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Harry Johnston

Sir Henry Hamilton Johnston GCMG KCB (12 June 1858 – 31 July 1927) was a British explorer, botanist, artist, colonial administrator, and linguist who travelled widely across Africa to speak some of the languages spoken by people on that continent. He published 40 books on subjects related to the continent of Africa and was one of the key players in the Scramble for Africa that occurred at the end of the 19th century.

Harry Johnston, by Elliott & Fry.

Early years edit

Johnston was born at Kennington Park, south London, the son of John Brookes Johnstone and Esther Laetitia Hamilton. He attended Stockwell grammar school and then King's College London, followed by four years studying painting at the Royal Academy.[1] In connection with his study he travelled to Europe and North Africa, visiting the little-known (by Europeans) interior of Tunisia.[2]

Exploration in Africa edit

In 1882, he visited southern Angola with the Earl of Mayo, and in the following year met Henry Morton Stanley in the Congo, becoming one of the first Europeans after Stanley to see the river above the Stanley Pool.

His developing reputation led the Royal Geographical Society and the British Association to appoint him leader of a scientific expedition to Mount Kilimanjaro in 1884.[1] On the expedition, Johnston concluded treaties with local chiefs (which were then transferred to the British East Africa Company), in competition with German efforts to do likewise.[1][3]

British colonial service and the Cape to Cairo vision edit

In October 1886, the British government appointed him vice-consul in Cameroon and the Niger River delta area, where a protectorate had been declared in 1885, and he became acting consul in 1887,[4] deposing and banishing the local chief Jaja.

While in West Africa in 1886, Johnston sketched what has been termed a "fantasy map" of his ideas of how the African continent could be divided among the colonial powers. This envisaged two blocks of British colonies, one of continuous territory in West Africa, the Nile valley and much of East Africa as far south as Lake Tanganyika and Lake Nyasa, the other in southern Africa south of the Zambezi. This left a continuous band in Portuguese occupation from Angola to Mozambique and Germany in possession of much of the East African coast.[5]

The original proposal for a Cape to Cairo railway was made in 1874 by Edwin Arnold, the then editor of the Daily Telegraph, which was joint sponsor of the expedition by H.M. Stanley to Africa to discover the course of the Congo River.[6] The proposed route involved a mixture of railway and river transport between Elizabethville, now Lubumbashi in the Belgian Congo and Sennar in the Sudan rather than a completely rail one.[7] Johnston later acknowledged his debt to Stanley and Arnold and when on leave in England in 1888, he revived the Cape-to-Cairo concept of acquiring a continuous band of British territory down Africa in discussion with Lord Salisbury. Johnston then published an supporting the idea article in Times anonymously, as "by an African Explorer" and later in 1888 and 1889 published a number of articles in other newspapers and journals with Salisbury's tacit approval.[8]

Scramble for Katanga edit

The Berlin Conference had allocated Katanga to the sphere of influence of King Leopold of Belgium's Congo Free State, but under the Berlin Conference's Principle of Effectivity this was only provisional. In July 1890, Leopold protested to Lord Salisbury that Johnston, as agent for Cecil Rhodes, was circulating maps showing that the Congo Free State did not include Katanga, and in response to Salisbury's enquiries, in August 1890 Johnston presented Rhodes' claim, which included the false information that Msiri, King of Garanganze in Katanga had asked for British protection.[9]

In November 1890, to justify his claim, Johnston sent Alfred Sharpe (who would become his successor in Nyasaland) to act for Rhodes and the British South Africa Company (BSAC), to obtain a treaty with Msiri, a move which had the potential to precipitate an Anglo-Belgian crisis. Sharpe failed with Msiri, though he obtained treaties with Mwata Kazembe covering the eastern side of the Luapula River and Lake Mweru, and with other chiefs covering the southern end of Lake Tanganyika. When Leopold again protested to Salisbury in May 1891, the latter had to admit Msiri had not signed a treaty asking for British protection and left Katanga open to Belgian colonisation. In 1891 Leopold sent the Stairs Expedition to Katanga. Johnston dissuaded it from accessing Katanga through Nyasaland, but it went through German East Africa instead, and took Katanga after killing Msiri. The southern border of the Congo Free State was settled by an Anglo-Congo agreement of 1894.[10]

Nyasaland (British Central Africa Protectorate) edit

 
Portrait of Harry Johnston by Theodore Blake Wirgman (1894)

In 1879, the Portuguese government formally claimed the area south and east of the Ruo River (currently the southeastern border of Malawi) and then, in 1882, occupied the lower Shire River valley as far north as the Ruo. It attempted to gain British acceptance of this claim without success, and also failed in a claim that the Shire Highlands was part of Portuguese East Africa, as it was not under effective occupation[11] As late as 1888, the British Foreign Office would not accept responsibility for British missionaries and settlers in the Shire Highlands after the African Lakes Corporation had tried but failed to become a Chartered company with interests there and around the western shore of Lake Malawi.[12]

However, in 1885–86, Alexandre de Serpa Pinto had undertaken an expedition which reached Shire Highlands, which had failed to make any treaties of protection with the Yao chiefs west of Lake Malawi.[13] To prevent possible Portuguese occupation, in November 1888, Johnston was appointed as Commissioner and Consul-general for the Mozambique and the Nyasa districts, and arrived in Blantyre in March 1889.[14] On his way to take up his appointment, Johnston spent six weeks in Lisbon attempting to negotiate an acceptable agreement on Portuguese and British spheres of influence in southeastern Africa. However, as the draft agreement did not expressly exclude the Shire Highlands from the Portuguese sphere, it was rejected by the Foreign Office.[15]

