Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
and depicted his holdings as a “new Australia.” But his company soon
teetered on bankruptcy because the region lacked exploitable mineral
resources and its local economies were not suited to easy extraction.
Few East Africans in the interior produced commodities for the world
market, which meant that MacKinnon could not emulate Clive’s success in India by capturing preexisting trade and tax systems. To make
matters worse, his charter required him to occupy the lake kingdom
of Buganda at considerable expense. MacKinnon’s only hope of survival was a government subsidy for a railway linking Mombasa to
the highlands, but his enterprise was doomed once the Liberal prime
minister William Gladstone refused to saddle the British taxpayers
with such an expensive enterprise.
MacKinnon was a prototypical example of a failed imperial speculator. Although he benefi ted from western advances in commerce
and technology, he had no means of extracting wealth from his new
subjects. Many of his original employees were trained geologists, but
their desperate search for economically viable mineral deposits was
fruitless. Realizing that custom duties on the caravan trade were the
region’s only signifi cant revenue source, MacKinnon essentially took
over the old Afro-Arab trade network. His caravans employed many
of the same coastal peoples who had initially chartered the highland
trade, although they no longer engaged in slave raiding and elephant
hunting.
Given these realities, it is hardly surprising that the IBEAC had
diffi culty attracting investors. Handicapped by a chronic capital
shortage, MacKinnon lacked the means to govern and develop the
highlands. He escaped total ruin when the more imperially minded
prime minister Lord Rosebery claimed the Uganda and East Africa
Protectorates in 1894 and 1895 on the assumption that the source of
the Nile had suffi cient strategic importance to warrant the expense
of direct intervention. Having bought out MacKinnon and his investors, Rosebery concluded that the Treasury would have to take fi nancial responsibility for replacing the caravan route from Mombasa to
Uganda with a railway. In investing some nine million pounds of state
funds in the project, he implicitly committed the British government
to completing the IBEAC’s conquest of East Africa. MacKinnon was
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Kenya 303
off the hook, and most of his employees continued their careers in
government service.
The Foreign Offi ce had responsibility for the new protectorates
until the Colonial Offi ce took them over in 1906. This fi t the overall
pattern for the new British Empire. Administratively, the Crown was
the source of executive authority in every British-controlled territory, but in practice there was no uniform or integrated system of
governance. In London, a variety of government ministries instead
shared responsibility for imperial oversight. The Foreign Offi ce initially ran most of the African protectorates, but as in East Africa, it
handed off most of these territories to the Colonial Offi ce. The India
Offi ce oversaw the Raj and an extensive Indian Civil Service that was
separate and distinct from the rest of the colonial service. In practical terms, however, the Treasury exercised the greatest infl uence of
all the metropolitan ministries because the chancellors of the Exchequer stood in the way of speculators who sought to shift the costs
of empire to the metropolitan government. The British East Africa
Company was a notable exception to this rule.
Otherwise, the EAP followed the standard imperial template
by dividing the newly conquered territory into provinces, districts,
and African “locations.” The Protestant missions adopted a similar
strategy in apportioning the protectorate into spheres of infl uence
to ensure that they did not compete with each other. In terms of
governance, a commissioner, whose title later became governor, presided over a central secretariat, several specialized departments, and
the larger fi eld administration. These district offi cers supervised the
chiefs who actually ruled the African majority under the doctrine of
indirect rule.
In pretending to rule through local sovereigns, the British imported
the Indian model of imperial rule to Africa. As in the Raj, British
offi cials claimed to govern through African institutions of authority
rather than ruling directly. This made the “tribe” the basis of imperial
administration. Confused by the range of fl uid and often overlapping
ethnicities of preconquest Africa, British offi cials concluded that Africans lived in unchanging tribal societies. In the imperial imagination,
a tribe was a lower form of political and social organization that, with
proper paternal guidance, might one day evolve into a nation. Theoretically, these tribal identities were biologically ingrained, thereby
making them fi xed and corporate rather than individual. Working in
304 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
the service of colonial governments, anthropologists mapped tribal
languages, social institutions, and customary laws to fashion the tools
of imperial administration for district offi cers. The African tribe was
thus a useful fi ction to update the venerable imperial strategy of coopting local institutions of authority. This indirect rule lowered the
cost of administration and allowed the new imperialists to portray
themselves as philosopher-kings in the Platonic tradition.
However, British offi cials actually knew very little about the
local institutions and customs they claimed to protect. Their ignorance created opportunities for ambitious individuals to convince
imperial offi cials and ethnographers to make them chiefs with the
vested authority to defi ne the tribal customs that became the basis
of imperial administration. As John Iliffe famously noted: “Europeans believed Africans belonged to tribes; Africans built tribes to
belong to,” and the origins of the Mijikenda, Kalenjin, Luhya and
other contemporary Kenyan “tribes” date from the imperial era.13
The opportunities of imperially defi ned tribalism thus encouraged
subject peoples to frame political and social debates in tribal terms. In
doing so, they played into the hands of the new imperialists, for tribal
status disqualifi ed Africans from membership in the British nationstate. Metropolitan Britons were technically “subjects” of the British
Crown, but in practice they were citizens with the full rights and
protections of British law. Tribal Africans, conversely, were “protected
persons,” with no individual rights. Instead of citizenship, the British
imperial system granted collective rights to tribes.
