Dr. Sidney Langford Hinde, (23 July 1863 - 18 October 1930), Chevalier de l'ordre royal du lion; Membre honoraire de la Société belge de géographie; Medical Officer of the Interior, British East Africa; Late Captain, Congo Free State Forces; was a military medical officer involved in colonial operations in the Congo and East Africa in the 19th century.[1]
Contents |
He was the son of Surgeon George Langford Hinde (41st Foot Welsh Regiment) and Harrietta Tudor Rayner, daughter of Edward Charles Rayner, Esq. of England, married in London on 23 November 1861. They had two children, Sidney Langford Hinde, and Rhoda Hinde, (born 1865), both of whom were born in Canada.[2] In 1895, Hinde was posted to Machakos Fort in the East African Protectorate Service where he was appointed Resident to the Maasai Chief and Collector of Maasailand.[3]
Hinde was credited with aiding the overthrow of the infamous African slave trader Tippu Tip, and his successor, Sefu.[4]
A mountain peak in Kenya is named for him. Hinde Falls on Athi River is also named after the Hindes.[Note 1]
Sidney was married to anthropologist and zoologist, Hildegarde Beatrice Hinde (née Ginsburg) (1871 - 20 February 1959), who discovered three species of small mammal while in Africa. She wrote several grammars and vocabularies of East African languages as well. She and her husband were in the Congo from 1891 to 1894, and in the East African Protectorate (now Kenya) from 1895 to 1915.[5]
Hinde wrote two books and an article for an ornithological journal: