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Leander Starr Jameson

Sir Leander Starr Jameson, 1st Baronet KCMG, CB, PC (9 February 1853 – 26 November 1917), was a British colonial politician, who was best known for his involvement in the ill-fated Jameson Raid.

Sir Leander Starr Jameson
10th Prime Minister of the Cape Colony
In office
22 February 1904 – 2 February 1908
MonarchEdward VII
GovernorWalter Hely-Hutchinson
Preceded byGordon Sprigg
Succeeded byJohn X. Merriman
2nd Administrator of Southern Rhodesia
In office
10 September 1894 – 2 April 1896
MonarchQueen Victoria
Preceded byA. R. Colquhoun
Succeeded byThe Earl Grey
2nd Chief Magistrate of Southern Rhodesia
In office
18 September 1891 – 7 October 1893
MonarchQueen Victoria
Preceded byA. R. Colquhoun
Succeeded byA. H. F. Duncan
Personal details
Born
Leander Starr Jameson

(1853-02-09)9 February 1853
Stranraer, Scotland
Died26 November 1917(1917-11-26) (aged 64)
London, England
Resting place
NationalityBritish
Political partyProgressive Party
Alma materUniversity College London
OccupationPhysician

Early life and family edit

He was born on 9 February 1853, the youngest of 12 children of Robert William Jameson (1805–1868),[1] a Writer to the Signet,[2] and Christian Pringle, daughter of Major-General Pringle of Symington House.

Leander Starr Jameson was born at Stranraer, Wigtownshire (now part of Dumfries and Galloway), a great-nephew of Robert Jameson, Regius Professor of Natural History at the University of Edinburgh. Fort's biography of Jameson notes that Starr's "chief Gamaliel, however, was a Professor Grant, a man of advanced age, who had been a pupil of his great-uncle, the Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh."[3]

Robert William Jameson started his career as an advocate in Edinburgh, and was Writer to the Signet, before becoming a playwright, published poet and editor of The Wigtownshire Free Press. A radical and reformist, he was the author of the dramatic poem Nimrod (1848) and Timoleon, a tragedy in five acts informed by the anti-slavery movement. Timoleon was performed at the Adelphi Theatre in Edinburgh in 1852, and ran to a second edition. In due course, the Jameson family moved to London, living in Chelsea and Kensington. Leander Starr Jameson went to the Godolphin School in Hammersmith, where he did well in both lessons and games prior to his university education.

Leander was educated for the medical profession at University College Hospital, London,[2] for which he passed his entrance examinations in January 1870. He distinguished himself as a medical student, becoming a Gold Medallist in materia medica. After qualifying as a doctor, he was made Resident Medical Officer at University College Hospital (M.R.C.S. 1875; M.D. 1877).[2] After acting as house physician, house surgeon and demonstrator of anatomy, and showing promise of a successful professional career in London, his health broke down from overwork in 1878, and he went out to South Africa and settled down in practice at Kimberley. There he rapidly acquired a great reputation as a medical man, and, besides numbering President Kruger and the Matabele chief Lobengula among his patients, came much into contact with Cecil Rhodes.

Jameson was for some time the inDuna of the Matabele king's favourite regiment, the Imbeza. Lobengula expressed his delight with Jameson's successful medical treatment of his gout by honouring him with the rare status of inDuna. Although white, he underwent the initiation ceremonies linked with this honour. His status as an inDuna gave him certain advantages. In 1888, he successfully exerted his influence with Lobengula to induce the chieftain to grant the concessions to the agents of Rhodes which led to the formation of the British South Africa Company; and when the company proceeded to open up Mashonaland, Jameson abandoned his medical practice and joined the pioneer expedition of 1890. From this time his fortunes were bound up with Rhodes' schemes in the north. Immediately after the pioneer column had occupied Mashonaland, Jameson, with F.C. Selous and A.R. Colquhoun, went east to Manicaland and was instrumental in securing the greater part of the country, to which Portugal was laying claim, for the Chartered Company. In 1891, Jameson succeeded Colquhoun as Administrator of Mashonaland.[2] In 1893, Jameson was a key figure in the First Matabele War and involved in incidents that led to the massacre of the Shangani Patrol.[citation needed]

Character edit

Elizabeth Longford wrote of him, "Whatever one felt about him or his projects when he was not there, one could not help falling for the man in his presence.... People attached themselves to Jameson with extraordinary fervour, the more extraordinary because he made no effort to feed it. He affected an attitude of tough cynicism towards life, literature and any articulate form of idealism, particularly towards the hero-worship which he himself excited ... [After Starr's death,] The Times estimated that his astonishing personal hold over his followers had been equalled only by that of Parnell, the Irish patriot."[4]

