British North West Africa Company
British North West Africa Company was an international trading company, founded by Donald McKenzie in 1874 after securing bank financing with the guarantee of businessmen from Manchester.[1] Since 1882 It was taken from Port Victoria in Tarfaya as its headquarters for the purpose of dealing with commercial caravans linking Noun River and Timbuktu.[2]
Industry | Caravan trade |
---|---|
Predecessor | Morocco |
Founded | 1874 |
Founders | Donald McKenzie |
Defunct | 1895 |
Fate | Abandoned |
Successor | Morocco |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Tarfaya |
Owner | United Kingdom |
In 1879, the company occupied and took over Tarfaya as part of the Scramble for Africa, and turned it into an exchange center of trade in order to trade with commercial caravans coming from Timbuktu and destined to Wadi Noun. In 1882, Mackenzie built a fortress under the name of "Port Victoria". On 26 March 1888, the local Saharan tribes attacked the fortress which resulted in killing and injuring workers. In 1895, after the Treaty of Cape Juby, the company abandoned its final fort and left it to the sultan of Morocco, Abd al-Aziz, who had just succeeded his father Hassan I.[3]
References
- Morsy, Magali (1984). North Africa, 1800-1900: A Survey from the Nile Valley to the Atlantic. ISBN 978-0582783768.
- "F is for Flooding the Sahara". Sahara Overland. Archived from the original on 2020-09-27.
- Hertslet, E. (2013). The Map of Africa by Treaty. Routledge. p. 970. ISBN 978-1-136-01918-0.