In 1879, when Sir George Taubman Goldie organised the amalgamation of the rival trading firms of the Lower Niger and formed the United Africa Company, only a few far-sighted people could have had any idea of the possibilities of future commercial greatness that were possessed by this utterly unattractive and uncivilised region. “The Niger,” as Colonel Mockler-Ferryman tells us, “was absolutely tabooed; its name was mentioned only in whispers, and the British public regarded it as an unlucky, pestilential spot, out of which no good could ever come.” It must be remembered, in explanation of this pessimistic attitude, that all attempts to explore Nigeria and open up commerce on the river had failed more or less completely; a great number of lives had been sacrificed in successive expeditions, and no practical good had been accomplished. McGregor Laird, some quarter of a century earlier, had founded the African Shipping Company, with monthly sailings to the West African ports and, with the grudging co-operation of the Government, had contracted to keep a steamer on the Niger. But Laird died in 1857, when his spirited enterprise appeared to be on the point of yielding tangible results, and the country was still under a cloud when, twenty years later, the first organised attempt was made to develop its commercial resources.
About This Book
A concise survey of Northern Nigeria's recent development centers on the discovery and commercial exploitation of extensive tin deposits and their transformative economic implications. The narrative describes geographical features, towns, river transport, markets, agricultural and mineral production, and the infrastructure and business activities enabling extraction and export. It combines eyewitness description with technical and administrative information, illustrated by numerous photographs and plates documenting landscape, settlements, mining methods, and daily life, while assessing prospects and practical challenges facing resource-driven development.