 
Caricature of Jameson from 1896 issue of Vanity Fair

Longford wrote that Rudyard Kipling wrote the poem "If—" with Leander Starr Jameson in mind as an inspiration for the characteristics he recommended young people to live by (notably Kipling's son, to whom the poem is addressed in the last lines). Longford writes, "Jameson was later to be the inspiration and hero of Rudyard Kipling's poem, If...".[5] Direct evidence that the poem "If—" was written about Jameson is available also in Rudyard Kipling's autobiography in which Kipling writes that "If—" was "drawn from Jameson's character."[6][7]

In 1895, Jameson led about 500 of his countrymen in what became known as the Jameson Raid against the Boers in southern Africa. The Jameson Raid was later cited by Winston Churchill as a major factor in bringing about the Boer War of 1899 to 1902. But the story as recounted in Britain was quite different. The British defeat was interpreted as a victory and Jameson was portrayed as a daring hero.[citation needed]

Seymour Fort 1918 wrote of L.S. Jameson in this way:

... It was not his wont to talk at length, nor was he, unless exceptionally interested, a good listener. He was so logical and so quick to grasp a situation, that he would often cut short exposition by some forcible remark or personal raillery that would all too often quite disconcert the speaker.

Despite his adventurous career, mere reminiscences obviously bored him; he was always for movement, for some betterment of present or future conditions, and in discussion he was a master of the art of persuasion, unconsciously creating in those around him a latent desire to follow, if he would lead. The source of such persuasive influence eludes analysis, and, like the mystery of leadership, is probably more psychic than mental. In this latter respect, Jameson was splendidly equipped; he had greater power of concentration, of logical reasoning, and of rapid diagnosis, while on his lighter side he was brilliant in repartee and in the exercise of a badinage that was both cynical and personal...

... He wrapped himself in cynicism as with a cloak, not only to protect himself against his own quick human sympathy, but to conceal the austere standard of duty and honour that he always set to himself. He was ever trying to hide from his friends his real attitude towards life, and the high estimate he placed upon accepted ethical values... He was essentially a patriot who sought for himself neither wealth, nor power, nor fame, nor leisure, nor even an easy anchorage for reflection. The wide sphere of his work and achievements, and the accepted dominion of his personality and his influence were both based upon his adherence to the principle of always subordinating personal considerations to the work in hand, upon the loyalty of his service to big ideals. His whole life seems to illustrate the truth of the saying that in self-regard and self-centredness there is no profit, and that only in sacrificing himself for impersonal aims can a man save his soul and benefit his fellow men.[8]

A less flattering view is given in Antony Thomas's Rhodes (1996), in which Jameson is portrayed as unscrupulous.

The Jameson Raid edit

 
Arrest of Jameson after the raid – Petit Parisien 1896
 
Matabeleland, 1887

In 1895, Jameson assembled a private army outside the Transvaal in preparation for the violent overthrow of the Boer government. The idea was to foment unrest among foreign workers (Uitlanders) in the territory, and use the outbreak of open revolt as an excuse to invade and annex the territory.

In November 1895, a piece of territory of strategic importance, the Pitsani Strip, part of the Bechuanaland Protectorate and bordering the Transvaal, was ceded to the British South Africa Company by the Colonial Office, overtly for the protection of a railway running through the territory. Cecil Rhodes, the Prime Minister of the Cape Colony and managing director of the company was eager to bring South Africa under British dominion, and encouraged the disenfranchised Uitlanders of the Boer republics to resist Afrikaner domination.

Rhodes hoped that the intervention of the company's private army could spark an Uitlander uprising, leading to the overthrow of the Transvaal government. Rhodes' forces were assembled in the Pitsani Strip for this purpose. Joseph Chamberlain informed Salisbury on Boxing Day that an uprising was expected, and was aware that an invasion would be launched, but was not sure when. The subsequent Jameson Raid was a debacle, leading to the invading force's surrender. Chamberlain, at Highbury Hall, his home in Birmingham, received a secret telegram from the Colonial Office on 31 December informing him of the beginning of the Raid.

Though sympathetic to the ultimate goals of the Raid, Chamberlain was uncomfortable with the timing of the invasion[why?] and remarked "if this succeeds it will ruin me. I'm going up to London to crush it". He swiftly travelled by train to the Colonial Office, ordering Sir Hercules Robinson, Governor of the Cape Colony, to repudiate the actions of Jameson and warned Rhodes that the company's Charter would be in danger if it were discovered that the Cape Prime Minister were involved in the Raid. The prisoners were returned to London for trial, and the Transvaal government received considerable compensation from the company. Jameson was tried in England for leading the raid; during that time he was lionised by the press and London society.

The Jameson Raid trial edit

The Jameson Raiders arrived in England at the end of February, 1896 to face prosecution under the Foreign Enlistment Act 1870 styled R. v Jameson, Willoughby and others.[9] There were some months of investigations initially held at Bow Street Magistrates' Court, following which the trial at bar (a trial in front of multiple judges instead of a jury) began on 20 June 1896, at the High Court. The trial lasted seven days, following which Dr Jameson was "found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment as a first-class misdemeanant for fifteen months.[2] He was, however, released from Holloway in the following December on account of illness."[8]

During the trial of Jameson, Rhodes' solicitor, Bourchier Hawksley, refused to produce cablegrams that had passed between Rhodes and his agents in London during November and December 1895. According to Hawksley, these demonstrated that the Colonial Office 'influenced the actions of those in South Africa' who embarked on the Raid, and even that Chamberlain had transferred control of the Pitsani Strip to facilitate an invasion. Nine days before the Raid, Chamberlain had asked his Assistant Under-Secretary to encourage Rhodes to "hurry up" because of the developing Venezuela Crisis of 1895.

The conduct of Dr Jameson during the trial was graphically described by Krout 1899, an eyewitness account of her observations during the Jameson Raid trial. She wrote:

.... Dr. Jameson was very grave and he, alone, was somewhat ill at ease. As he entered the court room a dark flush mounted to his forehead, which slowly faded as he walked to his chair and seated himself with great deliberateness. He was a man somewhat below medium height, with a huge head carried a little to one side, showing a remarkable breadth of brow; the eyes were large, dark and sufficiently expressive, when not concealed by the heavy drooping lids that were frequently half, or wholly, closed; the nose was prominent and large and rather symmetrical, the chin and mouth indicated decided firmness; the whole expression and demeanour of the man evinced fearlessness that would be disposed to express itself in deeds rather than words. He, too, was carefully dressed in a dark frock coat and trousers, a spotless, white necktie and pale grey gloves-the conventional morning dress of an English gentleman. He walked with a heavy un-elastic tread and a slightly swinging carriage, and sat much of the time obliquely in his chair, one cheek resting upon his elegantly gloved hand; his glance was often cast down or fixed at rare intervals upon his counsel, Sir Edward Clarke; not once during the day, so far as I could observe, did he give more than a passing look at the witnesses upon the stand; to whatever was being drawn out of them he seemed quite indifferent, and, except for that first dull flush, he was equally oblivious of the spectators about him to whom he was a manifest object of interest. Such was the hero of one of the most daring raids in all the annals of border warfare; to all appearance a quiet, modest gentleman, in faultless and fashionable dress, with civilian stamped upon him from head to foot, and who would have been recognised anywhere as the circumspect, model family physician. He seemed pre-eminently a man to whom healing of wounds was far more congenial and better suited than blood-letting with Maxim guns and Lee-Metford rifles, after the manner which he had so rashly undertaken.

Jameson was sentenced to fifteen months in gaol, but was soon pardoned.[2] In June 1896, Chamberlain, British Colonial Secretary of the day, offered his resignation to Lord Salisbury, having shown the Prime Minister one or more of the cablegrams implicating him in the Raid's planning. Salisbury refused to accept the offer, possibly reluctant to lose the government's most popular figure. Salisbury reacted aggressively in support of Chamberlain, supporting the Colonial Secretary's threat to withdraw the company's charter if the cablegrams were revealed. Accordingly, Rhodes refused to reveal the cablegrams, and as no evidence was produced showing that Chamberlain was complicit in the Raid's planning, the Select Committee appointed to investigate the events surrounding the Raid had no choice but to absolve Chamberlain of all responsibility.[citation needed]

Jameson had been Administrator General for Matabeleland at the time of the Raid and his intrusion into Transvaal depleted Matabeleland of many of its troops and left the whole territory vulnerable. Seizing on this weakness, and a discontent with the British South Africa Company, the Matabele revolted in March 1896 in what is now celebrated in Zimbabwe as the First War of Independence – the Second Matabele War. Hundreds of white settlers were killed within the first few weeks and many more would die over the next year and a half at the hands of both the Matabele and the Shona. With few troops to support them, the settlers had to quickly build a laager in the centre of Bulawayo on their own. Against over 50,000 Matabele held up in their stronghold of the Matobo Hills as the settlers mounted patrols under Burnham, Baden-Powell, and Selous. After the Matabele laid down their arms, the war continued until October 1897 in Mashonaland.[citation needed]

Later political career edit

Despite the Raid, Jameson had a successful political life following the invasion, receiving many honours in later life. In 1903, Jameson was put forward as the leader of the Progressive (British) Party in the Cape Colony.[2] When the party was successful he served as Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1904 to 1908. His government was unique in Cape history, as being the only Ministry to be composed exclusively of British politicians.[11]

During the Conference of Colonial Premiers held in London in March 1907, he was made a Privy Counsellor. He served as the leader of the Unionist Party (South Africa) from its founding in 1910 until 1912, when Starr returned to England. (Jameson was defeated in the election of September 1910 by the nationalist South African Party and never held political power.)[12]

Honours edit

Leander Starr Jameson was awarded the:

Jameson was created a baronet in 1911.

