Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere

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Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere (28 April 1870-13 November 1931), was a British peer and one of the first British settlers in Kenya.

Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere, at right, with several other members of Kenya's famous Happy Valley set
Hugh Cholmondeley, 3rd Baron Delamere, at right, with several other members of Kenya's famous Happy Valley set

Delamere, the son of Hugh Cholmondeley, 2nd Baron Delamere, and Augusta Emily Seymour, moved to Kenya in 1901 and acquired a 100,000 acre (400 km²) estate in the Rift Valley Region of the Kenyan Highlands. This was to be the first in an extensive collection of property he would acquire. Over the years, he became the unofficial leader of the colony’s European community and was an active member of the Legislative Council of Kenya.

Lord Delamere married Lady Florence Anne Cole, daughter of Lowry Egerton Cole, 4th Earl of Enniskillen, in 1899. After her death in 1914 he married Gwladys Helen Beckett, daughter of Hon. Rupert Eveleyn Beckett, in 1928. He died in November 1931, aged 61, and was succeeded in the barony by his son from his first marriage, Thomas. Lady Delamere died in 1943.

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[edit] Early years

Delamere left Eton at the age of sixteen with the intention of entering the army, but gave up his military pursuits after inheriting his title at seventeen.[1] He inherited a sizable estate, including the family home in Cheshire.[2]

Delamere made his first trip to Africa in 1891 to hunt lion in Somaliland, and returned yearly to resume the hunt. In 1894 he was severely mauled by an attacking lion, and was only saved when his Somali gunbearer Abdullah Ashur leaped on the lion, giving Delamere time to retrieve his rifle. As a result of the attack, Lord Delamere limped for the rest of his life; he also developed a healthy respect for Somalis.[3]

It is believed that on one of these Somaliland hunting trips, Delamere coined the term “white hunter” – the term which came to describe the professional safari hunter in colonial East Africa. Delamere employed a professional hunter named Alan Black and a native Somali hunter to lead the safari. As the story goes, in order to avoid confusion, the Somali was referred to as the "black hunter," and Black was called the "white hunter."[4]

In 1896, Delamere, with a retinue including a doctor, taxidermist, photographer, and 200 camels, set out to cross the deserts of southern Somaliland, intending to enter British East Africa from the north. It was this journey which set the course for the rest of his life: at its end, in 1897, he arrived in the lush green highlands of what is now central Kenya. For the first time, Delamere set his eyes on the land he would soon call home, and in whose history he would play a defining and indelible role.[5]

[edit] Colonial Kenya

Delamere originally applied for a land grant in May 1903 but was denied because then governor, Sir Charles Eliot, thought the land was too far from any population center.[6] His next request for 100,000 acres near Naivasha was denied because the government felt there would be conflicts with Maasai ownership. Delamere’s third attempt at land acquisition was successful. He received a 99-year lease on 100,000 acres of land that would be named “Equator Ranch,” requiring him to pay a £200 annual rent and to spend £5000 on the land over the first five years of occupancy.[7] In 1906, he acquired a large farm, which would eventually include more than 200,000 acres (800 km²), located between the Molo River and Njoro town. This ranch he named Soysambu.[8] Together, these vast posessions made Delamere one of Kenya's "largemen" - the local name for the handful of colonists with the greatest land holdings.

[edit] Farming

Among Kenya’s white settlers, Delamere was famous for his utter devotion to developing Kenyan agriculture. For many years his only homes in Kenya were native-style mud and grass huts, which his wife decorated with their fine English furnishings.[9] For twenty years, Delamere farmed his colossal land by trial, error and dogged effort, experimenting endlessly with crops and livestock, and accruing an invaluable stockpile of knowledge that would later serve as the foundation for the agricultural economy of the colony.[10]

By 1905, Delamere was a pioneer of the East African dairy industry. He was also a pioneer at crossbreeding animals, beginning with sheep and chicken, then moving to cattle; most of his imported animals, however, succumbed to diseases such as foot and mouth and Red water disease.[11] Delamere purchased Ryeland Rams from England to mate with 11,000 Maasai ewes, and in 1904, imported 500 pure-bred merino ewes from New Zealand. Four-fifths of the merino ewes quickly died, and the remaining stock were moved to Delamere’s Soysamba farm, as well as the remaining stock of 1500 imported cattle that suffered from pleuro-pneumonia.[12]

