JAMESON, LEANDER STARR (1853– ), British colonial
statesman, son of R. W. Jameson, a writer to the signet in Edinburgh,
was born at Edinburgh in 1853, and was educated for the
medical profession at University College Hospital, London
(M.R.C.S. 1875; M.D. 1877). After acting as house physician,
house surgeon and demonstrator of anatomy, and showing
promise of a successful professional career in London, his health
broke down from overwork in 1878, and he went out to South
Africa and settled down in practice at Kimberley. There he
rapidly acquired a great reputation as a medical man, and,
besides numbering President Kruger and the Matabele chief
Lobengula among his patients, came much into contact with Cecil
Rhodes. In 1888 his influence with Lobengula was successfully
exerted to induce that chieftain to grant the concessions to the
agents of Rhodes which led to the formation of the British South
Africa Company; and when the company proceeded to open up
Mashonaland, Jameson abandoned his medical practice and joined
the pioneer expedition of 1890. From this time his fortunes
were bound up with Rhodes’s schemes in the north. Immediately
after the pioneer column had occupied Mashonaland,
Jameson, with F. C. Selous and A. R. Colquhoun, went east to
Manicaland and was instrumental in securing the greater part
of that country, to which Portugal was laying claim, for the
Chartered Company. In 1891 Jameson succeeded Colquhoun
as administrator of Rhodesia. The events connected with his
vigorous administration and the wars with the Matabele are
narrated under Rhodesia. At the end of 1894 “Dr Jim”
(as he was familiarly called) came to England and was fêted on
all sides; he was made a C.B., and returned to Africa in the
spring of 1895 with enhanced prestige. On the last day of that
year the world was startled to learn that Jameson, with a force
of 600 men, had made a raid into the Transvaal from Mafeking
in support of a projected rising in Johannesburg, which had been
connived at by Rhodes at the Cape (see Rhodes and Transvaal).
Jameson’s force was compelled to surrender at Doornkop,
receiving a guarantee that the lives of all would be spared;
he and his officers were sent to Pretoria, and, after a short delay,
during which time sections of the Boer populace clamoured for
the execution of Jameson, President Kruger on the surrender
of Johannesburg (January 7) handed them over to the British
government for punishment. They were tried in London under
the Foreign Enlistment Act in May 1896, and Dr Jameson
was sentenced to fifteen months’ inmprisonment at Holloway.
He served a year in prison, and was then released on account of
ill health. He still retained the affections of the white population
of Rhodesia, and subsequently returned there in an unofficial
capacity. He was the constant companion of Rhodes on
his journeys up to the end of his life, and when Rhodes died in
May 1902 Jameson was left one of the executors of his will. In
1903 Jameson came forward as the leader of the Progressive
(British) party in Cape Colony; and that party being victorious
at the general election in January-February 1904, Jameson
formed an administration in which he took the post of prime
minister. He had to face a serious economic crisis and strenuously
promoted the development of the agricultural and pastoral
resources of the colony. He also passed a much needed Redistribution
Act, and in the session of 1906 passed an Amnesty Act
restoring the rebel voters to the franchise. Jameson, as prime
minister of Cape Colony, attended the Colonial conference held
in London in 1907. In September of that year the Cape parliament
was dissolved, and as the elections for the legislative
council went in favour of the Bond, Jameson resigned office,
31st of January 1908 (see Cape Colony: History). In 1908 he
was chosen one of the delegates from Cape Colony to the intercolonial
convention for the closer union of the South African
states, and he took a prominent part in settling the terms on
which union was effected in 1909. It was at Jameson’s suggestion
that the Orange River Colony was renamed Orange Free
State Province.