Among several pressing problems was the Karonga War, a dispute between Swahili traders in slaves and ivory with their Henga allies on one side and the African Lakes Trading Company and factions of the Ngonde people on the other which had broken out in 1887.[16] As Johnston had no significant forces at that time, he agreed to a truce with the Swahili leaders in October 1889,[17] but the Swahili traders did not adhere to its terms.[18]

In late 1888 and early 1889, the Portuguese government sent two expeditions to make treaties of protection with local chiefs, one under Antonio Cardoso set off toward Lake Malawi, the other under Alexandre de Serpa Pinto moved up the Shire valley. Between them, they made over twenty treaties with chiefs in what is now Malawi.[19] Johnston met Serpa Pinto in August 1889 east of the Ruo and advised him not to cross the river, but Serpa Pinto disregarded this and crossed the river to Chiromo, now in Malawi.[20] In September, following minor clashes between Serpa Pinto's force and local Africans, Johnston's deputy declared a Shire Highlands Protectorate, despite the contrary instructions.[21] Johnston's proclamation of a further protectorate west of Lake Malawi, the Nyasaland Districts Protectorate, was endorsed by the Foreign Office in May 1891.[22]

Johnston arrived in Chiromo, in the south of Nyasaland, on 16 July 1891.[23] By that time he had already selected a team of men who were to assist in forming the administration of the new protectorate. They included Alfred Sharpe (Johnston's Deputy Commissioner), Bertram L. Sclater (Surveyor, Roadmaker, and Commandant of the Constabulary), Alexander Whyte (a zoologist who was to discover several new species in Nyasaland), Cecil Montgomery Maguire (Military Commandant), Hugh Charlie Marshall (Customs Officer, Collector of Revenues and Postmaster for the Chiromo district), John Buchanan (an agriculturalist who had been in Nyasaland since 1876, and was appointed Vice Consul by Johnston), and others.

In 1891, Johnston only controlled a fraction of the Shire Highlands, itself a small part of the whole protectorate. He was provided with a small force of Indian troops in 1891, and began to train African soldiers and police. At first, Johnston used his small force in the south of the protectorate to suppress slave trading by Yao chiefs, who had established links with Swahili traders in ivory and slaves from the early 19th century. As the Yao people had no central authority, Johnston was able to defeat one group at a time, although this took until 1894, as he left the most powerful chief, Makanjira, until almost last, starting an amphibious operation against him in late 1893.[24]

Before the British Central Africa Protectorate was proclaimed in May 1891, a number of European companies and settlers had made, or claimed to have made, treaties with local chiefs under which the land owned by the African communities that occupied it was transferred to the Europeans in exchange for protection and some trade goods.[25] The African Lakes Company claimed over 2.75 million acres in the north of the protectorate, some under treaties that claimed to transfer sovereignty to the company,[26] and three others individuals claimed to have purchased large areas of land in the south. Eugene Sharrer claimed 363,034 acres, Alexander Low Bruce claimed 176,000 acres, and John Buchanan and his brothers claimed a further 167,823 acres. These lands were purchased for trivial quantities of goods under agreements signed by chiefs with no understanding of English concepts of land tenure.[27][28]

Johnston had the task of reviewing these land claims, and began to do so in late 1892, as the proclamation of the protectorate had been followed by a wholesale land grab, with huge areas of land bought for trivial sums and some claims overlapping. He rejected any suggestion that treaties made before the protectorate was established could transfer sovereignty to individuals or companies, but accept that they could be evidence of land sales. Although Johnston accepted that the land belonged to its African communities, so their chiefs had no right to alienate it, he suggested that each community had given their chief this right. Despite having no legal training, he claimed that, as Commissioner, he was entitled to investigate these land sales and to issue Certificates of Claim registering freehold title to the European claimants. He rejected very few claims, despite the questionable evidence for several major ones. The existing African villages and farms were exempted from these sales, and the villagers were told that their homes and fields were not being alienated. Despite this, the concentration of much of the most fertile land in the Shire Highlands in the hands of European owners had profound economic consequences that lasted throughout the colonial period.[29][30]

In April 1894, Johnston returned to England and was away for a year. He had quarrelled with Cecil Rhodes who had so far provided most of his funds, and during the first three years the administration had run up a deficit of £20,000. During his leave he managed to persuade the British Government to agree to take over the financing of the country. On his way back he visited Egypt and India with a view to recruiting soldiers, and eventually arrived back in Nyasaland with a flotilla of boats, 202 Sikh soldiers, and over 400 other men. 4000 porters were recruited in the Shire Highlands to carry stores and equipment. Johnston reached Zomba on 3 May 1895.[31]

Johnston visited Karonga in June 1895 to try to make a settlement but the Swahili leaders refused either to meet him curtail their raiding activities, so Johnston decided on military action.[32] In November 1895, Johnston embarked with a force of over 400 Sikh and African riflemen, with artillery and machine guns on steamers, to Karonga and surrounded the traders' main stockaded town, bombarding it for two days and finally assaulting it on 4 December. The Swahili leader, Mlozi, was captured, given a cursory trial and hanged on 5 December and between 200 and 300 of fighters and several hundred non-combatants were killed, many while attempting to surrender. Other Swahili stockades did not resist and were destroyed.[33]