Death edit

Sir Leander Starr Jameson, 1st Bt., died on the afternoon of Monday, 26 November 1917, at his home, 2 Great Cumberland Place, Hyde Park, in London. His body was laid in a vault at Kensal Green Cemetery on 29 November 1917, where it remained until 1920 when it was exhumed and reburied alongside Cecil Rhodes at Malindidzimu Hill,[13] a granite hill in the Matobo National Park, 40 kilometres (25 mi) south of Bulawayo. It was designated by Cecil Rhodes as the resting place for those who served Great Britain well in Africa.

Biographies, portraits and honours edit

 
Jameson Hall and Jammie Plaza, the focal point of the University of Cape Town, were named in his honour.

Jameson's life is the subject of a number of biographies, including The Life of Jameson by Ian Colvin (1922, Vol. 1 and 1923, Vol. 2), Dr. Jameson by G. Seymour Fort (1918), and The If Man by Chris Ash (2012). The Jameson Raid has been the subject of numerous articles and books, and remains a fascinating historical riddle more than one hundred years after the events of the Raid took place.

There are three portraits of Jameson in the National Portrait Gallery in London. One of these was by one of his elder brothers, Middleton Jameson, R.A. (1851–1919).

During the colonial period, the Zambian town of Chipata was named "Fort Jameson" in Jameson's honour.

Later historical documents edit

In 2002, The Van Riebeck Society published Sir Graham Bower’s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis, 1895–1902,[14] adding to growing historical evidence that the imprisonment and judgment upon the Raiders at the time of their trial was an underhand move by the British government, a result of political manoeuvres by Joseph Chamberlain and his staff to hide his own involvement and knowledge of the Raid. In his review of Sir Graham Bower’s Secret History... Alan Cousins,[15] notes that, "A number of major themes and concerns emerge" from Bower's history, "... perhaps the most poignant being Sir Graham Bower's accounts of his being made a scapegoat in the aftermath of the raid: 'since a scapegoat was wanted I was willing to serve my country in that capacity'."

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Banerji.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911.
  3. ^ Seymour Fort 1918, p. 53.
  4. ^ Longford 1982.
  5. ^ Longford 1982, p. 44.
  6. ^ Kipling 1937, p. 191.
  7. ^ Ash 2012.
  8. ^ a b Seymour Fort 1918, pp. 331–335.
  9. ^ The National Archives: "Queen's Bench: R v Leander Starr Jameson, Sir John Christopher Willoughby Bt, Henry..." TS 36/102
  10. ^ Krout 1899.
  11. ^ McCracken 1967, p. 52.
  12. ^ Chronicle of 20th Century History edited by J S Bowman; ISBN 1-85422-005-5
  13. ^ Wells 1956, p. 191.
  14. ^ Bower 2002.
  15. ^ Cousins 2004.

Sources edit

  • Ash, Chris (2012). The If Man: Dr Leander Starr Jameson, the Inspiration for Kipling's Masterpiece. Helion & Company. ISBN 978-1-920143-58-9.
  • Banerji, Nilanjana. "Jameson, Robert William (1805–1868)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/14634. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Bower, Graham (2002). Deryck Marshall Schreuder; Jeffrey Butler (eds.). Sir Graham Bower's Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis, 1895-1902. The Van Riebeeck Society. ISBN 978-0-9584112-9-5.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Jameson, Leander Starr". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 147–148.
  • Colvin, Ian Duncan (1922). The Life of Jameson. Vol. 1. London: Edward Arnold.
  • Colvin, Ian Duncan (1923). The Life of Jameson. Vol. 2. London: Edward Arnold.
  • Cousins, A. (2004). "Review of Deryck Schreuder and Jeffrey Butler, 'Sir Graham Bower's Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis, 1895–1902'". History. 89 (295). Blackwell: 434–448. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.2004.00308.x. ISSN 0018-2648.
  • Kipling, Rudyard (1937). Something of Myself. Macmillan.
  • Krout, Mary Hannah (1899). A Looker on in London. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company.
  • Longford, E. (1982). Jameson's Raid: The Prelude to the Boer War (2nd ed.). Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball.
  • McCracken, J. L. (1967). The Cape parliament, 1854-1910. Oxford: Clarendon.
  • Seymour Fort, George (1918). Dr. Jameson. London: Hurst and Blackett. ISBN 9781354681855.
  • Wells, Arthur Walter (1956). Southern Africa, To-day & Yesterday. Dent.

Further reading edit

  • Hole, H. M (1930). The Jameson Raid. London: Philip Allan.
  • Crator, L. J. (December 2005). "The Jameson Raid and England's Anti-Mercenary Laws". South African Military History Journal. 13 (4).

