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Herbert Macaulay

Olayinka Herbert Samuel Heelas Badmus Macaulay // (14 November 1864 – 7 May 1946) was a Nigerian nationalist, politician, surveyor, engineer, architect, journalist, and musician and is considered by many Nigerians as the founder of Nigerian nationalism.[1][2][3]

Herbert Macaulay
Born
Olayinka Badmus Macaulay

(1864-11-14)14 November 1864
Died7 May 1946(1946-05-07) (aged 81)
Resting placeIkoyi Cemetery
NationalityNigerian
CitizenshipNigeria
EducationChurch Missionary Society Grammar School, Lagos
Plymouth, England
Alma materRoyal Institute of British Architects, London
Trinity College of Music
Occupation(s)politician, engineer, architect, journalist, musician.
Years active1891–1946
Known forNigerian nationalism
Political partyNigerian National Democratic Party
National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons
Spouse
Caroline Pratt
(m. 1898; died 1899)
ChildrenHelena Victoria Maria Macaulay Smith (daughter)
Sarah Abigail Idowu Macaulay Adadevoh (daughter)
Oliver Ogedengbe Macaulay (son)
Frank Montague Macaulay (son)
Enitan Macaulay (daughter)
Florence Macaulay (daughter)
Tokunbo Macaulay(son)
Samuel Macaulay (son)
Parent(s)Thomas Babington Macaulay (father)
Abigail Crowther (mother)
RelativesSamuel Ajayi Crowther (maternal grandfather)
Babatunde Kwaku Adadevoh (grandson)

Early years edit

Herbert Macaulay was born in Broad Street, Lagos,[4][5] on 14 November 1864 to the family of Thomas Babington Macaulay and Abigail Crowther. His parents were children of people captured from what is now Nigeria, resettled in Sierra Leone by the British West Africa Squadron, and eventual returnees to present day Nigeria.[6] Thomas Babington Macaulay was one of the sons of Ojo Oriare while Abigail Crowther was the daughter of Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther, a descendant of King Abiodun.[6] Thomas Babington Macaulay was the founder of the first secondary school in Nigeria, the CMS Grammar School, Lagos.[7][8]

Education edit

Macaulay started primary school in 1869 and from 1877, he was educated at St Paul's Breadfruit School, Lagos and CMS Faji School, Lagos.[9] From 1877 to October 1880, he attended CMS Grammar School, Lagos for his secondary education.[9] He was a student at the school when his father died in 1878.[10][11] In 1880, he joined his maternal uncle's trade steamer and embarked on a trade and missionary journey across the Niger River visiting Bonny, Lokoja, Gbebe and Brass.[10] After going to a Christian missionary school, he took a job as a clerical assistant and indexer at the Department of Public Works, Lagos.[10] Thereafter, with the support of the colonial administration, Macaulay left Lagos on 1 July 1890 to further his training in England. From 1891 to 1894 he studied civil engineering in Plymouth, England, and was also a pupil of G.D. Bellamy, a borough surveyor and water engineer in Plymouth.[12] In 1893, he became a graduate of the Royal Institute of British Architects, London.[13] Macaulay was also an accomplished musician who received a certificate in music from Trinity College, London and a certificate in violin playing from Music International College, London.[14]

Career edit

Upon his return to Lagos in September 1893, he resumed work with the colonial service as a surveyor of Crown Lands. He left the service as land inspector in September 1898 due to a growing distaste for the British rule of the Lagos Colony and the position of Yorubaland and the Niger Coast Protectorate as British protectorates. Other authors such as Patrick Dele-Cole have noted the abuse of office allegations (leveled by his British superiors) and pursuit of private gain controversy that clouded Macaulay's resignation as surveyor of Crown Grants.[15] Kristin Mann, citing British Colonial Government dispatches,[16] notes that Macaulay behaved dishonestly, by using "his position as Surveyor of Crown Lands to help friends acquire crown grants and persecute enemies by granting their land to others".[17] She further writes that Macaulay "obtained crown grants under false names and then sold them at a profit".[17] In October 1898, he obtained a licence to practise as a surveyor. As a surveyor, his plans and valuations included E. J. Alex Taylor's house on Victoria Street, Henry Carr's residence in Tinubu, Akinola Maja's house and Doherty Villa in Campos Square.[18]

Private life edit

Macaulay married Caroline Pratt, daughter of an African Superintendent of Police in December 1898.[19] Their marriage came to an end in August 1899 upon Caroline's death during childbirth and Macaulay is reported to have vowed never to marry again.[20] While Macaulay never remarried in the Church,[20] he had liaisons including Ms. da Souza who returned to Lagos, her ancestral home, from Brazil and lived into her 90s, from whom he had a number of children,[19] as well as companionships which bore no children (Stella Davies Coker, daughter of J. P. L. Davies and Sarah Forbes Bonetta, lived with Macaulay from 1909 until her death in 1916. They had a daughter named Sarah Abigail Idowu Macaulay Adadevoh. Sarah Abigail was named after her maternal grandmother Sarah Forbes Bonetta and her paternal grandmother Abigail Crowther).[21] Macaulay was reportedly the first Nigerian to own a motor car.[22][23]

Though from a family of devout Anglicans, Macaulay embraced indigenous African religious traditions, was superstitious, and dabbled in the practice of magic.[19] His personal papers contain notes from fortune tellers and diviners with instructions around taboos, divinations, sacrifices, and other occult practices.[24][19] Macaulay was also a member of the Association of Babalawos (Ifa priests) of Lagos.[19]

