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The White Highlands and the Mau Mau With the Rucks, Leakeys, and Kikuyu Freedom Fighters, 1952–1961

Par : N.W. MARTIN
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232312749
  • EAN9798232312749
  • Date de parution04/02/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurDraft2Digital

Résumé

She arrived in Kenya as a princess and left as a queen. In February 1952, Princess Elizabeth Alexandra Mary traveled to colonial Kenya with her husband, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. While staying at Treetops in the Aberdare Range, she received news that her father, King George VI, had died at Sandringham on 6 February 1952. Elizabeth was proclaimed Queen while still in the colony, marking a historic transition of the British crown on African soil.
At the same time, Kenya was descending into violent conflict. The Mau Mau Emergency spread across the colony and into the White Highlands. In 1953, settlers Roger Ruck, his wife Esme, and their young son Michael were killed in an attack that shocked the settler community and intensified demands for security. Mary Leakey was later killed during a raid on her farm, and her husband, Arundell Leakey, was abducted and murdered in the forest.
These events deepened fear among European families living on isolated homesteads. Resistance fighters organized in the forests around Mount Kenya under leaders such as Dedan Kimathi and Kahiu Itina, known as Knife in the Butt. Their campaign of insurgency and ambush was met by a sweeping British response that included mass detentions and security operations. Operation Anvil in 1954 sealed Nairobi in one of the largest crackdowns of the Emergency.
In 1959, the killings at Hola Camp exposed abuses within the detention system and provoked sharp debate in the British Parliament between Labour and Conservative members. This book examines the Mau Mau uprising through the experiences of settlers, Kikuyu freedom fighters, and British officials, placing personal tragedy alongside political upheaval. It offers a detailed account of the Emergency and the forces that shaped Kenya's path toward independence.
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E-book
3,49 €