North-Eastern Rhodesia and Nyasaland edit

Johnston realised the strategic importance of Lake Tanganyika to the British, especially since the territory between the lake and the coast had become German East Africa forming a break of nearly 900 kilometres (560 mi) in the chain of British colonies in the Cape to Cairo dream. However the north end of Lake Tanganyika was only 230 kilometres (140 mi) from British-controlled Uganda, and so a British presence at the south end of the lake was a priority. Although the northern boundaries of North-Eastern Rhodesia and Nyasaland were eventually settled by negotiations between Britain, Germany. Portugal and the Congo Free State, Johnston ensured that British bomas were established (in addition to those in Nyasaland) east of Luapula-Mweru at Chiengi and the Kalungwishi River, at the south end of Lake Tanganyika at Abercorn, and at Fort Jameson between Mozambique and the Luangwa valley to demonstrate effective occupation.[34]

Until 1899, Johnson had administrative control of the territory which became North-Eastern Rhodesia (the north-eastern half of today's Zambia), and he helped to set up and oversee the British South Africa Company's administration in that area. North-Eastern Rhodesia was little developed in this period, being regarded principally as a labour reserve, with only a handful of company administrators.[35]

Despite missed out in Katanga, altogether he helped to consolidate an area of nearly half a million square kilometres into the British Empire – nearly 200,000 square miles (520,000 km2), or twice the area of the United Kingdom in 2009 – lying between the lower Luangwa River valley and lakes Nyasa, Tanganyika, and Mweru.

Later years edit

 
Okapi, from an original painting by Johnston, based on preserved skins (1901)

In 1896 in recognition of this achievement he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB), but afflicted by tropical fevers, transferred to Tunis as consul-general.[1] In the same year, he had married the Hon. Winifred Mary Irby, daughter of Florance George Henry Irby, fifth Baron Boston.[36]

In 1899 Sir Harry was sent to Uganda as special commissioner to reorganize the administration of that protectorate after the suppression of the mutiny of the Sudanese soldiers and to end an ongoing war with Unyoro.[1] He improved the colonial administration, and concluded the Buganda Agreement of 1900, dividing the land between the UK and the chiefs. For his services in Uganda, he received the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG) in the King's Birthday Honours list in November 1901.[37] Also in 1901, Johnston was the first recipient of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society's Livingstone Medal,[38] and in the following year he was appointed a member of the council of the Zoological Society of London.[39] He received the honorary degree Doctor of Science (D.Sc.) from the University of Cambridge in May 1902.[40] The Royal Geographical Society awarded him their 1904 Founder's Medal for his services to African exploration.[41]

In 1902 his wife gave birth to twin boys, but neither survived more than a few hours, and they had no more children. His sister, Mabel Johnston, married Arnold Dolmetsch, an instrument maker and member of the Bloomsbury set, in 1903.

In 1903 and in 1906 he stood for parliament for the Liberal Party, but was unsuccessful on both occasions. In 1906, the Johnstons moved to the hamlet of Poling, near Arundel in West Sussex, where Harry Johnston largely concentrated on his literary endeavours. He took to writing novels, which were frequently short-lived, while his accounts of his own voyages through central Africa were rather more enduring.

1903 Rochester by-election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Charles Tuff 2,504 55.8 N/A
Liberal Harry Johnston 1,983 44.2 N/A
Majority 521 11.6 N/A
Turnout 4,487 86.2 N/A
Registered electors 5,206
Conservative hold
 
Wall plaque erected to the memory of Sir Harry Johnston in the church of St Nicholas, Poling, West Sussex. Designed and cut by Eric Gill

Harry Johnston suffered two strokes in 1925, from which he became partially paralysed and never recovered, dying two years later in 1927 at Woodsetts House near Worksop in Nottinghamshire. He was buried in the churchyard of St Nicholas, Poling, West Sussex, where there is a commemorative wall plaque within the nave of the church designed and cut by the Arts and Crafts sculptor and typeface designer Eric Gill who lived in nearby Ditchling.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

Harry Johnston is commemorated in the scientific names of the okapi, Okapia johnstoni and of two species of African lizards, Trioceros johnstoni and Latastia johnstoni.[42]

The falls at Mambidima on the Luapula River were named Johnston Falls by the British in his honour.

Sir Harry Johnston Primary school in Zomba, Malawi is also named after him.

Prominent Bengali author Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay mentioned the influence of Sir H. H. Johnston's works, one of many, in helping him portray scenes convincingly in his famous Bengali adventure novel Chander Pahar.

Books edit

 
Frontispiece painting "The Negro in West Africa – Liberian Hinterland" painted by Johnston and published in his book The Negro in the New World (1910)
  • The River Congo (1884)
  • The Kilima-Njaro Expedition (1886)
  • The History of a Slave (1889)
  • British Central Africa (1897)
  • A History of the Colonization of Africa by Alien Races (1899)
  • The Uganda Protectorate (1902)
  • The Nile Quest: The Story of Exploration (1903)
  • Liberia (1907)
  • George Grenfell and the Congo (1908)
  • The Negro in the New World (1910)
  • The Opening Up of Africa (London: Williams & Norgate, n.d.) (1911)
  • Phonetic Spelling (1913) (online)
  • Pioneers in India (1913)
  • A Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languages (1919, 1922) (online)
  • The Gay-Dombeys (1919) – a sequel to Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
  • Mrs. Warren's Daughter—a sequel to Mrs. Warren's Profession by George Bernard Shaw
  • The Backward Peoples and Our Relations with Them (1920)
  • The Man Who Did the Right Thing (1921) – novel
  • The Story of my Life (1923) – autobiography
  • The Veneerings – a sequel to Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens
  • Manuscripts of collected vocabularies of Sir Harry Hamilton Johnston are held by SOAS Archives