Macaulay was a great socialite in Victorian Lagos. He organized concerts and film shows (He was among the first Nigerians that brought films to Nigeria by inviting film companies to come to Lagos to exhibit films) at his residence (named "Kirsten Hall" after his German Consul friend Arthur Kirsten) on 8, Balbina Street in Yaba.[19] Macaulay was nicknamed "Wizard of Kirsten Hall" because of his ability to obtain classified information. Macaulay ran a network of informants who he paid handsomely. Many times, minutes from colonial government meetings would be leaked in newspapers that Macaulay was associated with. Whole sections of colonial government files and telegrams can be found in the Macaulay Papers at the Africana section of the Library at the University of Ibadan.[25]

Opposition to British rule in colonial Nigeria edit

Prior to the beginning of the twentieth century, Macaulay associated with many Lagos socialites, worked as a private surveyor and had a moderate outlook about colonialism.[26] However, by the end of the 1800s, he had begun to veer from his professional and social activities to become a political activist. He joined the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines' Protection Society. Macaulay was an unlikely champion of the masses. A grandson of Ajayi Crowther, the first African bishop of the Niger Territory, he was born into a Lagos that was divided politically into groups arranged in a convenient pecking order – the British authorities who lived in the posh Marina district, the Saros and other slave descendants who lived to the west, and the Brazilians who lived behind the whites in the Portuguese Town. Behind all three lived the real Lagosians, the masses of indigenous Yoruba people, disliked and generally ignored by their privileged neighbours. It was not until Macaulay's generation that the Saros and Brazilians even began to contemplate making common cause with the masses.

Macaulay was one of the first Nigerian nationalists and for most of his life a strong opponent of many colonial policies. As a reaction to claims by the British that they were governing with "the true interests of the natives at heart", he wrote: "The dimensions of "the true interests of the natives at heart" are algebraically equal to the length, breadth and depth of the whiteman's pocket." In 1908 he exposed European corruption in the handling of railway finances and in 1919 he argued successfully for the chiefs whose land had been taken by the colonial government in front of the Privy Council in London. As a result, the colonial government was forced to pay compensation to the chiefs.

In 1909, he came out publicly against the prohibition of spirits into Nigeria which he felt will ultimately lead to reduced government revenues and thereafter increased taxation. Macaulay also found himself in opposition to the colonial government in three major issues that were prominent in Lagos life during 1900–1930. The issues included the proposed water rate, selection of the Oba of Lagos and the Imamate of the Lagos Central Mosque. Macaulay opposed colonial taxation to fund water supply in Lagos on the grounds of taxation without representation.[26] He was a major supporter of the House of Docemo in Lagos. Largely because Lagos was not under indirect rule, the Oba of Lagos unlike many of his counterparts in other areas of the country was stripped of many of his traditional authorities. Macaulay supported the House of Docemo in its opposition to the water rate and colonial acquisition of Lagos lands.[26] He also galvanized the Ilu Committee composed of the Oba of Lagos and traditional chiefs in Lagos to oppose some of the colonial policies.[27]

Macaulay's profile in Lagos was enhanced by the Oluwa Land case. Amodu Tijani Oluwa, a traditional chief, had challenged the compulsory acquisition without compensation of his family land in Apapa. He lost his appeal at the Supreme Court and took the case to the Privy Court Council in London. Macaulay was Oluwa's private secretary in the trip to London. Oluwa's case was supported by the Ilu Committee and the Oba who were interested in the protection of their family lands in Lagos.[27] In London, Macaulay presented himself as Oluwa's private secretary and as a representative of the Oba and in the capacity he made statements which the colonial authorities felt were inimical to their interests. In 1920, the Eleko, Eshungbayi was ostracized by the British because he refused to disavow allegations against the colonial authorities made by Macaulay in London.

To further his political activities, Macaulay co-founded the Nigerian Daily News, a platform he used to write opinion pieces such as Justitia Fiat: The Moral Obligation of the British Government to the House of Docemo. He also wrote a piece titled Henry Carr Must Go. From 1923 to 1938, he became a prominent figure in many important political issues in Lagos including the quinquennial elections into the Legislative Council, triennial elections to the Lagos Town Council, and the headship of the House of Docemo.[28] In his political activities, he relied on the Lagos Daily News, the Lagos Market Women Association led by his ally, Alimotu Pelewura, the House of Docemo and many uneducated Lagosians.[28] His political opinions divided many Lagos elites as he used the Daily News to publicly vilify his opponents and former friends such as Henry Carr. On 24 June 1923, he founded the Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP), the first Nigerian political party.[1] The party won all the seats in the elections of 1923, 1928 and 1933.[29] Though the party's major function was to put candidates into the legislative council, it had a broader objective of promoting democracy in Nigeria, increasing higher Nigerian participation in the social, economic and educational development of Nigeria. Although the party wanted to be national in outlook, Macaulay's strength of support was from the House of Docemo and therefore his preoccupation with the defence of the House and his desire to control the party limited the growth of the party.[30]

Support for British rule in colonial Nigeria edit

In 1931, relations between Macaulay and the British began to improve up to the point that the governor even held conferences with Macaulay.[29] In October 1938, the more radical Nigerian Youth Movement fought and won elections for the Lagos Town Council, ending the dominance of Macaulay and his National Democratic Party.[31]

Legal problems edit

Macaulay was barred from running for public office because of legal problems - he was convicted twice by the colonial government in Lagos; the first time for fraud, and the second time for sedition.