Eventually, Delamere decided to grow wheat. This too, was plagued by disease, specifically rust.[13] By 1909, Delamere was out of money, resting his last hopes on a 1200-acre wheat crop that eventually failed.[14] He was quoted by author Elspeth Huxley as commenting drily, “I started to grow wheat in East Africa to prove that though I lived on the equator, I was not in an equatorial country.” Delamere eventually created a “wheat laboratory” on his farm, employing scientists to manufacture hardy wheat varieties for the Kenyan highlands. [15] To supplement his income, he even tried raising ostriches for their feathers, importing incubators from Europe; this venture also failed with the advent on the motor car and the decline in fashion of feathered hats. [16] Delamere was the first European to start a maize farm, Florida Farm in the Rongai Valley, and established the first flour mill in Kenya.[17] By 1914, his efforts finally began to generate a profit. [18]

Delamere was active in recruiting settlers to the region, promising new colonists 640 acres, with 200 people eventually responding.[19] He persuaded some of his friends among the English landed gentry to buy large estates like his own and take up life in Kenya; he is credited with helping to found the so-called Happy Valley set, a clique of well-off British colonials whose pleasure-seeking habits eventually degenerated into drug-taking and wife-swapping. The story is often told of Delamere riding his horse into the dining room of Nairobi’s Norfolk Hotel and jumping over the tables.[20] He was also known to knock golf balls onto the roof of the Muthaiga Club, the pink stucco gathering-place for Nairobi's white elite, and then climb up to retrieve them.[21]

At the outbreak of WWI, Delamere was placed in charge of Intelligence on the Maasai border, monitoring the movements of German units in present day Tanzania.[22] Delamere entertained many high-ranking official visitors to Kenya, including then Under-Secretary for the Colonies, Winston Churchill. He was also the first president of the East African Turf Club. [23]

[edit] Government

Delamere embodied the many contradictions of the committed East African settler. He was personally fond of many Africans, and particularly enjoyed the company of the Masai (even gently tolerating their habit of pilfering his cattle for their own herds),[24] but fought fiercely to maintain British supremacy in the colony. "The extension of European civilization was in itself a desirable thing," he wrote in 1927. "The British race... was superior to heterogeneous African races only now emerging from centuries of relative barbarism... the opening up of new areas by means of genuine colonisation was to the advantage to the world."[25]

Richard Meinertzhagen (himself a complex figure of Africa's colonial days) quoted Delamere as proclaiming, “I am going to prove to you all that this is a white man’s country.”[26]

These views held great sway among the settlers because, as their founding father, Delamere was their undisputed if unofficial leader and, in some measure, spokesman for 30 years. He was a member of the Legislative Council, the Executive Council, and in 1907, became president of the Colonists’ Association.[27] Errol Trzebinski, who wrote a number of books on Kenya’s colonial elite, wrote of him: “Delamere was the Rhodes of Kenya and the settlers followed him both politically and spiritually.” [28] And a contemporary and former colonist said more or less the same: “(His) ascendancy over the settlers of Kenya has been enjoyed long enough for him to expect all men – and women – to do his bidding, and do it promptly. He is their Moses. For 25 years he has been their guide.”[29]

Delamere's efforts to steer Kenyan economic and racial policy – which often contravened the more pro-African intentions of the Colonial Office – were assisted by his powerful friends at home in England. Delamere and other settlers were so successful in affecting Kenya’s politics that in 1923, the British government responded with the Devonshire White Paper, which declared officially that in Kenya, the concerns of Africans were "paramount," even when they conflicted with the needs of whites.[30]

[edit] Legacy

Delamere died in 1931 at the age of 61. At his death, he left Kenya's agricultural economy healthy enough to develop into one of the most stable economies in Africa. He also left unpaid bank loans totalling £500,000.[31]

A main thoroughfare in Nairobi was named Delamere Avenue to commemorate his place in the development of the colony, and an eight-foot bronze statue of the 3rd Baron was erected at the street’s head. His widow, Gwladys, became the first woman mayor of Nairobi.

