John Kirk (explorer)

John Kirk, retired
John Kirk

John Kirk CMG KCB (19 December 1832 – 15 January 1922) was a Scottish physician, naturalist, companion to explorer David Livingstone, and British administrator in Zanzibar. He was born in Barry, Angus, near Arbroath, Scotland and is buried in St. Nicholas's churchyard in Sevenoaks, Kent, England. He earned his medical degree from the University of Edinburgh. He was a keen botanist throughout his life and was highly regarded by successive directors of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: William Hooker, Joseph Dalton Hooker and William Thistleton-Dyer.

Career

After the death of Livingstone, Kirk pledged to continue Livingston's work to end the East African slave trade. For years he negotiated with the ruler of Zanzibar, Sultan Bargash, gaining his confidence and promising to help enrich the East African domain through legitimate commerce. The Sultan banned slave trading in 1873 and by 1885, the region was larger and more profitable. Unfortunately, after the Berlin Conference of 1884–85, the British Government forced Kirk, as British Consul in Zanzibar, to drop the Sultan as part of the "Scramble for Africa".[1]

Family

Kirk had a daughter, Helen, who married Major-General Henry Brooke Hagstromer Wright CB CMG, the brother of the famous bacteriologist and immunologist, Sir Almroth Edward Wright and of Sir Charles Theodore Hagberg Wright, Secretary and Librarian of London Library. The engineer, Alexander C. Kirk, was John Kirk's elder brother.

Kirk's Red Colobus

Kirk's Red Colobus of Zanzibar, Procolobus kirkii, taken at Jozani Forest, Zanzibar, Tanzania.

According to sources,[2] Kirk first drew zoologists' attention to the Zanzibar red colobus.[3] The species Procolobus kirkii, which is endemic to Zanzibar, is named after him.

Bibliography

References

  1. Ferguson N. (2003). Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World. p. 236.
  2. Kirk'sred colobus, Procolobus kirkii
  3. Inventory Acc.942 Papers of Sir John Kirk GCMB KCB and Lady Kirk née Helen Cooke. National Library of Scotland: Manuscripts Division.
  4. "Author Query for 'J.Kirk'". International Plant Names Index.

Further reading