Misappropriation of funds edit

After going into private practice as a surveyor and architect, Macaulay faced some financial difficulty and misappropriated funds from an estate he served as executor for. His actions were uncovered by the authorities who tried him and sentenced him to two years in prison.[32] The historian Patrick Dele-Cole outlines evidence suggesting that Macaulay was unfairly persecuted at his 1913 trial. The prosecuting counsel, one Robert Irving, was Herbert Macaulay's tenant who may have pursued a private vendetta. Macaulay had obtained a court order to evict Robert Irving on 3 December 1912. Additionally, Macaulay's lawyers encountered severe difficulties putting up a solid defense in the course of the case: as an example Macaulay's lawyers were unable to find the police magistrate anywhere in Lagos to obtain bail. Other incidents include the acting Chief Justice fining Macaulay £100 despite the five assessors in the court returning a not guilty verdict. Cole also underscores Macaulay's scrupulous transparency regarding the trust. According to Cole "the will of the testatrix was read in public at the request of Macaulay and the loan he obtained in order to clear the debts of the testatrix was explained to the beneficiaries of the will (Macaulay's niece was the principal beneficiary and she certainly did not engage Irving to prosecute the case), yet he was convicted of 'intent to defraud'". Finally, Cole notes that Macaulay's sentence of five years was "unusually severe".[33]

Gunpowder Plot edit

Macaulay's second legal problem centered on what came to be the "Gunpowder Plot Case". When the Privy Council decided that the exiled Oba Eshugbayi Eleko could apply for a writ of habeas corpus from one judge to another, Lagos went wild with excitement because it indicated that the popular Oba would be reinstated. Macaulay's Lagos Daily News published a rumor that because of the Privy Council's decision, the British colonial government in Lagos planned to blow up Oba Eleko's vehicle.[34][32] For the Gunpowder Plot Case Macaulay was sentenced to six months in prison (at Broad Street Prison) with hard labor without the option for a fine. Macaulay was sixty-four years old at the time of this conviction and the imprisonment increased Macaulay's popularity within Nigeria.[34]

Feud with Henry Carr edit

It is unclear how the fierce hatred between Macaulay and Henry Carr developed however their disputes are well documented. Carr believed that Macaulay lacked integrity and was exploiting the House of Dosunmu for personal gain.[35] In Carr's diaries, he writes of Macaulay "Among all human monsters with whom we have been brought into contact none has displayed the devilish ingenuity of this man", concluding that Macaulay was a "crooked mind and dangerous fool". Carr abhorred the political reality that Macaulay, who was barred from partaking in politics because of his criminal convictions, was a political kingmaker through Macaulay's control of the NNDP.[35]

The level of the strife between both men was so caustic that in 1924, Macaulay published a malicious account titled "Henry Carr Must Go".[36] In the slanderous publication, Macaulay falsely asserted that Carr's father, Amuwo Carr deserted his wife to settle in Abeokuta as a polygamist. This was untrue considering Amuwo Carr died in Abeokuta of poor health and was nearly blind. Macaulay's vicious attacks on Carr in the press framed the Lagosian public's perception of Carr as shy, distant, and aloof.[35]

Macaulay, on the other hand, believed Carr was behind political divisions in Lagos. He believed Carr was responsible for the government's stubborn position on the Oba Eleko land case. In the pamphlet "Henry Carr Must Go", Macaulay writes of Carr "He has been without any possible doubt whatsoever, the Head Centre, the King Pin, the very mainspring of what his own flatterers choose to call powerful influence or official support behind the renowned articulate minority on whose side Mr. Carr has along flung the whole weight of his official prestige, manifesting thereby an intolerable partisanship...deadly and detestable".[37]

Twilight years and death edit

In 1944, Macaulay co-founded the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC) together with Nnamdi Azikiwe and became its president.[38] The NCNC was a patriotic organization designed to bring together Nigerians of all stripes to demand independence.[39] In 1946, Macaulay fell ill in Kano and later died in Lagos. Macaulay's reported last words were:

"Tell the National Council delegates to halt wherever they are for four days for Macaulay and then carry on.
Tell Oged to keep the flag flying"[40]

The leadership of the NCNC went to Azikiwe, who later became the first president of Nigeria. Macaulay was buried at Ikoyi Cemetery in Lagos on 11 May 1946. Nnamdi Azikiwe delivered a funeral oration at Macaulay's burial ceremony[41][42] and Isaac Babalola Thomas, editor and proprietor of the Akede Eko, was executor of Macaulay's Last Will and Testament.

Macaulay papers at the University of Ibadan Library edit

Like his political foe Henry Rawlingson Carr whose library and papers are at the University of Ibadan Library, Macaulay's private collection called The Macaulay Papers are at the African Section of the University of Ibadan Library.[43] The Macaulay Papers include a vast assortment of political pamphlets, newspapers, and government documents. They also include personal papers, correspondences, diaries, and photographs.[44]

Honours edit

Macaulay was featured in the 1 Naira banknote since 1979 until 1991, when the note was replaced by a coin, also portraying Macaulay.[45][46]