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Chief Magistrate of Southern Rhodesia (Mashonaland)
1891–1893
Succeeded by
A. H. F. Duncan (acting)
Preceded by Administrator of Southern Rhodesia
1894–1896
Succeeded by
Preceded by
John Gordon Sprigg
Prime Minister of the Cape Colony
1904–1908
Succeeded by
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Down Street)
1911–1917
Extinct

leander, starr, jameson, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, with, wikipedia, content, policies, particularly, neutral, point, view, please, discuss, further, talk, page, january, 2023, . A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Sir Leander Starr Jameson 1st Baronet KCMG CB PC 9 February 1853 26 November 1917 was a British colonial politician who was best known for his involvement in the ill fated Jameson Raid The Right HonourableSir Leander Starr JamesonKCMG CB PC10th Prime Minister of the Cape ColonyIn office 22 February 1904 2 February 1908MonarchEdward VIIGovernorWalter Hely HutchinsonPreceded byGordon SpriggSucceeded byJohn X Merriman2nd Administrator of Southern RhodesiaIn office 10 September 1894 2 April 1896MonarchQueen VictoriaPreceded byA R ColquhounSucceeded byThe Earl Grey2nd Chief Magistrate of Southern RhodesiaIn office 18 September 1891 7 October 1893MonarchQueen VictoriaPreceded byA R ColquhounSucceeded byA H F DuncanPersonal detailsBornLeander Starr Jameson 1853 02 09 9 February 1853Stranraer ScotlandDied26 November 1917 1917 11 26 aged 64 London EnglandResting placeMatopos Hills Rhodesia present day Matobos Hills Zimbabwe NationalityBritishPolitical partyProgressive PartyAlma materUniversity College LondonOccupationPhysician Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Character 3 The Jameson Raid 4 The Jameson Raid trial 5 Later political career 6 Honours 7 Death 8 Biographies portraits and honours 9 Later historical documents 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and family editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leander Starr Jameson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message He was born on 9 February 1853 the youngest of 12 children of Robert William Jameson 1805 1868 1 a Writer to the Signet 2 and Christian Pringle daughter of Major General Pringle of Symington House Leander Starr Jameson was born at Stranraer Wigtownshire now part of Dumfries and Galloway a great nephew of Robert Jameson Regius Professor of Natural History at the University of Edinburgh Fort s biography of Jameson notes that Starr s chief Gamaliel however was a Professor Grant a man of advanced age who had been a pupil of his great uncle the Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh 3 Robert William Jameson started his career as an advocate in Edinburgh and was Writer to the Signet before becoming a playwright published poet and editor of The Wigtownshire Free Press A radical and reformist he was the author of the dramatic poem Nimrod 1848 and Timoleon a tragedy in five acts informed by the anti slavery movement Timoleon was performed at the Adelphi Theatre in Edinburgh in 1852 and ran to a second edition In due course the Jameson family moved to London living in Chelsea and Kensington Leander Starr Jameson went to the Godolphin School in Hammersmith where he did well in both lessons and games prior to his university education Leander was educated for the medical profession at University College Hospital London 2 for which he passed his entrance examinations in January 1870 He distinguished himself as a medical student becoming a Gold Medallist in materia medica After qualifying as a doctor he was made Resident Medical Officer at University College Hospital M R C S 1875 M D 1877 2 After acting as house physician house surgeon and demonstrator of anatomy and showing promise of a successful professional career in London his health broke down from overwork in 1878 and he went out to South Africa and settled down in practice at Kimberley There he rapidly acquired a great reputation as a medical man and besides numbering President Kruger and the Matabele chief Lobengula among his patients came much into contact with Cecil Rhodes Jameson was for some time the inDuna of the Matabele king s favourite regiment the Imbeza Lobengula expressed his delight with Jameson s successful medical treatment of his gout by honouring him with the rare status of inDuna Although white he underwent the initiation ceremonies linked with this honour His status as an inDuna gave him certain advantages In 1888 he successfully exerted his influence with Lobengula to induce the chieftain to grant the concessions to the agents of Rhodes which led to the formation of the British South Africa Company and when the company proceeded to open up Mashonaland Jameson abandoned his medical practice and joined the pioneer expedition of 1890 From this time his fortunes were bound up with Rhodes schemes in the north Immediately after the pioneer column had occupied Mashonaland Jameson with F C Selous and A R Colquhoun went east to Manicaland and was instrumental in securing the greater part of the country to which Portugal was laying claim for the Chartered Company In 1891 Jameson succeeded Colquhoun as Administrator of Mashonaland 2 In 1893 Jameson was a key figure in the First Matabele War and involved in incidents that led to the massacre of the Shangani Patrol citation needed Character editElizabeth Longford wrote of him Whatever one felt about him or his projects when he was not there one could not help falling for the man in his presence People attached themselves to Jameson with extraordinary fervour the more extraordinary because he made no effort to feed it He affected an attitude of tough cynicism towards life literature and any articulate form of idealism particularly towards the hero worship which he himself excited After Starr s death