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RCS contains:
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RCMS 149 Essays on Nigerian topics
RCMS 15 Under many flags: my pilgrimage
RCMS 150 Papers of H.B. Thomas
RCMS 152 Papers of the Joint Africa Board
RCMS 153 The development of African road transport in Western Nigeria, 1919-1939
RCMS 154 East Africa and Uganda 1912
RCMS 155 Dictionary of East African biography
RCMS 156 History of the Imperial British East Africa Company
RCMS 16 Religious writings of Charles Gordon
RCMS 160 The Carrier Corps
RCMS 161 Papers of A.T. Matson
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East Africa and Uganda 1912

Title East Africa and Uganda 1912
Reference GBR/0115/RCMS 154
(former reference: MSS 468)
Creator Dick, James, 1862-1926, businessman and soldier in South Africa
Covering Dates 1912
Extent and Medium paper; Manuscript
Repository Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library
Content and context

James Dick (1862-1926) was born at Shotts in Scotland and educated at George Watson School and Edinburgh University. He emigrated to South Africa in his twenties, and became manager of Steel-Murray & Company, merchants in Durban. In December 1890 he was made Lieutenant in the C (Caledonian) Company of the Natal Royal Rifles (later the Durban Light Infantry). After serving in the Boer War, he commanded the newly-raised volunteer corps, the Natal Rangers, during the Zulu Rebellion of 1906. The forces were demobilised in July 1906, but were called out again in November 1907 following the murder of the loyal chief, Mpumela. On the outbreak of the First World War, a second battalion of the Durban Light Infantry was raised under Dick's command for the invasion of German South-West Africa. The battalion arrived at Walfisch Bay on 29 January 1915, but was not involved in any fighting. It returned to Durban on 9 July, and was disbanded on the 18th. James Dick died in Edinburgh in 1926.

This account (81 pages) describes a visit to East Africa from South Africa in 1912 by James Dick. He travelled by the Uganda railway from the coast to Kisumu, with stops on the way including Nairobi and a visit to the bamboo forest. Dick crossed Lake Victoria on the 'Clement Hill' to Entebbe, and thence went by rickshaw to Kampala. His journey ended at the Ripon Falls. There is a good deal of historical background and other information; the journey covered well-traversed ground, but the narrative is informative. The collection is accompanied by a letter from Nancy Dick (James's daughter) to D.H. Simpson, R.C.S. Librarian, 9th February 1974, supplying further biographical details of her father.

Presented to the Colonial Society by Miss Nancy Dick in 1973.

Access and Use

Please cite as Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library, East Africa and Uganda 1912, RCMS 154

Further information

The material has been microfilmed, and is listed in: 'Africa through western eyes, parts 1 & 2: original manuscripts from the Royal Commonwealth Society Library at Cambridge University Library - a listing and guide to the microfilm collection' (2000), Adam Matthew Publications Ltd.

For further details of James Dick's career, see A. C. Martin, 'The Durban Light Infantry, 1935-1960' (Durban, 1969).

The R.C.S. Manuscripts Collection includes letters written by James Dick in South Africa 1905-circa 1915, RCMS 193.

A map of East Africa and Uganda included with this collection is held at RCMS 154/MAP 1.

Donald H. Simpson, ed., 'The manuscript catalogue of the library of the Royal Commonwealth Society' (London, 1975), p. 96. Indexed

This collection level description was created by WS and MJC using information from 'Africa through western eyes.'

Available on microfilm: Reel 6.

Index Terms
Africa
Uganda
Kenya
Dick, James (1862-1926) businessman and soldier in South Africa
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