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Johnston, Sir Henry Hamilton" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 473–474.
  2. ^ Obituary, (1927). Henry Hamilton Johnston, Ibis, Vol. XLIV, No. 1, p. 735.
  3. ^ "Obituary: Henry Hamilton Johnston". Ibis. XLIV (1): 735–6. 1927.
  4. ^ "Obituary: Henry Hamilton Johnston". Ibis. XLIV (1): 736. 1927.
  5. ^ . National Archives. 2 January 2013. Archived from the original on 26 April 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  6. ^ K J Panton (2015). A Historical Dictionary of the British Empire. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-81087-801-3.
  7. ^ L Weintal (1923). The story of the Cape to Cairo Railway and River Route from 1887 to 1922. Vol. 4. London: Pioneer Publishing. p. 4.
  8. ^ G Harper (2002). Comedy, Fantasy and Colonialism. London: Bloomsbury Publications. pp. 142–3. ISBN 978-0-82644-919-1..
  9. ^ N. Ascherson (1999). The King Incorporated: Leopold the Second and the Congo. London: Granta Books. p. 161.
  10. ^ N. Ascherson (1999). The King Incorporated: Leopold the Second and the Congo. pp. 162–3.
  11. ^ F Axelson (1967). Portugal and the Scramble for Africa. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press. pp. 182–3, 198–200.
  12. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  13. ^ M Newitt (1995). A History of Mozambique. London: Hurst & Co. pp. 276–7, 325–6. ISBN 1-85065-172-8.
  14. ^ P. T. Terry (1965). "The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887–1895 Part II". The Nyasaland Journal. 18 (2): 39.
  15. ^ Sir Harry Johnston (1897). British Central Africa. New York: Edward Arnold. p. 81.
  16. ^ Owen J. M. Kalinga (1980). "The Karonga War: Commercial Rivalry and Politics of Survival". Journal of African History. 21 (2): 209. doi:10.1017/S002185370001817X. S2CID 153579730.
  17. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 57–8. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  18. ^ P. T. Terry (1965). "The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887–1895 Part II". The Nyasaland Journal. 18 (2): 41–3.
  19. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 52–3. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  20. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 53, 55. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  21. ^ M Newitt (1995). A History of Mozambique. London: Hurst & Co. p. 346. ISBN 1-85065-172-8.
  22. ^ R I Rotberg (1965). The Rise of Nationalism in Central Africa: The Making of Malawi and Zambia, 1873–1964. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 15.
  23. ^ Baker, C.A. (1970). Johnston's Administration: 1891–1897. Malawi Government Ministry of Local Government, Department of Antiquities. p. 21.
  24. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 58–62. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  25. ^ B Pachai (1973). "Land Policies in Malawi: An Examination of the Colonial Legacy". The Journal of African History. 14 (4): 685. doi:10.1017/S0021853700013116. S2CID 162918655.
  26. ^ Owen J. M. Kalinga (1984). "European Settlers, African Apprehensions, and Colonial Economic Policy: The North Nyasa Native Reserves Commission of 1929". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 17 (4): 642.
  27. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 77–8. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  28. ^ Sir Harry Johnston (1897). British Central Africa. New York: Edward Arnold. p. 85.
  29. ^ Sir Harry Johnston (1897). British Central Africa. New York: Edward Arnold. pp. 112–13.
  30. ^ B Pachai (1973). "Land Policies in Malawi: An Examination of the Colonial Legacy". The Journal of African History. 14 (4): 682–3, 685. doi:10.1017/S0021853700013116. S2CID 162918655.
  31. ^ Baker, C.A. (1970). Johnston's Administration: 1891–1897. Malawi Government Ministry of Local Government, Department of Antiquities. pp. 42–4.
  32. ^ P. T. Terry (1965). "The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887–1895 Part II". The Nyasaland Journal. 18 (2): 43–4.
  33. ^ J McCracken (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. pp. 61–3. ISBN 978-1-84701-050-6.
  34. ^ A. Keppel-Jones (1983). Rhodes and Rhodesia, 1884–1902. Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 549–50.
  35. ^ E. A. Walker (1963). The Cambridge History of the British Empire. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 696–7.
  36. ^ Obituary, (1927). Sir Harry H. Johnston, The Geographical Journal, Vol. 70, No. 4, pp. 415–416.
  37. ^ "No. 27377". The London Gazette. 15 November 1901. p. 7393.
  38. ^ RSGS memorial to recipients of the Livingstone Medal
  39. ^ "Zoological Society of London". The Times. No. 36755. London. 30 April 1902. p. 6.
  40. ^ "University intelligence". The Times. No. 36779. London. 28 May 1902. p. 12.
  41. ^ (PDF). Royal Geographical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  42. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Johnston", pp. 135–136).
  43. ^ International Plant Names Index.  H.H.Johnst.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Works by Harry Johnston at Project Gutenberg
  • Full text of Johnston's book British Central Africa (1897). (text only)
  • Full text of Johnston's book British Central Africa (1897). (facsimile)
  • Works by or about Harry Johnston at Internet Archive
  • Works by Harry Johnston at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Harry Johnston at Open Library
  • The International Primary School which bears Sir Harry Johnston's name was founded in the early 1950s in Zomba, Malawi
  • Newspaper clippings about Harry Johnston in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

