Caution!

Visiting this web site requires a newer version of Netscape Communicator.

Visit Microsoft's Web site to obtain the newest version of Internet Explorer, or visit Netscape's Web site to obtain the newest version of Netscape Communicator.

Visiting this web site without first upgrading your browser may result in unreliable behavior.




 
David Rattray 
    Anglo Zulu War Historical Society 

Search
Go


 General



Home


About the Society


The Journal


Join the Society


Society Degree Courses


Zulu Village


Books


Travel Advice


News


Links


Photo Gallery


Day Of The Dead Moon CD set by David Rattray


Anglo Zulu War Virtual Museum


Gail van Lingen Prints


Bill Race Prints


Fugitives Drift Lodge


 Members



Members Only









A Profile of David Rattray

David Rattray, 1958 - 2007David Rattray was born in Johannesburg in 1958. He was educated at Pridwin in Johannesburg and St Alban’s College in Pretoria. He graduated with a BSc Honours degree in entomology in 1982 from the University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg. 

After a period managing game reserves and working with wildlife in Southern Africa David and his wife Nicky began building Fugitives’ Drift Lodge in 1989, since when they have hosted a constant stream of often distinguished visitors and from where these guests set out to visit the battlefields of Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift.

In 1994 – the year of the first all party general election in South Africa, David started to lecture in the United Kingdom.  This developed over the years and he had done thirty-five lectures at the Royal Geographical Society in London.  The Royal Geographical Society awarded him their “Ness Award” in 1999, in recognition of widening the popular understanding of Zulu cultures in Southern Africa. David was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.

A central theme in all these lectures was reconciliation – and how reconciliation can develop from conflict.  David had lectured in America, Antarctica, Hong Kong and throughout Southern Africa and had been acclaimed by major British newspapers as one of the finest public speakers in the world.

Most of the lectures in the United Kingdom were in aid of charities, particularly for the Order of St John, The Army Benevolent Fund, The British Heart Foundation and the NW Cancer Research Fund.

In 1999 David assisted with the visit of the Royal Regiment of Wales to South Africa. This famous regiment (of which the 24th Regiment of Foot which fought at Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift is part) came out to the Battlefields to commemorate the 120th anniversary of these battles. David lectured all these soldiers on both sites over a number of days and hosted the Regimental Dinner at Fugitives’ Drift.  This visit was an enormous success and did much to further reconciliation and raise the profile of this remarkable piece of history. It received much extensive coverage on BBC Wales and on the BBC1 news.

DavidIn 2000 David did two lectures in the Brecon Theatre to raise funds for the Regimental Museum in Brecon, which is important to the local tourism effort in Wales, and continues to preserve the most outstanding collection of medals, documents and memorabilia on this period.

David kept a watchful eye over Regimental interests on these battlefields and hoped that the considerable tourism to the battlefields would manifest itself in
greater numbers of people visiting the museum in Brecon. Close ties were maintained with the regiment and the curator of this museum.

In February 2001 David gave the inaugural Laurens Van Der Post Memorial Lecture, hosted by His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales.  The theme of this lecture was Laurens’ philosophy on reconciliation.

Later that year at a function held at Sotheby’s, David delivered a lecture: at this function over £80 000 was raised for education projects at Isandlwana.

David’s contribution to tourism in South Africa was recognised in London at the Tatler Travel Award 2002 Ceremony. He was awarded the Tatler/Gordon Campbell Gray award for “Vision in Tourism”.

He published a book, “Guide to the Anglo Zulu War” and had recently completed a new book, A Soldier Artist in Zululand.

David had an abiding interest in conservation. The Rattray property is a registered Natural Heritage Site.  He was a trustee of the WWF, South Africa. He was a trustee of the John Voelcker Bird Book Fund which produces some of the finest ornithological books in the world.  He was a trustee of the Magqubu Ntombela Foundation which amongst other activities ensures that the historical contribution by Zulu people to conservation in South Africa will not be forgotten.

