Sir Leander Starr Jameson, Baronet

prime minister of the Cape Colony
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Quick Facts
Born:
Feb. 9, 1853, Edinburgh
Died:
Nov. 26, 1917, London (aged 64)
Role In:
Jameson Raid

Sir Leander Starr Jameson, Baronet (born Feb. 9, 1853, Edinburgh—died Nov. 26, 1917, London) was a southern African statesman who, as a friend and collaborator of Cecil Rhodes, was notorious for his abortive raid into the Transvaal to overthrow the Boer government of Paul Kruger in 1895.

After studying medicine at University College, London, Jameson seemed destined for a great future as a physician in Britain, but poor health and a strong sense of adventure led him in 1878 to the diamond mines in Kimberley, Griqualand West, in southern Africa. There he met Rhodes. They became fast friends and shared a dream to extend British rule from the Cape of Good Hope to Cairo.

On Rhodes’s behalf, Jameson undertook missions in 1889 and 1890 to charm Lobengula, king of the Ndebele (sometimes called Matabele), into confirming mineral concessions in present-day Zimbabwe for the British South Africa Company. In 1891 Jameson, again as Rhodes’s representative, explored the area between inland Salisbury and coastal Beira (now in Mozambique) and gained concessions from local chiefs. Later that year he was made administrator of Mashonaland, thereby establishing the first settled government. At the conclusion of the Matabele War (1893), the lands of Lobengula were incorporated under Jameson’s authority to create the embryo colony of Rhodesia.

The Boer government of the Transvaal Republic was the chief obstacle to Rhodes’s plans for the federation of all South Africa under the British. Thus, he plotted with Jameson and with Uitlander (Afrikaans: “foreigner”; i.e., British) leaders of the Transvaal to overthrow it. “Dr. Jim” was to raise a force and move against Johannesburg to support an Uitlander uprising.

Internal Uitlander disputes caused Rhodes to postpone the action, but the impetuous Jameson decided to force the issue and invaded the Transvaal on Dec. 29, 1895, with 500 mounted men. The raid was a disaster: Jameson and his men were defeated and captured; Rhodes’s political career was ruined; and Jameson was sent to England, tried, and sentenced to 15 months’ imprisonment. He was released after a few months because of severe illness.

Jameson returned to South Africa and was elected to represent Kimberley in the Cape Colony Parliament (1900). When Rhodes died in 1902, Jameson took over leadership of the Progressive Party and became prime minister (1904–08) of the Cape Colony. After helping to promote the Union of South Africa, he founded the Unionist Party (1910) and led the opposition to the governing South African Party in the Union Parliament until he was forced to retire to England in 1912 because of his health. A baronetcy was conferred on him in 1911 (it lapsed upon his death, for he never married). Though he died in England, his body was taken to the Matopo Hills in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and buried near that of Rhodes.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.