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Name: JACKSON, Thomas Herbert Elliot 'Pinkie'

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Nee: son of Herbert Kendall Jackson

Birth Date: 12 Jan 1903 Wimborne, Dorset

Death Date: 22 May 1968 murdered at his home on Mt. Elgon

First Date: 1923

Last Date: 1968

Profession: Agric. Officer (Horticulture) in 1953. Originally Jun. Lab. Asst. 1936. Senior Horticultural Officer 1955-63, lepidopterist

Area: Molo, 1930 Kitale, 1952 Kapretwa, Kitale

Married: unmarried

Author: Trans Nzoia Scrap Book - 'Butterfly and Moth Collecting in the Trans Nzoia'

Book Reference: Sitrep 2, Staff 53, Red 31, Hut, Colonial, Trans Nzoia Scrap Book, Pioneers, Nicholls, Web, Barnes

War Service: 4 KAR

School: Ardingly Coll., Wellington, and Reading University; Dip. Hort. (Reading)? [Wellington and Harper Adams, Shropshire]

General Information:

Pre-war volunteer to the Kenya Regiment (KR 575).
Gazette 6 Dec 1938 Trans Nzoia Voters List
Trans Nzoia Scrap Book - I myself arrived in the district in 1924 and on instructions from my father bought Kapretwa where I was joined by the family later in the year ………. It was in 1927 when I, with a friend of mine - Bob Stewart, who had a farm at Kiminini, started to collect seriously. T.H.E. Jackson, known to his many friends as 'Pinkie' was murdered at his home on Mount Elgon on 22nd May 1968. The only son of Brigadier-General H.K. Jackson, he was educated at Wellington College and was destined for the Army, but Pinkie's interests lay elsewhere and he went to the Harper Adams Agricultural College. In 1923, on his way to India, he visited Kenya and fell in love with the country, and returned to settle here in 1924. He was joined by his parents and sisters, and on the slopes of the mountain he developed Kapretwa as a coffee plantation. Latterly he pioneered the growing of tea and built the first factory in the Trans Nzoia. At the beginning of the last war Pinkie volunteered for service and subsequently was commissioned in the KAR. He was sent to raise and train a Company of Turkana Irregulars on the troubled Abyssinian border. When this mission was completed he joined the military administration in Somalia. During his many years in Kenya Pinkie Jackson assembled one of the world's finest collections of African butterflies. He developed new collecting and breeding techniques and trained a number of Africans who were constantly employed collecting butterflies throughout tropical Africa. The publication of several learned treatises and the presentation of some 65,000 specimens of his own collection to the British Museum in 1961 made a major contribution to this branch of natural science. In 1935 he joined the party of the British Museum Expedition to Ruwenzori and also organised the safari to the crater of Mount Elgon. His garden was famous for its number of rare flowers where his trees became the hosts to exotic and indigenous orchids, many of which he had collected himself, but he was always willing to show or lend some of them for the horticultural exhibitions. With his great love for, and confidence in the future of the country, Pinkie was one of the first to take out Kenya citizenship. He had many African friends to whom he gave generous help, and with all his diverse interests and expert knowledge on so many subjects, he was never too busy to give up time to encourage any young or inexperienced enthusiast…….. He was wise, kind and generous, an unfailing friend to all.
Nicholls - a renowned lepidopterist who left his vast collection to the British Museum of Natural history. He, too, had plants named for him.
Web - Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 1969 - THOMAS HERBERT ELLIOT JACKSON (1903-1968) T. H. E. Jackson, known to his many friends as "Pinkie," was murdered by a criminal gang at his home near Kitale, Kenya, on the night of May 22,1968. Pinkie Jackson was born in Dorset, England, on January 12, 1903. His father, Brigadier General H. K. Jackson, hoped that his son eventually would enter professional military service and enrolled him at Wellington College. Young Jackson, however, showed little inclination for the army and after Wellington went to Harper Adams Agricultural College in Shropshire. In 1923, after a brief visit to Kenya, he went to India to work on an indigo plantation. Kenya, however, had made an impression, and the following year he returned there to stay. After a time spent learning to grow coffee with Mr. Maxwell Trench near Nyeri, he settled on a farm of his own on the slopes of Mt. Elgon, where he was soon joined by his father and family. Coffee had not been grown in that area before but was eventually established by Jackson and his father, and after many vicissitudes the farm "Kapretwa" blossomed forth, to become one of the finest and most successful coffee estates in the district. At the outbreak of World War II Jackson joined the Officer Cadet Training Unit and was later drafted to the 4th King's African Rifles. After some service with this regiment he was sent by the Kenya government to raise and train a company of Turkana Irregulars for duty on the troubled Abyssinian frontier. Later he was charged with the military administration of a large area in northern Somalia. By the end of the war he had reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. The war over, Jackson returned to Kapretwa and continued to improve and develop it in subsequent years. Among other things he pioneered the growing of tea and built the first processing plant in the Kitale district. At the start of the Mau Mau emergency in 1953 he volunteered and served in a senior capacity in the Embu district. From then on he devoted his time to his farm, to his superb garden and to his entomological activities. Jackson had been an enthusiastic naturalist from his early youth. He became an excellent field ornithologist and botanist, and over the years built up one of the most beautiful gardens in Kenya as well as