harry, johnston, other, people, named, disambiguation, henry, hamilton, johnston, gcmg, june, 1858, july, 1927, british, explorer, botanist, artist, colonial, administrator, linguist, travelled, widely, across, africa, speak, some, languages, spoken, people, t. For other people named Harry Johnston see Harry Johnston disambiguation Sir Henry Hamilton Johnston GCMG KCB 12 June 1858 31 July 1927 was a British explorer botanist artist colonial administrator and linguist who travelled widely across Africa to speak some of the languages spoken by people on that continent He published 40 books on subjects related to the continent of Africa and was one of the key players in the Scramble for Africa that occurred at the end of the 19th century Harry Johnston by Elliott amp Fry Contents 1 Early years 2 Exploration in Africa 3 British colonial service and the Cape to Cairo vision 4 Scramble for Katanga 5 Nyasaland British Central Africa Protectorate 6 North Eastern Rhodesia and Nyasaland 7 Later years 8 Legacy 9 Books 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly years editJohnston was born at Kennington Park south London the son of John Brookes Johnstone and Esther Laetitia Hamilton He attended Stockwell grammar school and then King s College London followed by four years studying painting at the Royal Academy 1 In connection with his study he travelled to Europe and North Africa visiting the little known by Europeans interior of Tunisia 2 Exploration in Africa editIn 1882 he visited southern Angola with the Earl of Mayo and in the following year met Henry Morton Stanley in the Congo becoming one of the first Europeans after Stanley to see the river above the Stanley Pool His developing reputation led the Royal Geographical Society and the British Association to appoint him leader of a scientific expedition to Mount Kilimanjaro in 1884 1 On the expedition Johnston concluded treaties with local chiefs which were then transferred to the British East Africa Company in competition with German efforts to do likewise 1 3 British colonial service and the Cape to Cairo vision editIn October 1886 the British government appointed him vice consul in Cameroon and the Niger River delta area where a protectorate had been declared in 1885 and he became acting consul in 1887 4 deposing and banishing the local chief Jaja While in West Africa in 1886 Johnston sketched what has been termed a fantasy map of his ideas of how the African continent could be divided among the colonial powers This envisaged two blocks of British colonies one of continuous territory in West Africa the Nile valley and much of East Africa as far south as Lake Tanganyika and Lake Nyasa the other in southern Africa south of the Zambezi This left a continuous band in Portuguese occupation from Angola to Mozambique and Germany in possession of much of the East African coast 5 The original proposal for a Cape to Cairo railway was made in 1874 by Edwin Arnold the then editor of the Daily Telegraph which was joint sponsor of the expedition by H M Stanley to Africa to discover the course of the Congo River 6 The proposed route involved a mixture of railway and river transport between Elizabethville now Lubumbashi in the Belgian Congo and Sennar in the Sudan rather than a completely rail one 7 Johnston later acknowledged his debt to Stanley and Arnold and when on leave in England in 1888 he revived the Cape to Cairo concept of acquiring a continuous band of British territory down Africa in discussion with Lord Salisbury Johnston then published an supporting the idea article in Times anonymously as by an African Explorer and later in 1888 and 1889 published a number of articles in other newspapers and journals with Salisbury s tacit approval 8 Scramble for Katanga editThe Berlin Conference had allocated Katanga to the sphere of influence of King Leopold of Belgium s Congo Free State but under the Berlin Conference s Principle of Effectivity this was only provisional In July 1890 Leopold protested to Lord Salisbury that Johnston as agent for Cecil Rhodes was circulating maps showing that the Congo Free State did not include Katanga and in response to Salisbury s enquiries in August 1890 Johnston presented Rhodes claim which included the false information that Msiri King of Garanganze in Katanga had asked for British protection 9 In November 1890 to justify his claim Johnston sent Alfred Sharpe who would become his successor in Nyasaland to act for Rhodes and the British South Africa Company BSAC to obtain a treaty with Msiri a move which had the potential to precipitate an Anglo Belgian crisis Sharpe failed with Msiri though he obtained treaties with Mwata Kazembe covering the eastern side of the Luapula River and Lake Mweru and with other chiefs covering the southern end of Lake Tanganyika When Leopold again protested to Salisbury in May 1891 the latter had to admit Msiri had not signed a treaty asking for British protection and left Katanga open to Belgian colonisation In 1891 Leopold sent the Stairs Expedition to Katanga Johnston dissuaded it from accessing Katanga through Nyasaland but it went through German East Africa instead and took Katanga after killing Msiri The southern border of the Congo Free State was settled by an Anglo Congo agreement of 1894 10 Nyasaland British Central Africa Protectorate edit nbsp Portrait of Harry Johnston by Theodore Blake Wirgman 1894 In 1879 the Portuguese government formally claimed the area south and east of the Ruo River currently the southeastern border of Malawi and then in 1882 occupied the lower Shire River valley as far north as the Ruo It attempted to gain British acceptance of this claim without success and also failed in a claim that the Shire Highlands was part of Portuguese East Africa as it was not under effective occupation 11 As late as 1888 the British Foreign Office would not accept responsibility for British missionaries and settlers in the Shire Highlands after the African Lakes Corporation had tried but failed to become a Chartered company with interests there and around the western shore of Lake Malawi 12 However in 1885 86 Alexandre de Serpa Pinto had undertaken an expedition which reached Shire