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Name: MAYERS, George Russell 'Grandpa'

Birth Date: 10 Oct 1864 Andover
Death Date: 26 Apr 1930 Miwani
First Date: 1922 from Queensland, Australia
Last Date: 1930
Profession: Started the sugar industry in Kenya. Joelson - 1928 - Managing Dir. Victoria Nyanza Sugar Co., which Company, formed in Australia in 1921 .... the European staff now numbers about 50
Area: 'Miwani', near Kisumu
Married: In Brisbane 6 Jan 1894 Louise Elizabeth Penelope Smith (arrived in Kenya 1912) b. 15 Jan 1875 Brisbane, d. 3 June 1943 Eldoret
Children: Cyril Herbert (9 Mar 1902 Townsville-1980); Eric George (25 Feb 1898 Townsville-2013); Frank Aubrey (26 Dec 1900 Townsville); Joseph; Howard Clive (9 Jan 1910 Woollahra-1943); Raymond Sidney (1908-1993); Horace Russell (14 Nov 1895 Cairns-1917); Roy Oswald (7 Oct 1903 Cairns-1988); Gladys Penelope (22 Oct 1894 Cairns-9 July 1992 Mombasa); Phyllis (14 May 1899 Townsville-1994); June Avril (Penn) (1915) 13 children in all
Book Reference: Sitrep 2, Seventy, Joelson, Today, Bovill, Red 25, Red 31, Hut, Red 22
General Information:
Letter from Leda Farrant - 'G.R. Mayers went to New Zealand from Reading at the end of the last century to make his fortune when he was 17 years old. No fortune in New Zealand, so moved to Brisbane in Australia. Opened a hardware store and did make a fortune. Brought out his brother Marsden Mayers, handed over the store, moved to Cairns in Queensland and there made another fortune in sugar. Known as the sugar King of Queensland. Married Penelope Smith (daughter of the 1st padre in Canberra). Had 12 children (1 died). In 1919 when the Socialist Govt. got into Queensland, then aged 52/3 he left Australia with 3 sons - Eric, Cyril and Roy. George and 3 sons toured India etc. looking for opportunities, but actually were headed for South America when they docked at Mombasa. As the ship was there for 3 days, George and 3 sons went up to Kisumu by KUR&H, and when George saw the Nyando Valley (20 miles from Lake Victoria), between Nandi and Kericho (there wasn't a soul there then, the Kavirondo's were round Lake Victoria) he thought that was a wonderful place to grow sugar. Hot and humid like Cairns in Western Australia, so he told his sons "We won't go to South America, we'll grow sugar here." Bought 10,000 acres, brought all the machinery from England, laid a railway system with steam engines, taught the Africans how to plant, cut etc. Had built the enormous factory. Put down a cricket pitch, built house for family, tennis courts, brought family over from Australia. All sons went to school in England. Brought white Australians to operate factories etc. etc. etc. He STARTED the sugar industry in Kenya. He died of cancer in 1930 but his sons carried on the industry. The estate was known as the Miwani Sugar Estate. His sons later bought coffee farms etc. The Miwani Estate was eventually sold to indians who milked it. The Kenya Govt. eventually took it over.'