The Times estimated that his astonishing personal hold over his followers had been equalled only by that of Parnell the Irish patriot 4 nbsp Caricature of Jameson from 1896 issue of Vanity Fair Longford wrote that Rudyard Kipling wrote the poem If with Leander Starr Jameson in mind as an inspiration for the characteristics he recommended young people to live by notably Kipling s son to whom the poem is addressed in the last lines Longford writes Jameson was later to be the inspiration and hero of Rudyard Kipling s poem If 5 Direct evidence that the poem If was written about Jameson is available also in Rudyard Kipling s autobiography in which Kipling writes that If was drawn from Jameson s character 6 7 In 1895 Jameson led about 500 of his countrymen in what became known as the Jameson Raid against the Boers in southern Africa The Jameson Raid was later cited by Winston Churchill as a major factor in bringing about the Boer War of 1899 to 1902 But the story as recounted in Britain was quite different The British defeat was interpreted as a victory and Jameson was portrayed as a daring hero citation needed Seymour Fort 1918 wrote of L S Jameson in this way It was not his wont to talk at length nor was he unless exceptionally interested a good listener He was so logical and so quick to grasp a situation that he would often cut short exposition by some forcible remark or personal raillery that would all too often quite disconcert the speaker Despite his adventurous career mere reminiscences obviously bored him he was always for movement for some betterment of present or future conditions and in discussion he was a master of the art of persuasion unconsciously creating in those around him a latent desire to follow if he would lead The source of such persuasive influence eludes analysis and like the mystery of leadership is probably more psychic than mental In this latter respect Jameson was splendidly equipped he had greater power of concentration of logical reasoning and of rapid diagnosis while on his lighter side he was brilliant in repartee and in the exercise of a badinage that was both cynical and personal He wrapped himself in cynicism as with a cloak not only to protect himself against his own quick human sympathy but to conceal the austere standard of duty and honour that he always set to himself He was ever trying to hide from his friends his real attitude towards life and the high estimate he placed upon accepted ethical values He was essentially a patriot who sought for himself neither wealth nor power nor fame nor leisure nor even an easy anchorage for reflection The wide sphere of his work and achievements and the accepted dominion of his personality and his influence were both based upon his adherence to the principle of always subordinating personal considerations to the work in hand upon the loyalty of his service to big ideals His whole life seems to illustrate the truth of the saying that in self regard and self centredness there is no profit and that only in sacrificing himself for impersonal aims can a man save his soul and benefit his fellow men 8 A less flattering view is given in Antony Thomas s Rhodes 1996 in which Jameson is portrayed as unscrupulous The Jameson Raid editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leander Starr Jameson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Main article Jameson Raid nbsp Arrest of Jameson after the raid Petit Parisien 1896 nbsp Matabeleland 1887 In 1895 Jameson assembled a private army outside the Transvaal in preparation for the violent overthrow of the Boer government The idea was to foment unrest among foreign workers Uitlanders in the territory and use the outbreak of open revolt as an excuse to invade and annex the territory In November 1895 a piece of territory of strategic importance the Pitsani Strip part of the Bechuanaland Protectorate and bordering the Transvaal was ceded to the British South Africa Company by the Colonial Office overtly for the protection of a railway running through the territory Cecil Rhodes the Prime Minister of the Cape Colony and managing director of the company was eager to bring South Africa under British dominion and encouraged the disenfranchised Uitlanders of the Boer republics to resist Afrikaner domination Rhodes hoped that the intervention of the company s private army could spark an Uitlander uprising leading to the overthrow of the Transvaal government Rhodes forces were assembled in the Pitsani Strip for this purpose Joseph Chamberlain informed Salisbury on Boxing Day that an uprising was expected and was aware that an invasion would be launched but was not sure when The subsequent Jameson Raid was a debacle leading to the invading force s surrender Chamberlain at Highbury Hall his home in Birmingham received a secret telegram from the Colonial Office on 31 December informing him of the beginning of the Raid Though sympathetic to the ultimate goals of the Raid Chamberlain was uncomfortable with the timing of the invasion why and remarked if this succeeds it will ruin me I m going up to London to crush it He swiftly travelled by train to the Colonial Office ordering Sir Hercules Robinson Governor of the Cape Colony to repudiate the actions of Jameson and warned Rhodes that the company s Charter would be in danger if it were discovered that the Cape Prime Minister were involved in the Raid The prisoners were returned to London for trial and the Transvaal government received considerable compensation from the company Jameson was tried in England for leading the raid during that time he was lionised by the press and London society The Jameson Raid trial editThe Jameson Raiders arrived in England at the end of February 1896 to face prosecution under the Foreign Enlistment Act 1870 styled R v Jameson Willoughby and others 9 There were some months of investigations