Highlands which had failed to make any treaties of protection with the Yao chiefs west of Lake Malawi 13 To prevent possible Portuguese occupation in November 1888 Johnston was appointed as Commissioner and Consul general for the Mozambique and the Nyasa districts and arrived in Blantyre in March 1889 14 On his way to take up his appointment Johnston spent six weeks in Lisbon attempting to negotiate an acceptable agreement on Portuguese and British spheres of influence in southeastern Africa However as the draft agreement did not expressly exclude the Shire Highlands from the Portuguese sphere it was rejected by the Foreign Office 15 Among several pressing problems was the Karonga War a dispute between Swahili traders in slaves and ivory with their Henga allies on one side and the African Lakes Trading Company and factions of the Ngonde people on the other which had broken out in 1887 16 As Johnston had no significant forces at that time he agreed to a truce with the Swahili leaders in October 1889 17 but the Swahili traders did not adhere to its terms 18 In late 1888 and early 1889 the Portuguese government sent two expeditions to make treaties of protection with local chiefs one under Antonio Cardoso set off toward Lake Malawi the other under Alexandre de Serpa Pinto moved up the Shire valley Between them they made over twenty treaties with chiefs in what is now Malawi 19 Johnston met Serpa Pinto in August 1889 east of the Ruo and advised him not to cross the river but Serpa Pinto disregarded this and crossed the river to Chiromo now in Malawi 20 In September following minor clashes between Serpa Pinto s force and local Africans Johnston s deputy declared a Shire Highlands Protectorate despite the contrary instructions 21 Johnston s proclamation of a further protectorate west of Lake Malawi the Nyasaland Districts Protectorate was endorsed by the Foreign Office in May 1891 22 Johnston arrived in Chiromo in the south of Nyasaland on 16 July 1891 23 By that time he had already selected a team of men who were to assist in forming the administration of the new protectorate They included Alfred Sharpe Johnston s Deputy Commissioner Bertram L Sclater Surveyor Roadmaker and Commandant of the Constabulary Alexander Whyte a zoologist who was to discover several new species in Nyasaland Cecil Montgomery Maguire Military Commandant Hugh Charlie Marshall Customs Officer Collector of Revenues and Postmaster for the Chiromo district John Buchanan an agriculturalist who had been in Nyasaland since 1876 and was appointed Vice Consul by Johnston and others In 1891 Johnston only controlled a fraction of the Shire Highlands itself a small part of the whole protectorate He was provided with a small force of Indian troops in 1891 and began to train African soldiers and police At first Johnston used his small force in the south of the protectorate to suppress slave trading by Yao chiefs who had established links with Swahili traders in ivory and slaves from the early 19th century As the Yao people had no central authority Johnston was able to defeat one group at a time although this took until 1894 as he left the most powerful chief Makanjira until almost last starting an amphibious operation against him in late 1893 24 Before the British Central Africa Protectorate was proclaimed in May 1891 a number of European companies and settlers had made or claimed to have made treaties with local chiefs under which the land owned by the African communities that occupied it was transferred to the Europeans in exchange for protection and some trade goods 25 The African Lakes Company claimed over 2 75 million acres in the north of the protectorate some under treaties that claimed to transfer sovereignty to the company 26 and three others individuals claimed to have purchased large areas of land in the south Eugene Sharrer claimed 363 034 acres Alexander Low Bruce claimed 176 000 acres and John Buchanan and his brothers claimed a further 167 823 acres These lands were purchased for trivial quantities of goods under agreements signed by chiefs with no understanding of English concepts of land tenure 27 28 Johnston had the task of reviewing these land claims and began to do so in late 1892 as the proclamation of the protectorate had been followed by a wholesale land grab with huge areas of land bought for trivial sums and some claims overlapping He rejected any suggestion that treaties made before the protectorate was established could transfer sovereignty to individuals or companies but accept that they could be evidence of land sales Although Johnston accepted that the land belonged to its African communities so their chiefs had no right to alienate it he suggested that each community had given their chief this right Despite having no legal training he claimed that as Commissioner he was entitled to investigate these land sales and to issue Certificates of Claim registering freehold title to the European claimants He rejected very few claims despite the questionable evidence for several major ones The existing African villages and farms were exempted from these sales and the villagers were told that their homes and fields were not being alienated Despite this the concentration of much of the most fertile land in the Shire Highlands in the hands of European owners had profound economic consequences that lasted throughout the colonial period 29 30 In April 1894 Johnston returned to England and was away for a year He had quarrelled with Cecil Rhodes who had so far provided most of his funds and during the first three years the administration had run up a deficit of 20 000 During his leave he managed to persuade the British Government to agree to take over the financing of the country On his way back he visited Egypt and India with a view to recruiting soldiers and eventually arrived back in Nyasaland with a flotilla of boats 202 Sikh soldiers and over 400 other men 4000 porters were recruited in the Shire Highlands to carry stores and equipment Johnston reached Zomba on 3 May 1895 31 Johnston visited Karonga in June 1895 to try to make a settlement but the Swahili leaders refused either to meet him curtail their raiding activities so