A biopic titled The Herbert Macaulay Affair which covered about 3 decades of his life was made by Nigerian filmmaker, Imoh Umoren and released in 2019.[47]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Saheed Aderinto (2015). Children and Childhood in Colonial Nigerian Histories. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 27. ISBN 9781137492937.
  2. ^ Kinni, Fongot Kini-Yen (2015). Pan-Africanism: Political Philosophy and Socio-Economic Anthropology for African Liberation and Governance (Book collections on Project MUSE, Caribbean and African American Contributions). Vol. 2. Langaa RPCIG. p. 19. ISBN 9789956762309.
  3. ^ "Herbert Macaulay's destroyed house should've been historical monument – Fafowora". Punch Newspapers. 26 May 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  4. ^ Thomas 1946, p. 1.
  5. ^ Adeuyan, Jacob (2011). Contributions of Yoruba People in the Economic & Political Developments of Nigeria. AuthorHouse. p. 121.
  6. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  7. ^ Robert W. July (2004). The Origins of Modern African Thought: Its Development in West Africa During the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Africa World Press. p. 377. ISBN 9781592211999.
  8. ^ Webster, Boahen & Tidy 1980, p. 266.
  9. ^ a b Tamuno, Tekena N. (1976). Herbert Macaulay, Nigerian Patriot. Heinemann Educational, 1976. p. 12. ISBN 9780435944728.
  10. ^ a b c Thomas 1946, p. 2.
  11. ^ Sanya Onabamiro (1983). Glimpses into Nigerian History: Historical Essays. University of Virginia (Macmillan Nigeria). p. 126. ISBN 9789781327292.
  12. ^ Thomas 1946, p. 3.
  13. ^ Rainer E. Lotz; Ian Pegg (1986). Under the Imperial carpet: essays in Black history, 1780-1950. Rabbit Press. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-948-7750-17.
  14. ^ Tamuno, Tekena (1976). Herbert Macaulay, Nigerian Patriot. Heinemann Educational, 1976. p. 19. ISBN 9780435944728.
  15. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 111. ISBN 9780521204392.
  16. ^ Mann, Kristin (5 December 1985). Marrying Well: Marriage, Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 5 December 1985. p. 142 note 74. ISBN 9780521307017.
  17. ^ a b Mann, Kristin (5 December 1985). Marrying Well: Marriage, Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 5 December 1985. p. 21. ISBN 9780521307017.
  18. ^ Thomas 1946, p. 6.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Tamuno, Tekena (1976). Herbert Macaulay, Nigerian Patriot. Heinemann Educational, 1976. pp. 17–21. ISBN 9780435944728.
  20. ^ a b Mann, Kristin (5 December 1985). Marrying Well: Marriage, Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 5 December 1985. p. 75. ISBN 9780521307017.
  21. ^ Mann, Kristin (5 December 1985). Marrying Well: Marriage, Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 5 December 1985. p. 88. ISBN 9780521307017.
  22. ^ Daniel H. Ocheja (2001). The rise and fall of the Nigerian First Republic: history of Nigeria from Lord Lugard to Gen. Aguyi-Ironsi (1900-1966). Ogun De-Reuben (Nig.). ISBN 9789783261419.
  23. ^ "Herbert Macaulay". 43 (17–25). Newswatch Communications Limited. 2006. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  24. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. pp. 109–113. ISBN 9780521204392.
  25. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 244 note 36. ISBN 9780521204392.
  26. ^ a b c Fasinro 2004, p. 137.
  27. ^ a b Fasinro 2004, p. 138.
  28. ^ a b Coleman 1971, p. 197.
  29. ^ a b Webster, Boahen & Tidy 1980, p. 267.
  30. ^ Coleman 1971, p. 198.
  31. ^ Coleman 1971, p. 225.
  32. ^ a b LaRay, Denzer. . The Institute of Diasporic Studies, Northwestern University. Archived from the original on 10 December 2013. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  33. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. pp. 112–113. ISBN 9780521204392.
  34. ^ a b Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. pp. 147–148. ISBN 9780521204392.
  35. ^ a b c Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. pp. 113–119. ISBN 9780521204392.
  36. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. pp. 105–109. ISBN 9780521204392.
  37. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 245 n47. ISBN 9780521204392.
  38. ^ Richard L. Sklar (2004). Nigerian Political Parties: Power in an Emergent African Nation. Africa World Press. p. 61. ISBN 9781592212095.
  39. ^ Webster, Boahen & Tidy 1980, p. 299.
  40. ^ Sklar, Robert L. (8 December 2015). Nigerian Political Parties: Power in an Emergent African Nation. Princeton University Press, 2015. p. 61. ISBN 9781400878239.
  41. ^ Zik: A Selection from The Speeches of Nnamdi Azikiwe. Cambridge University Press. 1961. pp. 58–59. ISBN 9780521091350. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  42. ^ Isaac B. Thomas (1946). Life History of Herbert Macaulay, C. E. Tika-To[r]e Press.
  43. ^ Cole, Patrick (17 April 1975). Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos. Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 243 n35. ISBN 9780521204392.
  44. ^ Odularu, SSA (1987). "The Manuscript Collection of Ibadan University Library". Libri. 37 (4): 321–332. doi:10.1515/libr.1987.37.4.321. S2CID 146586724. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  45. ^ Nigeria 1 Naira 1979-1984 Bank note museum
  46. ^ Nigeria 1 Naira 1979-1991 Bank note museum
  47. ^ Olowoyo, Ganiyah (1 October 2020). "NigeriaAt60: Seven movies that tell Nigeria's history". Retrieved 19 October 2021.

Sources

  • Coleman, James S. (1971). Nigeria: Background to Nationalism. University of California Press. p. 225. ISBN 0-520-02070-7.
  • Fasinro, Hassan Adisa Babatunde (2004). Political and cultural perspectives of Lagos. s.n.
  • Thomas, Isaac B. (1946). Life History of Herbert Macaulay, C. E. Nigeria: Tika-Tore Press.
  • Webster, James Bertin; Boahen, A. Adu; Tidy, Michael (1980). The Revolutionary Years: West Africa since 1800. Longman. ISBN 0-582-60332-3.

herbert, macaulay, olayinka, herbert, samuel, heelas, badmus, macaulay, november, 1864, 1946, nigerian, nationalist, politician, surveyor, engineer, architect, journalist, musician, considered, many, nigerians, founder, nigerian, nationalism, bornolayinka, bad. Olayinka Herbert Samuel Heelas Badmus Macaulay 14 November 1864 7 May 1946 was a Nigerian nationalist politician surveyor engineer architect journalist and musician and is considered by many Nigerians as the founder of Nigerian nationalism 1 2 3 Herbert MacaulayBornOlayinka Badmus Macaulay 1864 11 14 14 November 1864Lagos ColonyDied7 May 1946 1946 05 07 aged 81 Lagos British NigeriaResting placeIkoyi CemeteryNationalityNigerianCitizenshipNigeriaEducationChurch Missionary Society Grammar School LagosPlymouth EnglandAlma materRoyal Institute of British Architects LondonTrinity College of MusicOccupation s politician engineer architect journalist musician Years active1891 1946Known forNigerian nationalismPolitical partyNigerian National Democratic PartyNational Council of Nigeria and the CameroonsSpouseCaroline Pratt m 1898 died 1899 wbr ChildrenHelena Victoria Maria Macaulay Smith daughter Sarah Abigail Idowu Macaulay Adadevoh daughter Oliver Ogedengbe Macaulay son Frank Montague Macaulay son Enitan Macaulay daughter Florence Macaulay daughter Tokunbo Macaulay son Samuel Macaulay son Parent s Thomas Babington Macaulay father Abigail Crowther mother RelativesSamuel Ajayi Crowther maternal grandfather Babatunde Kwaku Adadevoh grandson Contents 1 Early years 2 Education 3 Career 4 Private life 5 Opposition to British rule in colonial Nigeria 6 Support for British rule in colonial Nigeria 7 Legal problems 7 1 Misappropriation of funds 7 2 Gunpowder Plot 8 Feud with Henry Carr 9 Twilight years and death 10 Macaulay papers at the University of Ibadan Library 11 Honours 12 ReferencesEarly years editHerbert Macaulay was born in Broad Street Lagos 4 5 on 14 November 1864 to the family of Thomas Babington Macaulay and Abigail Crowther His parents were children of people captured from what is now Nigeria resettled in Sierra Leone by the British West Africa Squadron and eventual returnees to present day Nigeria 6 Thomas Babington Macaulay was one of the sons of Ojo Oriare while Abigail Crowther was the daughter of Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther a descendant of King Abiodun 6 Thomas Babington Macaulay was the founder of the first secondary school in Nigeria the CMS Grammar School Lagos 7 8 Education editMacaulay started primary school in 1869 and from 1877 he was educated at St Paul s Breadfruit School Lagos and CMS Faji School Lagos 9 From 1877 to October 1880 he attended CMS Grammar School Lagos for his secondary education 9 He was a student at the school when his father died in 1878 10 11 In 1880 he joined his maternal uncle s trade steamer and embarked on a trade and missionary journey across the Niger River visiting Bonny Lokoja Gbebe and Brass 10 After going to a Christian missionary school he took a job as a clerical assistant and indexer at the Department of Public Works Lagos 10 Thereafter with the support of the colonial administration Macaulay left Lagos on 1 July 1890 to further his training in England From 1891 to 1894 he studied civil engineering in Plymouth England and was also a pupil of G D Bellamy a borough surveyor and water engineer in Plymouth 12 In 1893 he became a graduate of the Royal Institute of British Architects London 13 Macaulay was also an accomplished musician who received a certificate in music from Trinity College London and a certificate in violin playing from Music International College London 14 Career editUpon his return to Lagos in September 1893 he resumed work with the colonial service as a surveyor of Crown Lands He left the service as land inspector in September 1898 due to a growing distaste for the British rule of the Lagos Colony and the position of Yorubaland and the Niger Coast Protectorate as British protectorates Other authors such as Patrick Dele Cole have noted the abuse of office allegations leveled by his British superiors and pursuit of private gain controversy that clouded Macaulay s resignation as surveyor of Crown Grants 15 Kristin Mann citing British Colonial Government dispatches 16 notes that Macaulay behaved dishonestly by using his position as Surveyor of Crown Lands to help friends acquire crown grants and persecute enemies by granting their land to others 17 She further writes that Macaulay obtained crown grants under false names and then sold them at a profit 17 In October 1898 he obtained a licence to practise as a surveyor As a surveyor his plans and valuations included E J Alex Taylor s house on Victoria Street Henry Carr s residence in Tinubu Akinola Maja s house and Doherty Villa in Campos Square 18 Private life editMacaulay married Caroline Pratt daughter of an African Superintendent of Police in December 1898 19 Their marriage came to an end in August 1899 upon Caroline s death during childbirth and Macaulay is reported to have vowed never to marry again 20 While Macaulay never remarried in the Church 20 he had liaisons including Ms da Souza who returned to Lagos her ancestral home from Brazil and lived into her 90s from whom he had a number of children 19 as well as companionships which bore no children Stella Davies Coker daughter of J P L Davies and Sarah Forbes Bonetta lived with Macaulay from 1909 until her death in 1916 They had a daughter named Sarah Abigail Idowu Macaulay Adadevoh Sarah Abigail was named after