initially held at Bow Street Magistrates Court following which the trial at bar a trial in front of multiple judges instead of a jury began on 20 June 1896 at the High Court The trial lasted seven days following which Dr Jameson was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment as a first class misdemeanant for fifteen months 2 He was however released from Holloway in the following December on account of illness 8 During the trial of Jameson Rhodes solicitor Bourchier Hawksley refused to produce cablegrams that had passed between Rhodes and his agents in London during November and December 1895 According to Hawksley these demonstrated that the Colonial Office influenced the actions of those in South Africa who embarked on the Raid and even that Chamberlain had transferred control of the Pitsani Strip to facilitate an invasion Nine days before the Raid Chamberlain had asked his Assistant Under Secretary to encourage Rhodes to hurry up because of the developing Venezuela Crisis of 1895 The conduct of Dr Jameson during the trial was graphically described by Krout 1899 an eyewitness account of her observations during the Jameson Raid trial She wrote Dr Jameson was very grave and he alone was somewhat ill at ease As he entered the court room a dark flush mounted to his forehead which slowly faded as he walked to his chair and seated himself with great deliberateness He was a man somewhat below medium height with a huge head carried a little to one side showing a remarkable breadth of brow the eyes were large dark and sufficiently expressive when not concealed by the heavy drooping lids that were frequently half or wholly closed the nose was prominent and large and rather symmetrical the chin and mouth indicated decided firmness the whole expression and demeanour of the man evinced fearlessness that would be disposed to express itself in deeds rather than words He too was carefully dressed in a dark frock coat and trousers a spotless white necktie and pale grey gloves the conventional morning dress of an English gentleman He walked with a heavy un elastic tread and a slightly swinging carriage and sat much of the time obliquely in his chair one cheek resting upon his elegantly gloved hand his glance was often cast down or fixed at rare intervals upon his counsel Sir Edward Clarke not once during the day so far as I could observe did he give more than a passing look at the witnesses upon the stand to whatever was being drawn out of them he seemed quite indifferent and except for that first dull flush he was equally oblivious of the spectators about him to whom he was a manifest object of interest Such was the hero of one of the most daring raids in all the annals of border warfare to all appearance a quiet modest gentleman in faultless and fashionable dress with civilian stamped upon him from head to foot and who would have been recognised anywhere as the circumspect model family physician He seemed pre eminently a man to whom healing of wounds was far more congenial and better suited than blood letting with Maxim guns and Lee Metford rifles after the manner which he had so rashly undertaken Mary Krout 10 Jameson was sentenced to fifteen months in gaol but was soon pardoned 2 In June 1896 Chamberlain British Colonial Secretary of the day offered his resignation to Lord Salisbury having shown the Prime Minister one or more of the cablegrams implicating him in the Raid s planning Salisbury refused to accept the offer possibly reluctant to lose the government s most popular figure Salisbury reacted aggressively in support of Chamberlain supporting the Colonial Secretary s threat to withdraw the company s charter if the cablegrams were revealed Accordingly Rhodes refused to reveal the cablegrams and as no evidence was produced showing that Chamberlain was complicit in the Raid s planning the Select Committee appointed to investigate the events surrounding the Raid had no choice but to absolve Chamberlain of all responsibility citation needed Jameson had been Administrator General for Matabeleland at the time of the Raid and his intrusion into Transvaal depleted Matabeleland of many of its troops and left the whole territory vulnerable Seizing on this weakness and a discontent with the British South Africa Company the Matabele revolted in March 1896 in what is now celebrated in Zimbabwe as the First War of Independence the Second Matabele War Hundreds of white settlers were killed within the first few weeks and many more would die over the next year and a half at the hands of both the Matabele and the Shona With few troops to support them the settlers had to quickly build a laager in the centre of Bulawayo on their own Against over 50 000 Matabele held up in their stronghold of the Matobo Hills as the settlers mounted patrols under Burnham Baden Powell and Selous After the Matabele laid down their arms the war continued until October 1897 in Mashonaland citation needed Later political career editDespite the Raid Jameson had a successful political life following the invasion receiving many honours in later life In 1903 Jameson was put forward as the leader of the Progressive British Party in the Cape Colony 2 When the party was successful he served as Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1904 to 1908 His government was unique in Cape history as being the only Ministry to be composed exclusively of British politicians 11 During the Conference of Colonial Premiers held in London in March 1907 he was made a Privy Counsellor He served as the leader of the Unionist Party South Africa from its founding in 1910 until 1912 when Starr returned to England Jameson was defeated in the election of September 1910 by the nationalist South African Party and never held political power 12 Honours editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leander Starr