The complication was that while indirect rule worked relatively
well in the Raj, where sultans and maharajas had substantial authority, these Indian rulers had few counterparts in sub-Saharan Africa,
where, like the Nandi, most societies were stateless. This meant that
there were multiple sites of authority in a given community and
no single individual had the power to govern autonomously, collect
taxes, or rule on “native law.” In most territories, British offi cials
compensated by turning cooperative individuals with some measure
of infl uence into “chiefs.” But this was not the equivalent of Napoleonic
ralliement
, for few of these men were true local notables. Similarly, imperial administrators solved the problem of statelessness by
lumping related communities together into tribes under the nominal
authority of these imperial proxies. While it did not have the power
to force Africans to accept these tribal identities, the imperial regime
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created a powerful incentive for them to think tribally by refusing to
acknowledge them as individuals. Tellingly, individualistic westerneducated Africans such as the Sierra Leonean Krios had to be shunted
aside because they were too individualistic and “modern.”
It took some time for the Nandi and the rest of the highland communities to realize the consequences of these developments. Peoples
living along the route to Lake Nyanza/Victoria, which IBEAC offi cials
called the Buganda Road, saw both danger and opportunity in the
expanding British presence. Initially, there were profi ts to be made
by supplying the company with food, water, and labor. In the central
highlands, a Kikuyu trader named Kinyanjui made himself useful
by provisioning the caravans. Likewise, Mumia, a relatively minor
Luhya clan leader on the northern shore of Lake Victoria/Nyanza,
used his connections with the company to become a powerful chief.
At the same time, MacKinnon’s men also provoked highland communities when they resorted to foraging, which was essentially looting,
to the expense of bartering supplies. That there were no rich treasures
to plunder in the highlands did not mean that these latter-day conquistadors were any more virtuous than their predecessors.
Koitalel’s followers and other young warriors who had no stake
in commerce further hindered the company’s ability to turn a profi t.
Preferring raiding to trading, they made the caravans’ long trek from
Mombasa to Buganda diffi cult and dangerous. Indian work gangs
building the Uganda Railway were similarly at risk. The company
initially dealt with this threat by fortifying its food stations, but the
Foreign Offi ce, which had little patience for local interference with a
multimillion-pound construction project, adopted a more aggressive
response. It reorganized the private company army into the KAR to
bolster British authority in the new protectorates. This “native force”
reduced the cost of empire by following the chartered company practice of recruiting ex-slaves and other poorly paid marginal peoples for
service against more established communities.
Led by seconded regular army offi cers such as Richard Meinertzhagen, the KAR companies, backed by “native auxiliaries” and
Indian troops on loan from the Raj, gradually forced the peoples of
the highlands to accept imperial subjecthood. For the fi rst decade of
its existence the EAP’s main business was conquest. From 1895 to
1905, the total cost of these pacifi cation campaigns came to more than
six thousand pounds, which was one-third of the protectorate’s total
306 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
expenditures.14 The operations that led to Meinertzhagen’s execution
of Koitalel were fairly typical. Often devolving into mass cattle raids,
these small but vicious wars usually ended when protectorate troops
forced defi ant communities to surrender by seizing their livestock
and burning their huts and crops.
The resulting famines contributed to the devastatingly high mortality rates that affl icted the highlands at the end of the nineteenth
century. Racked by hunger and epidemic disease, weakened East Africans struggled to cope with the British invasion. Once again, smallpox in particular played a central role in western empire building.
Spread by the caravans along with cholera, pneumonia, and other
deadly pathogens, it ravaged communities whose relative isolation in
the highlands made them dangerously vulnerable to contagious Old
World diseases. Rinderpest, a highly virulent cattle disease originating in South Asia, and bovine pleuropneumonia (lungsickness) made
matters even worse by wiping out the herds that were both a food
source and a measure of wealth. Estimates vary, but it appears that
these human and biological disasters may have killed off as much as
30 to 50 percent of the population of the central and northern highlands.15
Although there were a few exceptions, the Nandi surrender in
1905 generally marked the end of open African resistance. With
British rule secure, the pacifi cation operations that brought glory to
Meinertzhagen and other ambitious empire builders now became an
expensive embarrassment and hindered the process of orderly extraction. As one of his fellow offi cers in the King’s African Rifl es candidly acknowledged, it was no longer “the object of the KAR to kill
potential British subjects, especially as they are expected to become
tax-payers and profi table customers.”16
As with earlier empires, the imperial regime viewed the East Africans primarily as exploitable subjects rather than consumers. Anxious to recoup the nine million pounds that metropolitan taxpayers
had invested in the Uganda Railway, protectorate authorities cast
about for paying passengers and shippers. Giving far too much credibility to the denigrating ideologies of empire building, they failed to
realize that many African farmers gladly would have produced crops
for export if given suffi cient access to global markets via the railway.
Instead, the EAP’s commissioner, Sir Charles Eliot, concluded that
it would take a civilized people to develop the highlands. As the line
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neared completion in 1903, imperial offi cials considered and dismissed
Indian peasants, Afrikaner homesteaders, and even Theodor Herzl’s
Zionists before committing themselves to enticing aristocratic Britons to settle in East Africa.
Building this elite settler society took some doing, for the pioneer empire builders in East Africa were anything but noble. As in
the early stages of most imperial projects, the protectorate tended to