He was born on 9 February 1853, the youngest of 12 children of
Robert William Jameson (1805–1868), a
Writer to the Signet, and Christian Pringle, daughter of
Major-General Pringle of Symington House. Leander Starr Jameson was born at
Stranraer,
Wigtownshire (now part of
Dumfries and Galloway), a great-nephew of
Robert Jameson,
Regius Professor of Natural History at the
University of Edinburgh. Fort's biography of Jameson notes that Starr's "chief
Gamaliel, however, was a Professor Grant, a man of advanced age, who had been a pupil of his great-uncle, the Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh."
Robert William Jameson started his career as an advocate in Edinburgh, and was
Writer to the Signet, before becoming a playwright, published poet and editor of
The Wigtownshire Free Press. A radical and reformist, he was the author of the dramatic poem
Nimrod (1848) and
Timoleon, a tragedy in five acts informed by the anti-slavery movement.
Timoleon was performed at the
Adelphi Theatre in Edinburgh in 1852, and ran to a second edition. In due course, the Jameson family moved to London, living in
Chelsea and
Kensington. Leander Starr Jameson went to the
Godolphin School in
Hammersmith, where he did well in both lessons and games prior to his university education. Leander was educated for the medical profession at
University College Hospital, London, for which he passed his entrance examinations in January 1870. He distinguished himself as a medical student, becoming a Gold Medallist in
materia medica. After qualifying as a doctor, he was made Resident Medical Officer at University College Hospital (M.R.C.S. 1875; M.D. 1877). After acting as house physician, house surgeon and demonstrator of anatomy, and showing promise of a successful professional career in London, his health broke down from overwork in 1878, and he went out to
South Africa and settled down in practice at
Kimberley. There he rapidly acquired a great reputation as a medical man, and, besides numbering
President Kruger and the
Matabele chief
Lobengula among his patients, came much into contact with
Cecil Rhodes. Jameson was for some time the
inDuna of the Matabele king's favourite regiment, the Imbeza. Lobengula expressed his delight with Jameson's successful medical treatment of his gout by honouring him with the rare status of inDuna. Although white, he underwent the initiation ceremonies linked with this honour. His status as an inDuna gave him certain advantages. In 1888, he successfully exerted his influence with Lobengula to induce the chieftain to grant the concessions to the agents of Rhodes which led to the formation of the
British South Africa Company; and when the company proceeded to open up
Mashonaland, Jameson abandoned his medical practice and joined the pioneer expedition of 1890. From this time his fortunes were bound up with Rhodes' schemes in the north. Immediately after the pioneer column had occupied Mashonaland, Jameson, with
F.C. Selous and A.R. Colquhoun, went east to
Manicaland and was instrumental in securing the greater part of the country, to which
Portugal was laying claim, for the Chartered Company. In 1891, Jameson succeeded Colquhoun as
Administrator of Mashonaland. In 1893, Jameson was a key figure in the
First Matabele War and involved in incidents that led to the massacre of the
Shangani Patrol. ==Character==