Johnston decided on military action 32 In November 1895 Johnston embarked with a force of over 400 Sikh and African riflemen with artillery and machine guns on steamers to Karonga and surrounded the traders main stockaded town bombarding it for two days and finally assaulting it on 4 December The Swahili leader Mlozi was captured given a cursory trial and hanged on 5 December and between 200 and 300 of fighters and several hundred non combatants were killed many while attempting to surrender Other Swahili stockades did not resist and were destroyed 33 North Eastern Rhodesia and Nyasaland editJohnston realised the strategic importance of Lake Tanganyika to the British especially since the territory between the lake and the coast had become German East Africa forming a break of nearly 900 kilometres 560 mi in the chain of British colonies in the Cape to Cairo dream However the north end of Lake Tanganyika was only 230 kilometres 140 mi from British controlled Uganda and so a British presence at the south end of the lake was a priority Although the northern boundaries of North Eastern Rhodesia and Nyasaland were eventually settled by negotiations between Britain Germany Portugal and the Congo Free State Johnston ensured that British bomas were established in addition to those in Nyasaland east of Luapula Mweru at Chiengi and the Kalungwishi River at the south end of Lake Tanganyika at Abercorn and at Fort Jameson between Mozambique and the Luangwa valley to demonstrate effective occupation 34 Until 1899 Johnson had administrative control of the territory which became North Eastern Rhodesia the north eastern half of today s Zambia and he helped to set up and oversee the British South Africa Company s administration in that area North Eastern Rhodesia was little developed in this period being regarded principally as a labour reserve with only a handful of company administrators 35 Despite missed out in Katanga altogether he helped to consolidate an area of nearly half a million square kilometres into the British Empire nearly 200 000 square miles 520 000 km2 or twice the area of the United Kingdom in 2009 lying between the lower Luangwa River valley and lakes Nyasa Tanganyika and Mweru Later years edit nbsp Okapi from an original painting by Johnston based on preserved skins 1901 In 1896 in recognition of this achievement he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath KCB but afflicted by tropical fevers transferred to Tunis as consul general 1 In the same year he had married the Hon Winifred Mary Irby daughter of Florance George Henry Irby fifth Baron Boston 36 In 1899 Sir Harry was sent to Uganda as special commissioner to reorganize the administration of that protectorate after the suppression of the mutiny of the Sudanese soldiers and to end an ongoing war with Unyoro 1 He improved the colonial administration and concluded the Buganda Agreement of 1900 dividing the land between the UK and the chiefs For his services in Uganda he received the Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George GCMG in the King s Birthday Honours list in November 1901 37 Also in 1901 Johnston was the first recipient of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society s Livingstone Medal 38 and in the following year he was appointed a member of the council of the Zoological Society of London 39 He received the honorary degree Doctor of Science D Sc from the University of Cambridge in May 1902 40 The Royal Geographical Society awarded him their 1904 Founder s Medal for his services to African exploration 41 In 1902 his wife gave birth to twin boys but neither survived more than a few hours and they had no more children His sister Mabel Johnston married Arnold Dolmetsch an instrument maker and member of the Bloomsbury set in 1903 In 1903 and in 1906 he stood for parliament for the Liberal Party but was unsuccessful on both occasions In 1906 the Johnstons moved to the hamlet of Poling near Arundel in West Sussex where Harry Johnston largely concentrated on his literary endeavours He took to writing novels which were frequently short lived while his accounts of his own voyages through central Africa were rather more enduring 1903 Rochester by election Party Candidate Votes Conservative Charles Tuff 2 504 55 8 N ALiberal Harry Johnston 1 983 44 2 N AMajority 521 11 6 N ATurnout 4 487 86 2 N ARegistered electors 5 206Conservative hold nbsp Wall plaque erected to the memory of Sir Harry Johnston in the church of St Nicholas Poling West Sussex Designed and cut by Eric GillHarry Johnston suffered two strokes in 1925 from which he became partially paralysed and never recovered dying two years later in 1927 at Woodsetts House near Worksop in Nottinghamshire He was buried in the churchyard of St Nicholas Poling West Sussex where there is a commemorative wall plaque within the nave of the church designed and cut by the Arts and Crafts sculptor and typeface designer Eric Gill who lived in nearby Ditchling citation needed Legacy editHarry Johnston is commemorated in the scientific names of the okapi Okapia johnstoni and of two species of African lizards Trioceros johnstoni and Latastia johnstoni 42 The falls at Mambidima on the Luapula River were named Johnston Falls by the British in his honour Sir Harry Johnston Primary school in Zomba Malawi is also named after him Prominent Bengali author Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay mentioned the influence of Sir H H Johnston s works one of many in helping him portray scenes convincingly in his famous Bengali adventure novel Chander Pahar Books edit nbsp Frontispiece painting The Negro in West Africa Liberian Hinterland painted by Johnston and published in his book The Negro in the New World 1910 The River Congo 1884 The Kilima Njaro Expedition 1886 The History of a Slave 1889 British Central Africa 1897 A History of the Colonization of Africa by Alien Races 1899 The Uganda Protectorate 1902 The Nile Quest The Story of Exploration 1903 Liberia 1907 George Grenfell and the Congo 1908 The Negro in the New World 1910 The Opening Up of Africa London Williams amp Norgate n d 1911 Phonetic Spelling 1913 online Pioneers in India 1913 A Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi Bantu Languages 1919 1922 online The Gay Dombeys 1919 a sequel to Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens Mrs Warren s Daughter a sequel to Mrs Warren s Profession by George Bernard Shaw The Backward Peoples and Our Relations with Them 1920 The Man Who Did the Right Thing 1921 novel The Story of my Life 1923 autobiography The Veneerings a sequel to Our Mutual Friend by Charles DickensThe standard author abbreviation H H Johnst is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name 43 Manuscripts of collected vocabularies of Sir Harry Hamilton Johnston are held by SOAS ArchivesReferences edit a b c d e Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Johnston Sir Henry Hamilton Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 473 474 Obituary 1927 Henry Hamilton Johnston Ibis Vol XLIV No 1 p 735 Obituary Henry Hamilton Johnston Ibis XLIV 1 735 6 1927 Obituary Henry Hamilton Johnston Ibis XLIV 1 736 1927 Mr Johnston s Imagination National Archives 2 January 2013 Archived from the original on 26 April 2019 Retrieved 21 September 2017 K J Panton 2015 A Historical Dictionary of the British Empire Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield p 113 ISBN 978 0 81087 801 3 L Weintal 1923 The story of the Cape to Cairo Railway and River Route from 1887 to 1922 Vol 4 London Pioneer Publishing p 4 G Harper 2002 Comedy Fantasy and Colonialism London Bloomsbury Publications pp 142 3 ISBN 978 0 82644 919 1 N Ascherson 1999 The King Incorporated Leopold the Second and the Congo London Granta Books p 161 N Ascherson 1999 The King Incorporated Leopold the Second and the Congo pp 162 3 F Axelson 1967 Portugal and the Scramble for Africa Johannesburg Witwatersrand University Press pp 182 3 198 200 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey p 51 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 M Newitt 1995 A History of Mozambique London Hurst amp Co pp 276 7 325 6 ISBN 1 85065 172 8 P T Terry 1965 The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887 1895 Part II The Nyasaland Journal 18 2 39 Sir Harry Johnston 1897 British Central Africa New York Edward Arnold p 81 Owen J M Kalinga 1980 The Karonga War Commercial Rivalry and Politics of Survival Journal of African History 21 2 209 doi 10 1017 S002185370001817X S2CID 153579730 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 57 8 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 P T Terry 1965 The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887 1895 Part II The Nyasaland Journal 18 2 41 3 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 52 3 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 53 55 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 M Newitt 1995 A History of Mozambique London Hurst amp Co p 346 ISBN 1 85065 172 8 R I Rotberg 1965 The Rise of Nationalism in Central Africa The Making of Malawi and Zambia 1873 1964 Cambridge Harvard University Press p 15 Baker C A 1970 Johnston s Administration 1891 1897 Malawi Government Ministry of Local Government Department of Antiquities p 21 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 58 62 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 B Pachai 1973 Land Policies in Malawi An Examination of the Colonial Legacy The Journal of African History 14 4 685 doi 10 1017 S0021853700013116 S2CID 162918655 Owen J M Kalinga 1984 European Settlers African Apprehensions and Colonial Economic Policy The North Nyasa Native Reserves Commission of 1929 The International Journal of African Historical Studies 17 4 642 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 77 8 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 Sir Harry Johnston 1897 British Central Africa New York Edward Arnold p 85 Sir Harry Johnston 1897 British Central Africa New York Edward Arnold pp 112 13 B Pachai 1973 Land Policies in Malawi An Examination of the Colonial Legacy The Journal of African History 14 4 682 3 685 doi 10 1017 S0021853700013116 S2CID 162918655 Baker C A 1970 Johnston s Administration 1891 1897 Malawi Government Ministry of Local Government Department of Antiquities pp 42 4 P T Terry 1965 The Arab War on Lake Nyasa 1887 1895 Part II The Nyasaland Journal 18 2 43 4 J McCracken 2012 A History of Malawi 1859 1966 Woodbridge James Currey pp 61 3 ISBN 978 1 84701 050 6 A Keppel Jones 1983 Rhodes and Rhodesia 1884 1902 Kingston McGill Queen s University Press pp 549 50 E A Walker 1963 The Cambridge History of the British Empire Vol 1 Cambridge University Press pp 696 7 Obituary 1927 Sir Harry H Johnston The Geographical Journal Vol 70 No 4 pp 415 416 No 27377 The London Gazette 15 November 1901 p 7393 RSGS memorial to recipients of the Livingstone Medal Zoological Society of London The Times No 36755 London 30 April 1902 p 6 University intelligence The Times No 36779 London 28 May 1902 p 12 List of Past Gold Medal Winners PDF Royal Geographical Society Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 24 August 2015 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Johnston pp 135 136 International Plant Names Index H H Johnst Sources editThomas Pakenham The Scramble for Africa Roland Oliver Sir Harry Johnston and the Scramble for Africa 1958 James A Casada Sir Harry H Johnston A Bio Bibliographical Study 1977 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Harry Johnston nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Hamilton Johnston nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Harry Johnston Works by Harry Johnston at Project Gutenberg Full text of Johnston s book British Central Africa 1897 text only Full text of Johnston s book British Central Africa 1897 facsimile Works by or about Harry Johnston at Internet Archive Works by Harry Johnston at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Harry Johnston at Open Library The International Primary School which bears Sir Harry Johnston s name was founded in the early 1950s in Zomba Malawi Newspaper clippings about Harry Johnston in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harry Johnston amp oldid 1196153243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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