Jameson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Leander Starr Jameson was awarded the KCMG CB Freedom of the City of London for services to the British Empire Freedom of the City of Manchester for services to the British Empire Freedom of the City of Edinburgh for services to the British Empire Jameson was created a baronet in 1911 Death editSir Leander Starr Jameson 1st Bt died on the afternoon of Monday 26 November 1917 at his home 2 Great Cumberland Place Hyde Park in London His body was laid in a vault at Kensal Green Cemetery on 29 November 1917 where it remained until 1920 when it was exhumed and reburied alongside Cecil Rhodes at Malindidzimu Hill 13 a granite hill in the Matobo National Park 40 kilometres 25 mi south of Bulawayo It was designated by Cecil Rhodes as the resting place for those who served Great Britain well in Africa Biographies portraits and honours editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leander Starr Jameson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Jameson Hall and Jammie Plaza the focal point of the University of Cape Town were named in his honour Jameson s life is the subject of a number of biographies including The Life of Jameson by Ian Colvin 1922 Vol 1 and 1923 Vol 2 Dr Jameson by G Seymour Fort 1918 and The If Man by Chris Ash 2012 The Jameson Raid has been the subject of numerous articles and books and remains a fascinating historical riddle more than one hundred years after the events of the Raid took place There are three portraits of Jameson in the National Portrait Gallery in London One of these was by one of his elder brothers Middleton Jameson R A 1851 1919 During the colonial period the Zambian town of Chipata was named Fort Jameson in Jameson s honour Later historical documents editIn 2002 The Van Riebeck Society published Sir Graham Bower s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis 1895 1902 14 adding to growing historical evidence that the imprisonment and judgment upon the Raiders at the time of their trial was an underhand move by the British government a result of political manoeuvres by Joseph Chamberlain and his staff to hide his own involvement and knowledge of the Raid In his review of Sir Graham Bower s Secret History Alan Cousins 15 notes that A number of major themes and concerns emerge from Bower s history perhaps the most poignant being Sir Graham Bower s accounts of his being made a scapegoat in the aftermath of the raid since a scapegoat was wanted I was willing to serve my country in that capacity References editCitations edit Banerji a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911 Seymour Fort 1918 p 53 Longford 1982 Longford 1982 p 44 Kipling 1937 p 191 Ash 2012 a b Seymour Fort 1918 pp 331 335 The National Archives Queen s Bench R v Leander Starr Jameson Sir John Christopher Willoughby Bt Henry TS 36 102 Krout 1899 McCracken 1967 p 52 Chronicle of 20th Century History edited by J S Bowman ISBN 1 85422 005 5 Wells 1956 p 191 Bower 2002 Cousins 2004 Sources edit Ash Chris 2012 The If Man Dr Leander Starr Jameson the Inspiration for Kipling s Masterpiece Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 920143 58 9 Banerji Nilanjana Jameson Robert William 1805 1868 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14634 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bower Graham 2002 Deryck Marshall Schreuder Jeffrey Butler eds Sir Graham Bower s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis 1895 1902 The Van Riebeeck Society ISBN 978 0 9584112 9 5 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Jameson Leander Starr Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 147 148 Colvin Ian Duncan 1922 The Life of Jameson Vol 1 London Edward Arnold Colvin Ian Duncan 1923 The Life of Jameson Vol 2 London Edward Arnold Cousins A 2004 Review of Deryck Schreuder and Jeffrey Butler Sir Graham Bower s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis 1895 1902 History 89 295 Blackwell 434 448 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 2004 00308 x ISSN 0018 2648 Kipling Rudyard 1937 Something of Myself Macmillan Krout Mary Hannah 1899 A Looker on in London New York Dodd Mead and Company Longford E 1982 Jameson s Raid The Prelude to the Boer War 2nd ed Johannesburg Jonathan Ball McCracken J L 1967 The Cape parliament 1854 1910 Oxford Clarendon Seymour Fort George 1918 Dr Jameson London Hurst and Blackett ISBN 9781354681855 Wells Arthur Walter 1956 Southern Africa To day amp Yesterday Dent Further reading editHole H M 1930 The Jameson Raid London Philip Allan Crator L J December 2005 The Jameson Raid and England s Anti Mercenary Laws South African Military History Journal 13 4 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Leander Starr Jameson nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leander Starr Jameson Portraits of Leander Starr Jameson at the National Portrait Gallery London Rudyard Kipling and Baden Powell The Mafeking Connection Part I Jameson s work as one of the first Rhodes Trustees at the Wayback Machine archived 2015 10 19 Pictures of Cecil Rhodes World s View Matopos burial place of Jameson Newspaper clippings about Leander Starr Jameson in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Political offices Preceded byA R Colquhoun acting Chief Magistrate of Southern Rhodesia Mashonaland 1891 1893 Succeeded byA H F Duncan acting Preceded byA R Colquhoun Administrator of Southern Rhodesia1894 1896 Succeeded byAlbert Grey 4th Earl Grey Preceded byJohn Gordon Sprigg Prime Minister of the Cape Colony1904 1908 Succeeded byJohn X Merriman Baronetage of the United Kingdom New creation Baronet of Down Street 1911 1917 Extinct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leander Starr Jameson amp oldid 1221994017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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