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Name: LONDON, Thomas Pain
Birth Date: 1860 Dover
Death Date: 19 Dec 1907 murdered at Mtongwe, Mombasa
Last Date: 1907
Profession: Chief electrician of cable ship Colonia
Area: Mombasa
Married: In Deptford 24 Apr 1884 Kathleen Elizabeth Pulley b. 25 July 1854 Deptford, d. 21 May 1919 Westcliff on Sea
Book Reference: Barnes, Gazette, North
General Information:
The picture of the murder site calls Thomas London 'Sir' but he never had this title.
Mombasa Mbaraki cemetery - 20 Dec 1907, T.P. London, aged 48, Chief Electrician "Colonia", murdered at Mtongwe, body found after 1 month - in memory of / Thomas Pain London / of Brockley Kent / who was treacherously murderd by natives at Mkongwe / on the 19th December 1907 aged 47 / this memorial was placed here by the officers and staff of the / Telegraphic Construction and Maintenance Company / of which he was for 32 years a member
Gazette 1/10/1908 - Letters of Administration in the Estate of Thomas Payne London deceased, who died at Mtongwe (Mombasa) on the 19th December 1907
Drumkey - Feb 13, 1908 - Mr Porter, the Mombasa Town Magistrate, committed the 5 natives to trial at the sessions for the murder of the late Mr London - Feb 20 - Judge Barth sentenced all 5 to be hanged
North has Thomas Pain London
From Brockley, Kent
Ancestry stories - Thomas was murdered while on a hunting trip in Mombasa [?]
Advertiser - 28/8/1908 - Mr H.W. Barnes has been deputed to hang the 4 murderers of Mr [Thomas Pain] London. Execution will take place on the spot the murder was committed.
Judy Aldrick, Sir Ali Bin Salim and the Making of Mombasa, 2018 - A young ship's engineer named Thomas London had gone ashore at Port Reitz in December 1907 and sat down to rest by a small stream, where he was killed, apparently for no reason. For several weeks the death remained a mystery despite all enquiries. But eventually Ali bin Salim's investigations proved that a powerful Digo wizard named Mwakilungu had instigated it as a ritual killing. Mwakilungu and his four accomplices were arrested and brought to trial, where they admitted they had engaged in white killings, starting with a white fowl and ending with a white man, believing it would increase their magical powers. This was the first murder case tried in the British law courts in Mombasa and the first public hanging in Kenya. A well-known photograph shows the five convicted men with their hands shackled.' They were hung at Mtongwe in 1912. A newspaper report says that Thomas was the son of one of the directors of the Cable & Wireless Co. in Mombasa. It reported he was a ship's engineer who went for a stroll and was killed resting beside a small stream.