He was a trustee of the Siyazisiza Trust which is the largest NGO of its kind in KwaZulu Natal and assists tens of thousands of impoverished people in KwaZulu Natal in the production of craft, vegetables etc. This craft making expertise was recently given an enormous profile in London when at a function, also at Sotheby’s David gave an address, sharing the platform with the South African High Commissioner and the National Minister of Arts, Culture and Technology.

In 2002 he was asked to be a patron of the British based Wilderness Trust.

David lectured prolifically, particularly to groups of people who wish to develop some insight into the complexity of South Africa’s story. He was extremely optimistic about South Africa’s future and made every effort to convince people from all over the world that South Africa is a remarkable country which, at the edge of the abyss, managed to pluck hope from hopelessness.

David died tragically in KwaZulu Natal on 26 January 2007 and is survived by his wife Nicky and three sons.


Click here to hear snippets of David Rattray's moving Day of the Dead Moon series

Click here to order David Rattray's moving audio series "Day of the Dead Moon" on CD

 

 


 


Links to articles and obituaries about David Rattray on the Internet:

Information and News about David Rattray from Google can be found by clicking on this link:

http://news.google.co.uk/nwshp?ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&tab=wn&q=david%20rattray

...or you can read other articles below.


David Rattray: Daily Telegraph Obituary
Daily Telegraph
David Rattray, who was murdered on Friday aged 48, was a self-taught historian and became an internationally renowned expert on the Anglo-Zulu war of 1879; as a prominent figure in South African tourism, he was instrumental in putting the remote battlefields of the eastern province of KwaZulu Natal on the tourist map.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2007/01/29/db2901.xml


David Rattray: Stirring historian, community-minded raconteur
Sunday Times
David Rattray, the internationally renowned KwaZulu- Natal battlefields historian who was murdered in his family home above Fugitives’ Drift this week, ...
http://www.sundaytimes.co.za/article.aspx?ID=369402


Zulus' champion gunned down
The Sunday Times
A FRIEND of Prince Charles who devoted his life to Zulus was almost certainly murdered by one of them in a shooting at his home in South Africa.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2089-2570056,00.html


David Rattray: September 6, 1960 - January 27, 2007
The Times
South African historian who chronicled the savage 1879 battle of Isandlwana in the Zulu campaign
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2571477,00.html


Was Rattray assassinated?
Dispatch
Nothing stolen and killers asked: ‘Where’s David?’
http://www.dispatch.co.za/2007/01/29/SouthAfrica/abgang.html


Rattray murder: tributes pour in
Pretoria News
Prince Charles is unlikely to attend the funeral of murdered historian David Rattray because he is visiting the United States, his spokesperson said last night.
http://www.pretorianews.co.za/index.php?fArticleId=3651141


Rattray murder 'a revenge killing'
Independent On-Line
Murdered historian, author and battlefield expert David Rattray confided in a friend his fears about endemic crime in South Africa.
http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=15&art_id=vn20070129092703464C688334


Gunning down of top historian Rattray sparks wave of anger
The Herald
MESSAGES of shock and outrage continued to pour in from both local and international leaders yesterday after the murder at the weekend of world-renowned KwaZulu Natal historian David Rattray.
http://www.theherald.co.za/herald/news/n04_29012007.htm








 


THE ANGLO ZULU WAR
HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Hon. President Prof. John Laband FRGS
Hon. Vice President Ian Knight BA, FRGS

Society Consultants;

In South Africa;- Prof. John Laband FRGS, Xolani Mkhize, David Charles FRGS

United Kingdom;- Col. Alan Spicer RAMC, Dr. Christopher Forester, Brian Best FRGS, Ian Knight BA FRGS, Ian Castle FRGS

From The Editor, Dr Adrian Greaves FRGS
Woodbury House, Woodchurch Road, Tenterden, Kent, TN30 7AE, Great Britain.
Tel; 01580-764189 Fax; 01580-766648

E-Mail: info@anglozuluwar.com  Web: www.anglozuluwar.com

Please note that for security reasons, we do not open unsolicited attachments from anonymous senders

 This site is designed, managed and hosted by Independent Web Marketing


Sign In