Rondebosch home may have a buried treasure

This four bedroom Rondebosch home is for sale through Anne Porter Knight Frank at R4,2 million.

Anne Porter Knight Frank is marketing a home in Rondebosch that has two remarkable “extras”, one of which would be unlikely to crop up more than once every century.

The home has a 300 year old 9m deep well - in itself not such an unusual feature - but this well just might have treasure buried in the silt that lies at its bottom.

“The unconfirmed story,” says Sylvia Muzzell of Anne Porter Knight Frank, “is that after Napoleon died on St Helena - to the end closely guarded by British troops - his steward settled in South Africa and owned this property. He was a married man but not always faithful to his wife who, on discovering that he had had a liaison with another lady, threw the jewellery that he had given her down the well, from where, it is said, it has never been recovered.”

Any recovery, she says, would be difficult because the well has several metres of water in it year-round. Although this is used to irrigate the garden it has never dried up. Getting to the base of the well would, therefore, probably involve employing a diver.

“It is, of course, quite possible that the story is totally apocryphal or that any jewels there are of minimal value - but who knows.”

The house is on the steep slopes of Devils Peak and within two minutes’ walk of UCT’s Middle Campus. However, as it is not on a through road, it is exceptionally quiet and peaceful.

“The house is deceptive,” says Jeanne Cowan, also of Anne Porter Knight Frank, “because from the street it looks like a small English cottage. On entering, you discover that over the years the owners have built extensively on the lower slopes and have created a home that is, in fact, big enough for two families: it has four bedrooms, three bathrooms, four living rooms, a study, a pool and ample parking space.”

The home has all the much-admired features of an earlier era: high ceilings, sash windows, Oregon pine floors, solid wood doors and cast iron fireplaces. Full length windows on main living rooms opens out the views of Devil’s Peak and the southern spine of the Table Mountain range.

The owner has said that homes in this street tend not to be sold but are usually passed on from one generation of the family to another.

“We are, therefore, breaking with the tradition,” she says, “but we do hope the new owners will appreciate the home as much as we do.”