When Kenya achieved independence in 1963, many white settlers opted to sell their farms and leave the country rather than submit to African rule. Delamere’s family, by then headed by his son Thomas, the 4th hereditary baron, elected to remain and accept Kenyan citizenship.

Other traces of Delamere’s colonial “reign” were not permitted to linger. Delamere Avenue was renamed Kenyatta Avenue, after Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta, and the statue of Delamere was relocated to the family’s Soysambu estate, where it faces out toward the mountain known locally as "Delamere's Nose" or "The Sleeping Warrior." Among the Masai, with whom Delamere was the first to establish a strong European connection, his family is now frequently reviled as those who “stole” the Masai’s land.[32]

His family's post-colonial standing in Kenya was badly damaged in April 2005, when Delamere’s great-grandson Thomas Chomondeley (in line to become the 6th hereditary baron) shot and killed Samson ole Sisina, a Masai and game warden who was arresting some of the Soysambu staff. Cholmondeley was not charged with a crime, and many Kenyans were outraged. A year later, Cholmondeley shot and killed Robert Njoya, who was poaching on his property. For this second killing, Cholmondeley was arrested and charged with murder. As of June 2008, his case is unresolved.

As one police spokesman summed up the reversal of the family fortune: “The Delameres used to be untouchable. But that’s all changed now.”[33]


Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Hugh Cholmondeley
Baron Delamere Succeeded by
Thomas Cholmondeley


[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Best, Nicholas, Happy Valley: The story of the English in Kenya (Secker and Warburg, 1979), p. 39
  2. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 39
  3. ^ Bull, Bartle, Safari: A Chronicle of Adventure, Penguin, 1992, p. 188
  4. ^ Brian Herne, White Hunters: The Golden Age of Safaris," Henry Holt & Co., 1999, pages 6-7
  5. ^ Bull, Safari, p. 188
  6. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 41
  7. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 41
  8. ^ Bull, Safari, p. 188
  9. ^ Bull, Safari, p. 191
  10. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 43
  11. ^ Kamau, John, Who was Lord Delamere?, The East African Standard, May 22, 2005, available at http://www.eastandard.net/archives/cl/hm_news/news.php?articleid=21034
  12. ^ Huxley, Elspeth, Settlers of Kenya (1975), pp. 29-30
  13. ^ Kamau, John, Who was Lord Delamere?
  14. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 43
  15. ^ Huxley, Settlers of Kenya, pp. 25-27
  16. ^ Best, Happy Valley, p. 45
  17. ^ Church, Archibald, East Africa: A New Dominion, 1970, pp. 287-8
  18. ^ Huxley, Settlers of Kenya p. 30
  19. ^ Hughes, Anthony John, East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Penguin, 1969, p. 275
  20. ^ Barton, Fiona, The Curse of White Mischief, The Daily Mail, September 23, 2006
  21. ^ Thurman, Judith, Isak Dinesen: Life of a Storyteller, MacMillan, 1999, p. 123
  22. ^ Herne, Brian, White Hunters: The Golden Age of African Safaris, 1999, pp. 99
  23. ^ Herne, White Hunters, pp. 21-33
  24. ^ Bull, Safari, pp. 189-191
  25. ^ Thurman, Judith, Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller, MacMillan, 1999, p. 180
  26. ^ Meinertzhagen from African Diary, quoted in Ridgeway, Rick, The Shadow of Kilimanjaro, Owl Publishing Company, 1998, p. 194
  27. ^ Trzebinski, Errol, The Kenya Pioneers, W.W. Norton 1986, p. 129 and Berman, Bruce, Control & Crisis in Colonial Kenya: The Dialectic of Domination, James Currey 1990, p. 140
  28. ^ Trzebinski, The Kenya Pioneers, p. 23
  29. ^ Hughes, East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, p. 275
  30. ^ Maxon, Robert, Struggle for Kenya: The Loss and Reassertion of Imperial Initiative, 1912-1923, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1993, pp. 13-14
  31. ^ Kamau, John, Who was Lord Delamere?
  32. ^ Barton, The Curse of White Mischief
  33. ^ Barton, The Curse of White Mischief