Julius Jeppe Monument

Also known as Jeppe Memorial

Table of Contents

Last Updated: July 15, 2025

About Julius Jeppe Monument

The Julius Jeppe Monument  is an obelisk constructed of red granite and sandstone, on the north side of the Jeppe Oval.

Address

Jeppestown Oval, off Mordaunt Street, Jeppe

History

The memorial honours Transvaal and Johannesburg pioneer Julius Jeppe the Elder (Julius Gottlieb Ernst Christian, born in Germany 1821, died on the Reef in 1893). Erected as Johannesburg’s first public memorial in 1892, the obelisk was placed in the Jeppestown Oval, an early public park.In the Town Engineer’s Report for 1895, it is stated that a monument had been erected “to the memory of the late Mr. Julius Jeppe ... founder of Jeppes Town”.

Julius Jeppe Senior built the first brick house in Johannesburg in 1886, and was the manager of Jeppe’s Township (The Diggers’ News of 4 April 1889). He formed the Jeppe and Ford Estate Company together with L.P. Ford. His sons, Carl and (the later Sir) Julius Jeppe were also partners. This company laid out Johannesburg’s first suburbs, Jeppestown and Fordsburg.

 

Statement of Significance

This is the first public monument erected in Johannesburg, dating from 1892. One of the oldest structures to have survived from Johannesburg’s formative early period, it commemorates a founding father of the city and head of the influential Jeppe family. It is closely associated with the history of one of Johannesburg’s oldest suburbs, Jeppestown, which was named either for the Jeppe family or specifically for the suburb’s founder, Julius Jeppe.

Inscription

a).Erected in Memory of GEC Jeppe The founder of Jeppestown 1893 On the side of the pedestal, in German, similar to a). b).Lives of all good men remind us We can make our lives sublime, And departing, leave behind us Footprints in the sands of time. Footprints that perhaps another Sailing o’er life’s solemn main; A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, shall take heart again. c). UBER ALLEN GIPFELN 1ST RUH IN ALLEN WIPFELN SPUREST DU KAUM EINEN HAUGH DIE VOGELEIN SCHWEIGEN IM WALDE WARTE NUR, BALDE RUHEST DU AUCH

Legal Status

Protected under Section 37 of the National Heritage Resources Act (Public Monuments and Memorials).  “Public monuments and memorials must, without the need to publish a notice to this effect, be protected in the same manner as places which are entered in a heritage register …”

Photo courtesy: Kabelo Mokoena (Sunday Times)

Explore Joburg

A culmination of research gathered over many years, the Online Johannesburg Heritage Register is being launched on Nelson Mandela Day 18 July 2025.

Among the many heritage sites featured is Chancellor House, the downtown offices of Mandela and Tambo Attorneys in the 1950s. After having been vacant and shuttered for more than a decade, this iconic building is being revived and brought to life once again as offices for the Community Development Department, which oversees the City’s Arts, Culture & Heritage Services.