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Fish Hoek or Vissers Baay or Visch Hoek appears on the earliest maps of the Cape.
The arrival of European settlers in 1652 forced the indigenous population to leave the area, and during the 18th century farmers appeared in the Noordhoek area.
Fish Hoek beach was used on an informal basis for whaling and fishing, but it was not until 1918 that it was laid out as a township.
The first grant of Crown land in Fish Hoek was granted to Andries Bruins in 1818.
The land was sold several times before being bought by Hester Sophia de Kock in 1883.
She was then a spinster of 51 years old.
In 1901, late in life, she married a local farmer, one Jacob Isaac de Villiers, who came to live with her on the farm.
Although she farmed wheat and vegetables ' she started providing accommodation for people who wanted to stay in Fish Hoek, and so became the first local tourist entrepreneur.
Having realized that Fish Hoek was becoming popular, she left instructions in her will that the farm was to be surveyed and the land sold as building plots.
After the deaths of Hester and Jacob, the land was sold off, the first sale taking place in 1918.
The oldest house on the bay, now named Uitkyk, was bought as a fisherman's cottage in 1918 by the Mossop family of Mossop Leathers, and is still in the Mossop family.
There had been a building on that site since the 1690s ; a poshuis or post house and a whaling station office is all that is known of its history.

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