an outstanding collection of local and exotic orchids. His most absorbing interest, however, was entomology, which he pursued throughout his life. In 1935 he took part in the British Museum Ruwenzori expedition, with the dipterist T. W. Edwards and the botanist George Taylor (now Sir George Taylor, Director of Kew Gardens), and collected vast numbers of insects, particularly butterflies, moths and beetles, most of which are now in the British Museum. Not long after that Jackson began to form his own collection of butterflies. From the beginning he devoted particular attention to their early stages, and his first papers were concerned with life histories he discovered. His collection, which he built with the same diligence and enthusiasm that marked his every undertaking, grew rapidly, particularly in his favorite groups, the Nymphalidae and the Lycaenidae and their allies. He collected widely in Africa himself, in Kenya, Uganda, Somalia, southern Ethiopia. He was one of the first to explore entomologically the Kigezi district of southern Uganda, a mountainous region where, in the Kayonza Forest, he found many new species. Jackson also trained several African collectors whom he sent not only to areas in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, but also to Middle Congo, Cameroun, Nigeria and Ivory Coast. At the time of his death he was negotiating with the government of Gabon to send one of them to that country. These men were not ordinary collectors, but highly trained specialists. One was particularly adept at finding the eggs and larvae of the genus lolaus, large, handsome blue and white hairstreaks whose larvae feed on the parasitic plant Loranthus, high in the forest canopy. Through the efforts of this man Jackson thus obtained long, perfect series of a host of species of this genus and its relatives, many of them new or previously little known. Another of his collectors specialized in finding nests of the ant genus Crematogaster and in building platforms high up in infested trees to collect liptenids associated with these ants. Whenever he had the chance Jackson would go to the British Museum to study the rich African collections and to compare the increasing number of new or little known species that he or his collectors had found. Through that institution he was put in contact, in 1938 or 1939, with M. Henri Stempffer of Paris, the world's foremost authority on African Lycaenidae. This was to be a most fortunate association, a happy combination of collector and specialist, both of rare ability and great productivity. Jackson published relatively little himself. He began rather late (he was 34 years old when his first paper appeared), and his early articles came out at considerable intervals. From the late 1950's, however, he began to publish more, and the last decade of his life saw more from his pen than all the preceding years. His most important papers, perhaps, are the one written in collaboration with V. G. L. van Someren (1960) on mimicry in African butterflies, and the series of taxonomic articles on the very difficult liptenid genus Epitola and its allies (1962a, 1964, 1964a, 1967). Jackson's collection had grown to be one of the largest assemblages of African butterflies anywhere, and certainly the largest on that continent. And this despite the fact that he gave away duplicate specimens by the thousands, to anyone or to any institution he thought would put them to good use: to Stempffer, to the Museum National cTHistoire Naturelle (Paris), to the Musee Royale de FAfrique Centrale (Tervuren), to Carnegie Museum, to the National Museum of Kenya, to the British Museum. The latter institution further received over the years the types of nearly all the many forms named by Jackson, or by Stempffer from Jackson's material. In 1961 Jackson began to feel that his collection itself should be more readily available to scientists and in June of that year gave half of it, some 65,000 specimens, to the British Museum. The other half, along with his fine entomological library, he willed to the National Museum of Kenya, where it now is. Mere words can scarcely do justice to Pinkie Jackson's many personal qualities. His great charm and warmth of personality won him close friends wherever he went. He was an ideal companion in the field, and a delightful correspondent, full of enthusiasm, extremely knowledgeable and always articulate. The brutal murder of this unfailingly kind, generous and wise man was a great shock to all who knew him and a grievous loss to his many friends and relatives and to African entomology. The above biographical account was adapted in part from an Appreciation published by one of us (RHC) in the East African Standard (Nairobi), June 14, 1968, and also in J. E. Afr. Nat. Hist. Soc. 26, 3(115): 149, June 30, 1968. Sir George Taylor, Director of The Royal Botanic Gardens (Kew), has also published an obituary notice (London Times, June 11, 1968), a copy of which he was so good as to send us and on which we have drawn. M. Henri Stempffer (Paris) and Mr. Norman D. Riley (British Museum) have contributed additional information and have helped with the bibliography. We thank all these gentlemen for their assistance. R. H. Carcasson, Centennial Museum, Vancouver, Canada Harry K. Clench, Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Barnes - Kitale Cemetery - Thomas Herbert Elliot Jackson - died May 1968
Gazette 2 May 1969 probate
Nicholas Symes: “Pinkie” Jackson was destined for an army career, but after training at Wellington College opted for a course at Harper Adams Agricultural College.  In 1923, after a brief visit to Kenya, he went to India to work on an indigo plantation.  Kenya, however, had made an impression and the following year he returned.  After a time spent learning to grow coffee with Mr Maxwell Trench near Nyeri, he settled on a farm of his own on the slopes of Elgon, where he was soon joined by his father, Brigadier General H.K. Jackson, and family.

