Created by:
Torrence Royer
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Zanzibar Sketches
William
A.
Churchill
was
the
younger
brother
of
the
British
Counsel
at
Zanzibar
in
the
late
1860's.
He
came
to
the
Islands
to
visit
his
brother
bringing
only
his
talent
and
his sketch pad.
These resulted in some remarkable views of 19
th
century Zanzibar.
William A. Churchill
The
railway
depicted
in
this
fine
sketch
is
not
the
famous
Bububu
Line,
which
was
built
in
1905
and
ran
north
out
of
town
after
passing
through
the
N'Gambo
neighborhood.
Rather
it
is
the
very
early
Tram
line
that
was
built
by
Sultan
Barghash in the mid-1800’s.
In
this
sketch,
Churchill
captures
the
image
of
one
of
the
many
business
men
from
around
the
world who took up residence in old Zanzibar.
The
Zanzibar
army
was
not
well
organized
in
those
days,
the
Navy
having
priority
on
the
best
resources
and
men,
however
it's
rather
open
recruitment
practices
did
cause
to
the
Zanzibar
army to become a temporary home for many of the professional soldiers of that age.
Churchill seemed intrigued by the Zanzibar women Zanzibar women, who made up a large
percentage of the workforce that kept Stone Town running as a functioning city.
He also noticed that some Zanzibar women appear as powerful figures in Zanzibar society.
Simple street scens, native huts, the plight of the slaves and the
spirit of the Sultans troops, all caught the attention of Mr. Churchill.
In
the
late
1800's
Dr.
Livingstone
was
seen
as
a
martyered
hero
in
England.
This
fine
sketch
of
Livimgstone’s
house
on
Zanzibar
may
be the work of Mr. Churchill.
Churchill even sketched the British Councils house, where he stayed while in
Zanzibar. This house was almost destroyed two years later, during the massive
hurricane of 1872.
Churchill
exercised
some
artistic
liberty
in
his
drawings
(displaying
perhaps
an
Orientalist
zeal)
but
many
of
his
works
were
remarkably
life
like.
Below
are
some
old
Zanzibar
photos
from
about
the
same
time
as
his
visit.
His
work
compares
well
with these historic scenenes. (These comparison images do not enlarge).
Henry
Adrian
Churchill
was
the
diplomat
William
was
visiting
while
in
Zanzibar.
Henry
Churchill
was
appointed
as
the
British
Counsel
on
Zanzibar
in
1867.
H.
A.
Churchill
had
a
long
diplomatic
career,
he
seemed
interested
in
helping
the
people
wherever
he
served.
He
acted
as
a
friend
and
mentor
for
the
more
famous
British
Counsel,
John
Kirk.
Dr.
Kirk
served
as Henry Churchill’s surgeon and vice-counsel during the years Henry lived on Zanzibar.
Prior
to
his
appointment
in
Zanzibar
the
elder
Churchill
worked
as
secretary
and
interpreter
on
the
Staff
of
the
British
Commissioner
with
the
Turkish
Army
in
the
Asia.
He
took
part
in
the
defense
of
Kars,
and
was
for
a
time
a
Russian
prisoner.
His
last
posting
was
as
British
Counsel at Palermo in 1879. He died in 1886.
After
William
visited
his
brother
on
Zanzibar
there
was
a
delay
in
the
publishing
of
these
sketches. Many were not published untill 1889, in the
Illustrated London News
.
May Allen
Miss May Allen was a nurse who went to Zanzibar in 1875 and spent the next 12 years caring for
the sick from the UMCA clinic in Stone Town. Her sketches and many letters home are informative
and touching.
Those letters are the basis for a book about her life, by Yoland Brown.
Other Sketch Artists
Old Zanzibar seems to have inspired visitors from all over to create
sketches of what some Zanzibaris call ‘the passing show’.
German
French
American
Italian
One wonders, in this sketch, if William Churchill captured his brother Henry at work.