipality was formed in December 2001 and includes the hamlets of Matroosberg, Touws River, De Doorns, Rawsonville and the town of Worcester. The people are represented by 31 Councillors, headed by an executive Mayor.

Census and population classification