Livingstone Bruce Plantation Raid

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Livingstone Bruce Plantation Raid
Part of The Chilembwe uprising during The Great War
Date23 January 1915
Location
Livingstone Bruce Plantation, Nyasaland
Result Rebel Victory
Belligerents

Flag of the United Kingdom.svg British Empire

Rebels
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Nyasaland (1925-1953, 1963-1964).svg William Jervis Livingstone   John Chilembwe
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
4 killed None

The Livingstone Bruce Plantation Raid was an attack on the European owned and run cotton and tobacco plantation, which was situated at Magomero. The attack on the plantation was only major action of the ill fated Chilembwe uprising.

Contents

Background

The Livingstone Bruce Plantation was situated at Magomero. The plantation spanned about 5,000 acres (2,000 ha) and grew both cotton and tobacco. [1] Around 5,000 local Africans worked on it as part of their thangata obligations. [2] The plantation had a reputation locally for the poor treatment of its workers and for the brutality of its managers, [3] who closed local schools, beat their workers and paid them less than had been promised. [3]

At the time Magomero was acquired, it was largely unoccupied and uncultivated, and it was necessary to find a suitable crop and workers. Between 1895 and 1925, the company had tried growing coffee, cotton and flue-cured tobacco: they all failed. Instead of local people, workers at Magomero were generally "Anguru", a term employed by Europeans to describe as a number of different Lomwe speaking migrants from the parts of Mozambique east of the Shire Highlands. [4] These Lomwe were welcomed at Magomero as tenants, and initially the men had no obligation to work in lieu of rent for their first two years, and after this for only one month a year: single women were exempt. By 1915, Lomwe migrants made up almost half the 4,926 hut owners at Magomero. [5] [6]

Arabica coffee was the first estate crop grown in much of the Shire Highlands, and was quite widely planted in the 1890s, until a world-wide collapse in coffee prices in 1903. About 200 to 300 acres of coffee bushes were planted at Magomero from 1895, but after poor crops in 1898 and 1899, the management looked for a more suitable crop. [7] Following the collapse of coffee prices, the Shire Highlands estates next turned to cotton from 1903. Growing Egyptian cotton in the Shire Highlands was at first unsuccessful: it was more suitable for the hotter Shire Valley. However, from 1906, W. J. Livingstone developed a hardier variety of Upland cotton called Nyasaland Upland, and by 1908 had planted 1,000 acres at Magomero, increased to 5,000 acres by 1914. Cotton required intensive labour over a long growing period, and this resulted increasing labour demands on the tenants. [8]

Thangata

In order to ensure that 3,000 to 5,000 workers were available throughout the five to six month long growing season of cotton, the obligations of labour tenants were exploited, wages were withheld or underpaid and violent coercion was used. The term "thangata" was used to describe these labour obligations. The word originally meant help, as in the reciprocal help that neighbours might give each other, but came to mean the amount of labour that a tenant on a European-owned estate has to give in return for their tenancy. Additional labour services were also required in lieu of Hut tax which the owned paid on behalf of tenants. [9] Alexander Livingstone Bruce was said to have pioneered the thangata system, and even if others had led the way, his manager, W. J. Livingstone, exploited it rigorously once the Magomero estate started to grow cotton . Although W. J. Livingstone was manager, Alexander Livingstone Bruce lived in Nyasaland and had control of the estate operations. On the Bruce estates, the total obligations could amount to four or five months a year, much of this in the growing season, leaving tenants with little time to grow their own food. Single women tenants were now required to provide labour. Tenancies were based on verbal contracts, and tenants had little or no chance to dispute the owners’ interpretations of them. [10]

Local Resentment

Their burning of Chilembwe's church in November 1913 created a personal animosity with the rebel leadership. [11] The insurgents launched two roughly concurrent attacks—one group targeted Magomero, the plantation headquarters and home of the main manager William Jervis Livingstone and a few other white staff, while a second assaulted the plantation-owned village of Mwanje, where there were two white households. [12] [13]

The Raid

Modern-day view of a tea plantation at Mlanje Tea plantation near Mulanje.JPG
Modern-day view of a tea plantation at Mlanje