her maternal grandmother Sarah Forbes Bonetta and her paternal grandmother Abigail Crowther 21 Macaulay was reportedly the first Nigerian to own a motor car 22 23 Though from a family of devout Anglicans Macaulay embraced indigenous African religious traditions was superstitious and dabbled in the practice of magic 19 His personal papers contain notes from fortune tellers and diviners with instructions around taboos divinations sacrifices and other occult practices 24 19 Macaulay was also a member of the Association of Babalawos Ifa priests of Lagos 19 Macaulay was a great socialite in Victorian Lagos He organized concerts and film shows He was among the first Nigerians that brought films to Nigeria by inviting film companies to come to Lagos to exhibit films at his residence named Kirsten Hall after his German Consul friend Arthur Kirsten on 8 Balbina Street in Yaba 19 Macaulay was nicknamed Wizard of Kirsten Hall because of his ability to obtain classified information Macaulay ran a network of informants who he paid handsomely Many times minutes from colonial government meetings would be leaked in newspapers that Macaulay was associated with Whole sections of colonial government files and telegrams can be found in the Macaulay Papers at the Africana section of the Library at the University of Ibadan 25 Opposition to British rule in colonial Nigeria editPrior to the beginning of the twentieth century Macaulay associated with many Lagos socialites worked as a private surveyor and had a moderate outlook about colonialism 26 However by the end of the 1800s he had begun to veer from his professional and social activities to become a political activist He joined the Anti Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society Macaulay was an unlikely champion of the masses A grandson of Ajayi Crowther the first African bishop of the Niger Territory he was born into a Lagos that was divided politically into groups arranged in a convenient pecking order the British authorities who lived in the posh Marina district the Saros and other slave descendants who lived to the west and the Brazilians who lived behind the whites in the Portuguese Town Behind all three lived the real Lagosians the masses of indigenous Yoruba people disliked and generally ignored by their privileged neighbours It was not until Macaulay s generation that the Saros and Brazilians even began to contemplate making common cause with the masses Macaulay was one of the first Nigerian nationalists and for most of his life a strong opponent of many colonial policies As a reaction to claims by the British that they were governing with the true interests of the natives at heart he wrote The dimensions of the true interests of the natives at heart are algebraically equal to the length breadth and depth of the whiteman s pocket In 1908 he exposed European corruption in the handling of railway finances and in 1919 he argued successfully for the chiefs whose land had been taken by the colonial government in front of the Privy Council in London As a result the colonial government was forced to pay compensation to the chiefs In 1909 he came out publicly against the prohibition of spirits into Nigeria which he felt will ultimately lead to reduced government revenues and thereafter increased taxation Macaulay also found himself in opposition to the colonial government in three major issues that were prominent in Lagos life during 1900 1930 The issues included the proposed water rate selection of the Oba of Lagos and the Imamate of the Lagos Central Mosque Macaulay opposed colonial taxation to fund water supply in Lagos on the grounds of taxation without representation 26 He was a major supporter of the House of Docemo in Lagos Largely because Lagos was not under indirect rule the Oba of Lagos unlike many of his counterparts in other areas of the country was stripped of many of his traditional authorities Macaulay supported the House of Docemo in its opposition to the water rate and colonial acquisition of Lagos lands 26 He also galvanized the Ilu Committee composed of the Oba of Lagos and traditional chiefs in Lagos to oppose some of the colonial policies 27 Macaulay s profile in Lagos was enhanced by the Oluwa Land case Amodu Tijani Oluwa a traditional chief had challenged the compulsory acquisition without compensation of his family land in Apapa He lost his appeal at the Supreme Court and took the case to the Privy Court Council in London Macaulay was Oluwa s private secretary in the trip to London Oluwa s case was supported by the Ilu Committee and the Oba who were interested in the protection of their family lands in Lagos 27 In London Macaulay presented himself as Oluwa s private secretary and as a representative of the Oba and in the capacity he made statements which the colonial authorities felt were inimical to their interests In 1920 the Eleko Eshungbayi was ostracized by the British because he refused to disavow allegations against the colonial authorities made by Macaulay in London To further his political activities Macaulay co founded the Nigerian Daily News a platform he used to write opinion pieces such as Justitia Fiat The Moral Obligation of the British Government to the House of Docemo He also wrote a piece titled Henry Carr Must Go From 1923 to 1938 he became a prominent figure in many important political issues in Lagos including the quinquennial elections into the Legislative Council triennial elections to the Lagos Town Council and the headship of the House of Docemo 28 In his political activities he relied on the Lagos Daily News the Lagos Market Women Association led by his ally Alimotu Pelewura the House of Docemo and many uneducated Lagosians 28 His political opinions divided many Lagos elites as he used the Daily News to publicly vilify his opponents and former friends such as Henry Carr On 24 June 1923 he founded the Nigerian National Democratic Party NNDP the first Nigerian political party 1 The party won all the seats in the elections of 