Meria Chronicles #7 as 4mankind Puts it

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This is a not-so-common photo of one of Kenya’s earliest settlers - Lord William Northrup McMillan (1872-1925).

Contrary to what many scholars of Kenya’s history would expect, McMillan was not British. He was a wealthy American from St. Louis.

He invested in a huge ranch that stretched towards Ol Donyo Sabuk mountain (Mt. Kilimambogo). Juja Farm, he called it.

It was at this farm where he played host to retired U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt in 1909 for some big game hunting. McMillan and his wife also established one of modern Nairobi’s earliest landmarks, the McMillan Library.

Immensely rich, McMillan ordered a farmhouse of steel and asbestos and had it shipped to Nairobi from England in parts.

By 1908, Juja Farm had electric lights, a telephone, an ice-making plant and bungalows for farm workers. In the farmhouse itself, there were luxurious teakwood chairs, a huge telescope for watching game and, yes, even running water.

McMillan spent close to £60,000 developing this place. His wife, Lucie, wasn’t happy about the way he was incurring expenses in a remote part of the world. Perhaps partly to appease her, McMillan bought Lucie a stone house in present-day Chiromo from Ewart Grogan.

When McMillan came to Kenya, he was tall and muscular. By 1910, the year when his guest Roosevelt returned to America, McMillan’s weight had increased considerably. He was so big that he was known to be the ‘fat mzungu who spits sideways’ or ‘mûkora’ (rogue), as the local Agîkûyû called him.

In the early 1920s, McMillan developed pleurisy and heart trouble. He died in Nice, France, in 1925. His body was returned to Kenya to be buried at a spot that he himself had chosen - at the top of Ol Donyo Sabuk.

Carrying his coffin up the mountain proved to be a problem. But when he was finally laid to rest, his spirit could savour magnificent views of the vast plains below, and the Ithanga hills beyond.

The McMillans were benevolent and generous. They are the ones that also funded the construction of YMCA in 1911. Moreover, their Chiromo and Juja Farm houses served as hospitals for troops injured during WWI.

Owing to his partly Canadian roots, McMillan was knighted by England’s King George V for his philanthropy.

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quite interesting

19 fucking 20’s and the mofo had running water, phone and electricity!

Utajenga lini?

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the Mcmillan memorial library hii iko Nai pia ni yake? bytheway that is the oldest library hapa kenya sio hizi ziliinuliwa juzi juzi

sasa tuseme Juja farm kwenye plot zinauzwa ilikuwa ni yake?

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What happened to the thitima and water? Juja farm bado haina hizo.

Plus the steel farmhouse?

Africans happened…

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You people are Glorifiying a pig an opressor a piece of white trash who came to conquer our forefathers.You should be ashamed of yourselves # spits and walks away

usungu imekuchenga leo
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Hehehe. Lakini huyu jamaa ni mkoloni kupe sana

:D:D:D:D:D:DDEAD! :D:D:D:D

MBONA HIO MBICHA YA KUSHMILAN INAKAA PHOTOCHOP.

NA MBONA MAUMAU HAWAKUMUKATA SHINGO.

He died in 1925, way long before MauMau appeared on the scene

Yeah ni yake though he let it out to the public. Its said that he infact initiated an act of parliament that would be used to protect the library from being privatized or grabbed in the event of his death.

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Same guy who brought JU & JA

good stuff… going up the Chronicles.

I now have 4 sections:

[ul]
[li]Freedom fighters[/li][li]Black Sellouts & Matafakas[/li][li]White Matafakas[/li][li]General Stuff[/li][/ul]
Off-course this one goes to the White Matafakas folder