The Somerset East Museum is nestled at the foot of the Boschberg Mountain and is one of the oldest buildings in town.
Wesleyan missionaries were given a site for a chapel and graveyard, and the chapel was consecrated in 1828. In July 1832 the property was transferred to the Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk of Somerset and by 1834 Ds. Morgan asked that the chapel be converted into a parsonage for him to live in. The ground floor took on its present design; namely sitting room, passage, and dining room. An upper floor was added, with two large bedrooms. Fireplaces were built in all four main rooms, and yellowwood floors were installed. Two wings were added, one a kitchen and one a study.
The museum is laid out mostly as a residence to depict the lives of the Dutch Reformed Church ministers that resided in the house, but some additional exhibits have been added to include a more rounded history of the area and all its people. One of these exhibits focuses on the Slagtersnek rebellion.
In 1971, the building, held to be “an exquisite example of a Georgian manor house, was made available as a museum. The Museum was inaugurated during the celebration of Somerset East’s 150th anniversary in 1975.
Some interesting discoveries made during the restoration included the tiny grave, complete with headstone, found when damaged floorboards were being replaced in the sitting room. This bears the inscription – Sacred to the memory of Alexander Thomas, son of Rev. S.J.H. Kay, who died on 8th May 1828, aged 12 months.