Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker

Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker (1832–1901), F.R.G.S., F.A.S., F.G.S., C.M.Z.S., known as Brucie Walker, was an English trader, explorer and collector of zoological specimens in West Africa.[1] The Founding Collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum includes a large number of objects collected by Walker.

Career

Walker worked as a trader for Hatton & Cookson of Liverpool.[2] In 1851, he moved from Sussex to Gabon,[3] and was based in Gabon for 23 years.[4] He was a significant contributor of African artifacts to British museums, in particular, his collection of African shields.[5] He was involved with General Pitt-Rivers, after whom the museum in England is named, in the affairs of the Ethnological Society of London (ESL) and the Anthropological Society of London (ASL); and the original collection of the museum is attributed to him. He collected ethnographic objects from 1862 onwards, particularly of Ba Fan tribes.[4] Walker became a member of the Anthropological Society of London in 1864 and contributed many objects from the Republic of Congo, Porto Novo (capital of Benin) and Gabon. A particular gift he made was an ornament collection, the adorned girdle worn by Mpongwe women. He translated the Bible into Mpongwe language and donated it to ASL. The Pitt Rivers Museum has recorded 143 items collected by Walker, including weapons, spears and arrows. Some of his curious collections in the museum include two bead necklaces from Gabon and the "Plait of Hair of Pamela Canot".[4]

Personal life

Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker was born on Friday 8 June 1832 at Gosden Green, Prinstead, Westbourne, Sussex. He was the son of Royal Navy Lieutenant Henry Walker (b.1786 Manchester England d.1848 Manchester England) and his wife Charlotte (b.1799 Chichester d.1887 South Stoneham, Hampshire). His father Henry joined the Royal Navy as a midshipman in 1803, attaining the rank of lieutenant in 1810. Midshipman Henry Walker saw action on many occasions during and after the Napoleonic Wars; most notably aboard the Bellerophon at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Robert was the seventh and last child of Henry and Charlotte Walker. However following a separation from her husband in or around 1836, Charlotte Walker gave birth to four more children while residing in the village of Catherington, Hampshire. In 1851 Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker gained employment with the Liverpool-based shipping and trading company of Hatton and Cookson. Shortly after joining the Company, Walker arrived at Sette Karma, on the coast of the French colony of Gabon, West Africa where his older brother Henry Clements Walker (b.1822 Selsey, Sussex d.1855 Gabon) had been trading since the late 1840s. In 1854 Walker returned to England and married Margaret Clara Ann Molesworth (b.1833 Portsmouth d.1873 Wandsworth, London) daughter of Royal Marine Captain Arthur Molesworth at St.Marys Church, Stoke Newington, Middlesex. Walker soon returned to the Gabon charged with the task of establishing a new trading station or 'factory' on behalf of Hatton and Cookson at Libreville. Presumably Walker was back in England by the spring of 1857, as in December that year his wife Margaret gave birth to their first son Harry Bruce Walker (d.1922 Wandsworth, London) A second son followed in 1863 named Arthur Duncan Bruce Walker (d.1926 Australia). Walker also had another son, André Raponda Walker (b.1871 Gabon d.1968 Gabon), by Princess Agnorogoule Ikoutou d.1913 Gabon and a daughter by Ikoutou in 1873. Ikoutou was Mpongwe,[6] and a niece of King Louis Dowé.[7] Raponda Walker, an author, botanist, and ethnographer, was the first Gabonese Roman Catholic priest.[8]It is also likely that Walker fathered a number children by native women. A letter written by Walker from Africa in 1868 to his friend John Holt, referred to an unnamed "daughter" and it was said that Walker held sexual relations with more than one native woman. Robert Bruce Walker's first wife, Margaret Clara Ann Molesworth died in 1873 at Wandsworth London. In 1876 Walker married again to Minnie Annetta Bevir (b.1858 London d.1910 London). No issue came of this union but within a few years the marriage began to breakdown, due in part to Walker's long absences from home and Mrs. Walker's intemperance and incurring debt. In 1875 Walker brought his African son, Ignace Gervais Andre Raponda Walker to England where he remained for about a year during which he attended school at Southampton, visited London and met his paternal grandmother, Charlotte Walker. Andre returned to Africa in 1876 at the request of his mother Ikoutou. It is doubtful if he ever saw his father again. By this time Bruce Walker had become dissatisfied with his lot with Hatton and Cookson and set about finding new means of earning a living. In the autumn of 1876 he set out for Marseilles via Paris with the intention of investing in an ice skating rink business but soon ran into financial difficulties. He returned to England before setting out for Sierra Leone, West Africa, working as a prospector for a gold mining enterprise. However, by the mid 1880s Walker was again in financial trouble; resorting to borrowing and begging money from friends and colleagues. Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker died at 14 Osbourne Terrace, Clapham Road, London on 9 March 1901 suffering from circulatory problems and sepsis. He was buried at Brompton Cemetery, London on 13 March, sharing the same grave plot as his first wife Margaret and brother-in-law Thomas Hooper Molesworth.

[9]

gollark: It immediately sublimates.
gollark: It immediately melts.
gollark: I wonder if the presumably extant ARM CPUs in the controller of my SSD outperform your Pentium 3.
gollark: Oh, we just implemented Rust in a Turing machine built on quirks of the Linux virtual filesystem.
gollark: Yes.

References

  1. McMillian, Nora (February 1996). "Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker, F.R.G.S., F.A.S., F.G.S., C.M.Z.S. (1832–1901), West African trader, explorer and collector of zoological specimens". Archives of Natural History. 23 (1): 125–141. doi:10.3366/anh.1996.23.1.125. ISSN 0260-9541. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  2. Haggerty, Webster & White 2009, p. 107.
  3. Reel 2013, p. 223.
  4. Rivière, Peter. "Rethinking Pitt-Rivers". Pitt Rivers Museum. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  5. 19th century Field Collecting Archived 2013-06-18 at the Wayback Machine, Oxford University, accessed 1 August 2008
  6. Historical Dictionary of Gabon, Gardiner and Yates, 2006, accessed 11 August 2008
  7. Biography of Raponds Walker, accessed 11 August 2008
  8. Webber 2014, p. 89.
  9. Stephen Flinders 2015

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.