The rebels moved into Magomero in the early evening, while Livingstone and his wife were entertaining some dinner guests. The estate official, Duncan MacCormick, was in another house nearby. [12] A third building, occupied by Emily Stanton, Alyce Roach and five children, contained a small cache of weapons and ammunition belonging to the local rifle club. [12] The insurgents quietly broke into the Livingstone's house and injured him during hand-to-hand fighting, prompting him to take refuge in the bedroom, where his wife attempted to treat his wounds. The rebels forced their way into the bedroom, and after capturing his wife, decapitated Livingstone. [14] [15] MacCormick, who had been alerted, was killed by a rebel spear. [16] The attackers took the women and children of the village prisoner but shortly released them unhurt, having reportedly treated them well. [14] [17] It has been suggested that Chilembwe may have hoped to use the women and children as hostages, but this remains unclear. [16] Mwanje had little military value but it has been proposed that the rebels may have hoped to find weapons and ammunition there. [14] Led by Jonathan Chigwinya, the insurgents stormed one of the houses and killed the plantation's stock manager, Robert Ferguson, with a spear as he lay in bed reading a newspaper. [14] [13] Two of the colonists, John Robertson and his wife Charlotte, escaped into the cotton fields and walked 6 miles (9.7 km) to a neighbouring plantation to raise the alarm. [18] One of the Robertsons' African servants, who remained loyal, was killed by the attackers. [18]

Aftermath

The attack on Magomero, and in particular the killing of Livingstone, had great symbolic significance for Chilembwe's men. [19] The two Mauser rifles captured from the plantation formed the basis of the rebel armoury for the rest of the uprising. [19]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Chilembwe's motivation</span>

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The Makololo chiefs recognised by the governments of colonial Nyasaland and independent Malawi have their origin in a group of porters that David Livingstone brought from Barotseland in the 1850s to support his first Zambezi expedition that did not return to Barotseland but assisted Livingstone and British missionaries in the area of southern Malawi between 1859 and 1864. After the withdrawal of the Universities' Mission to Central Africa those Makololo remaining in the Shire valley used firearms provided by the Europeans to attract dependants seeking protection, to seize land and to establish a number of chieftainships. At the time that a British protectorate was established in 1891, there were seven Makololo chiefs of which six were recognised by the government. Five survived to be given local governmental powers in 1933, and these powers continued after Malawi became independent. Although called Makololo or Kololo, after the ruling group in Barotseland in the 1850s, the majority came from peoples subject to the Makololo who adopted the more prestigious name. As, regardless of their origin, they took wives from among the inhabitants of the Shire Valley, their modern descendants have little connection with the Kololo people apart from their name.

References

  1. McCracken 2012, pp. 130–1.
  2. McCracken 2012, p. 130.
  3. 1 2 McCracken 2012, p. 131.
  4. L. White, (1984). 'Tribes' and the Aftermath of the Chilembwe Rising, pp. 513-8.
  5. J McCraken, (2012).A History of Malawi, 1859-1966, pp. 129-30.
  6. L. White, (1987). Magomero: Portrait of an African Village, pp. 100-1.
  7. L. White, (1987). Magomero: Portrait of an African Village, pp. 82-4.
  8. J McCraken, (2012).A History of Malawi, 1859-1966, pp. 130-2.
  9. L. White, (1987). Magomero: Portrait of an African Village, pp. 88-90.
  10. L. White, (1987). Magomero: Portrait of an African Village, p. 133.
  11. McCracken 2012, p. 133.
  12. 1 2 3 Rotberg 1971, p. 135.
  13. 1 2 Shepperson & Price 1958, p. 274.
  14. 1 2 3 4 Rotberg 1971, p. 136.
  15. Shepperson & Price 1958, p. 270.
  16. 1 2 Shepperson & Price 1958, p. 272.
  17. McCracken 2012, p. 127.
  18. 1 2 Shepperson & Price 1958, p. 277.
  19. 1 2 Shepperson & Price 1958, p. 273.

Bibliography

  • McCracken, John (2012). A History of Malawi, 1859–1966. Woodbridge: James Currey. ISBN   978-1-84701-064-3.
  • Rotberg, R. I. (1971). "Psychological Stress and the Question of Identity: Chilembwe's Revolt Reconsidered". In Rotberg, R. I.; Mazrui, A. A. (eds.). Protest and Power in Black Africa. New York. pp. 133–64. OCLC   139250.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Shepperson, George; Price, Thomas (1958). Independent African: John Chilembwe and the Origins, Setting and Significance of the Nyasaland Native Rising of 1915. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. OCLC   421086.