1923 1928 and 1933 29 Though the party s major function was to put candidates into the legislative council it had a broader objective of promoting democracy in Nigeria increasing higher Nigerian participation in the social economic and educational development of Nigeria Although the party wanted to be national in outlook Macaulay s strength of support was from the House of Docemo and therefore his preoccupation with the defence of the House and his desire to control the party limited the growth of the party 30 Support for British rule in colonial Nigeria editIn 1931 relations between Macaulay and the British began to improve up to the point that the governor even held conferences with Macaulay 29 In October 1938 the more radical Nigerian Youth Movement fought and won elections for the Lagos Town Council ending the dominance of Macaulay and his National Democratic Party 31 Legal problems editMacaulay was barred from running for public office because of legal problems he was convicted twice by the colonial government in Lagos the first time for fraud and the second time for sedition Misappropriation of funds edit After going into private practice as a surveyor and architect Macaulay faced some financial difficulty and misappropriated funds from an estate he served as executor for His actions were uncovered by the authorities who tried him and sentenced him to two years in prison 32 The historian Patrick Dele Cole outlines evidence suggesting that Macaulay was unfairly persecuted at his 1913 trial The prosecuting counsel one Robert Irving was Herbert Macaulay s tenant who may have pursued a private vendetta Macaulay had obtained a court order to evict Robert Irving on 3 December 1912 Additionally Macaulay s lawyers encountered severe difficulties putting up a solid defense in the course of the case as an example Macaulay s lawyers were unable to find the police magistrate anywhere in Lagos to obtain bail Other incidents include the acting Chief Justice fining Macaulay 100 despite the five assessors in the court returning a not guilty verdict Cole also underscores Macaulay s scrupulous transparency regarding the trust According to Cole the will of the testatrix was read in public at the request of Macaulay and the loan he obtained in order to clear the debts of the testatrix was explained to the beneficiaries of the will Macaulay s niece was the principal beneficiary and she certainly did not engage Irving to prosecute the case yet he was convicted of intent to defraud Finally Cole notes that Macaulay s sentence of five years was unusually severe 33 Gunpowder Plot edit Macaulay s second legal problem centered on what came to be the Gunpowder Plot Case When the Privy Council decided that the exiled Oba Eshugbayi Eleko could apply for a writ of habeas corpus from one judge to another Lagos went wild with excitement because it indicated that the popular Oba would be reinstated Macaulay s Lagos Daily News published a rumor that because of the Privy Council s decision the British colonial government in Lagos planned to blow up Oba Eleko s vehicle 34 32 For the Gunpowder Plot Case Macaulay was sentenced to six months in prison at Broad Street Prison with hard labor without the option for a fine Macaulay was sixty four years old at the time of this conviction and the imprisonment increased Macaulay s popularity within Nigeria 34 Feud with Henry Carr editIt is unclear how the fierce hatred between Macaulay and Henry Carr developed however their disputes are well documented Carr believed that Macaulay lacked integrity and was exploiting the House of Dosunmu for personal gain 35 In Carr s diaries he writes of Macaulay Among all human monsters with whom we have been brought into contact none has displayed the devilish ingenuity of this man concluding that Macaulay was a crooked mind and dangerous fool Carr abhorred the political reality that Macaulay who was barred from partaking in politics because of his criminal convictions was a political kingmaker through Macaulay s control of the NNDP 35 The level of the strife between both men was so caustic that in 1924 Macaulay published a malicious account titled Henry Carr Must Go 36 In the slanderous publication Macaulay falsely asserted that Carr s father Amuwo Carr deserted his wife to settle in Abeokuta as a polygamist This was untrue considering Amuwo Carr died in Abeokuta of poor health and was nearly blind Macaulay s vicious attacks on Carr in the press framed the Lagosian public s perception of Carr as shy distant and aloof 35 Macaulay on the other hand believed Carr was behind political divisions in Lagos He believed Carr was responsible for the government s stubborn position on the Oba Eleko land case In the pamphlet Henry Carr Must Go Macaulay writes of Carr He has been without any possible doubt whatsoever the Head Centre the King Pin the very mainspring of what his own flatterers choose to call powerful influence or official support behind the renowned articulate minority on whose side Mr Carr has along flung the whole weight of his official prestige manifesting thereby an intolerable partisanship deadly and detestable 37 Twilight years and death editIn 1944 Macaulay co founded the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons NCNC together with Nnamdi Azikiwe and became its president 38 The NCNC was a patriotic organization designed to bring together Nigerians of all stripes to demand independence 39 In 1946 Macaulay fell ill in Kano and later died in Lagos Macaulay s reported last words were Tell the National Council delegates to halt wherever they are for four days for Macaulay and then carry on Tell Oged to keep the flag flying 40 The leadership of the NCNC went to Azikiwe who later became the first president of Nigeria Macaulay was buried at Ikoyi Cemetery in Lagos on 11 May 1946 Nnamdi Azikiwe delivered a funeral oration at Macaulay s burial ceremony 41 42 and Isaac Babalola Thomas editor and proprietor of the Akede Eko was executor of Macaulay s Last Will and Testament Macaulay papers at the University of Ibadan Library editLike his political foe Henry Rawlingson Carr whose library and papers are at the University of Ibadan Library Macaulay s private collection called The Macaulay Papers are at the African Section of the University of Ibadan Library 43 The Macaulay Papers include a vast assortment of political pamphlets newspapers and government documents They also include personal papers correspondences diaries and photographs 44 Honours editMacaulay was featured in the 1 Naira banknote since 1979 until 1991 when the note was replaced by a coin also portraying Macaulay 45 46 A biopic titled The Herbert Macaulay Affair which covered about 3 decades of his life was made by Nigerian filmmaker Imoh Umoren and released in 2019 47 References edit a b Saheed Aderinto 2015 Children and Childhood in Colonial Nigerian Histories Palgrave Macmillan p 27 ISBN 9781137492937 Kinni Fongot Kini Yen 2015 Pan Africanism Political Philosophy and Socio Economic Anthropology for African Liberation and Governance Book collections on Project MUSE Caribbean and African American Contributions Vol 2 Langaa RPCIG p 19 ISBN 9789956762309 Herbert Macaulay s destroyed house should ve been historical monument Fafowora Punch Newspapers 26 May 2017 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Thomas 1946 p 1 Adeuyan Jacob 2011 Contributions of Yoruba People in the Economic amp Political Developments of Nigeria AuthorHouse p 121 a b Macaulay Thomas Babington 1826 to 1878 Anglican Nigeria Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2014 Robert W July 2004 The Origins of Modern African Thought Its Development in West Africa During the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Africa World Press p 377 ISBN 9781592211999 Webster Boahen amp Tidy 1980 p 266 a b Tamuno Tekena N 1976 Herbert Macaulay Nigerian Patriot Heinemann Educational 1976 p 12 ISBN 9780435944728 a b c Thomas 1946 p 2 Sanya Onabamiro 1983 Glimpses into Nigerian History Historical Essays University of Virginia Macmillan Nigeria p 126 ISBN 9789781327292 Thomas 1946 p 3 Rainer E Lotz Ian Pegg 1986 Under the Imperial carpet essays in Black history 1780 1950 Rabbit Press p 79 ISBN 978 0 948 7750 17 Tamuno Tekena 1976 Herbert Macaulay Nigerian Patriot Heinemann Educational 1976 p 19 ISBN 9780435944728 Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 p 111 ISBN 9780521204392 Mann Kristin 5 December 1985 Marrying Well Marriage Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos Cambridge University Press 5 December 1985 p 142 note 74 ISBN 9780521307017 a b Mann Kristin 5 December 1985 Marrying Well Marriage Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos Cambridge University Press 5 December 1985 p 21 ISBN 9780521307017 Thomas 1946 p 6 a b c d e f Tamuno Tekena 1976 Herbert Macaulay Nigerian Patriot Heinemann Educational 1976 pp 17 21 ISBN 9780435944728 a b Mann Kristin 5 December 1985 Marrying Well Marriage Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos Cambridge University Press 5 December 1985 p 75 ISBN 9780521307017 Mann Kristin 5 December 1985 Marrying Well Marriage Status and Social Change among the Educated Elite in Colonial Lagos Cambridge University Press 5 December 1985 p 88 ISBN 9780521307017 Daniel H Ocheja 2001 The rise and fall of the Nigerian First Republic history of Nigeria from Lord Lugard to Gen Aguyi Ironsi 1900 1966 Ogun De Reuben Nig ISBN 9789783261419 Herbert Macaulay 43 17 25 Newswatch Communications Limited 2006 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 pp 109 113 ISBN 9780521204392 Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 p 244 note 36 ISBN 9780521204392 a b c Fasinro 2004 p 137 a b Fasinro 2004 p 138 a b Coleman 1971 p 197 a b Webster Boahen amp Tidy 1980 p 267 Coleman 1971 p 198 Coleman 1971 p 225 a b LaRay Denzer Herbert Samuel Heelas Macaulay Founder of Nigerian nationalism The Institute of Diasporic Studies Northwestern University Archived from the original on 10 December 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 pp 112 113 ISBN 9780521204392 a b Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 pp 147 148 ISBN 9780521204392 a b c Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 pp 113 119 ISBN 9780521204392 Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 pp 105 109 ISBN 9780521204392 Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 p 245 n47 ISBN 9780521204392 Richard L Sklar 2004 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Africa World Press p 61 ISBN 9781592212095 Webster Boahen amp Tidy 1980 p 299 Sklar Robert L 8 December 2015 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Princeton University Press 2015 p 61 ISBN 9781400878239 Zik A Selection from The Speeches of Nnamdi Azikiwe Cambridge University Press 1961 pp 58 59 ISBN 9780521091350 Retrieved 19 August 2014 Isaac B Thomas 1946 Life History of Herbert Macaulay C E Tika To r e Press Cole Patrick 17 April 1975 Modern and Traditional Elites in the Politics of Lagos Cambridge University Press 1975 p 243 n35 ISBN 9780521204392 Odularu SSA 1987 The Manuscript Collection of Ibadan University Library Libri 37 4 321 332 doi 10 1515 libr 1987 37 4 321 S2CID 146586724 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Nigeria 1 Naira 1979 1984 Bank note museum Nigeria 1 Naira 1979 1991 Bank note museum Olowoyo Ganiyah 1 October 2020 NigeriaAt60 Seven movies that tell Nigeria s history Retrieved 19 October 2021 Sources Coleman James S 1971 Nigeria Background to Nationalism University of California Press p 225 ISBN 0 520 02070 7 Fasinro Hassan Adisa Babatunde 2004 Political and cultural perspectives of Lagos s n Thomas Isaac B 1946 Life History of Herbert Macaulay C E Nigeria Tika Tore Press Webster James Bertin Boahen A Adu Tidy Michael 1980 The Revolutionary Years West Africa since 1800 Longman ISBN 0 582 60332 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herbert Macaulay amp oldid 1205561176, 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