HistoryDuring the 19th Century, the river formed the border of the Cape Colony and was hotly contested during the Xhosa Wars of 1779 to 1878 between the indigenous Xhosa nation on the one side and the Dutch farmers and the 1820 Settlers from England on the other, and in 1835, the Fingo tribe was permitted to settle on the river's banks. During apartheid, the lower reaches formed the western boundary of the nominally independent Ciskei homeland. EconomyOrange River ProjectIn the 1970s, a major water project brought Orange River water, via the Fish River, for agricultural and industrial use. The tunnel for this was a major engineering undertaking, with the intake at Oviston (an acronym, in Afrikaans, for Orange-Fish Tunnel). Oviston is on the shores of the Gariep Dam. A hydro-electric generating plant is placed at the Fish River egress, but is uneconomic and is not in use. Mixing of waters from two watersheds is environmentally disastrous - much of the Fish River ecosystem is now taken over by Orange River flora and fauna. Recreation
TownsCradock is a significant town through which the Fish River runs. The area between Port Elizabeth and the Fish River is known as the Sunshine Coast. Great Fish PointGreat Fish Point is a lighthouse situated near the mouth of the Great Fish River, about 25 km from the coastal holiday resort of Port Alfred. Before the lighthouse was built in 1898, two ship's lamps exhibiting fixed green lights were erected on a flagstaff at Port Alfred, but these lights later proved to be inadequate. The clockwork system which used to drive the lens is still intact and on display. Although the lighthouse itself is only 9 meters high, it is situated 76 meters above sea level.
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