Coffee had not been grown in that area before but was eventually established, and, after many vicissitudes, the farm “Kapretwa” was developed as one of the most successful coffee estates in the district.  After service in the 1939–1945 War, reaching the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, he continued to develop his farm, pioneered the growing of tea and built the first processing plant in the Kitale district.  He was called up again during the Mau Mau emergency in 1953 and served in a senior capacity at Embu.  Thereafter he devoted his life to his farm, his superb garden and his natural history interests.

He had been an enthusiastic naturalist from early youth.  He became an excellent field ornithologist and botanist, and over the years built up one of the most beautiful gardens in Kenya.  His most absorbing interest, however, was entomology, which he pursued throughout his life.  In 1935 he took part in the British Museum Ruwenzori Expedition, on which George Taylor was botanist, and collected vast numbers of insects.  Soon after he began to form his own collection of butterflies and bred them to record their life histories.  He collected widely in Kenya, Uganda, Somalia and southern Ethiopia and employed several trained African collectors to go further afield.  In 1961 he gave over half his collection, some 65,000 specimens, to the BM and willed the rest to the National Museums of Kenya.  All too soon he was tragically murdered by a criminal gang in 1968.

He made a small supplementary collection of trees and shrubs to add to the material gathered during Edward Lugard’s visit to Elgon in 1930–1931, deposited at K with duplicates at EA and MO (Lugard’s son also had a coffee farm on Elgon).  He made some collections in the Kenya Highlands (K2–5) during the 1939–1945 War included in Peter Bally’s B series.  During his trips he collected plants for his garden and built up a particularly fine collection of native and exotic orchids, which he bequeathed to Kew.  After his death, Sir George Taylor, by then the Director of Kew, made a special visit to select material.  Other specimens were gathered by Marjorie Tweedie, a near neighbour, and passed to Joyce Stewart.  Several of the succulents he passed on over the years proved to be new to science.  His sister, Mrs Symes, also collected plants for Kew.

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