When James Jameson Bought A Girl Just To Watch Her Be Eaten By Cannibals

Published November 21, 2017
Updated July 8, 2018

James Jameson used his power and privilege to do the unspeakable — and get away with it.

James Jameson Cannibalism

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty ImagesJames S. Jameson, heir to the Jameson Irish Whiskey fortune.

In the 1880s, an heir to the vast Jameson Irish Whiskey fortune bought a 10-year-old girl just so he could draw her being eaten by cannibals.

James S. Jameson was the great-great-grandson of John Jameson, the founder of the famed Irish Whiskey company, and as such was heir to the family fortune.

Like many rich heirs of the era, Jameson considered himself something of an adventurer, and would tag along on the expeditions of more accomplished explorers.

In 1888, he joined the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, led by renowned explorer Henry Morton Stanley, across central Africa. The journey was ostensibly to bring supplies to Emin Pasha, the leader of an Ottoman province in Sudan that was cut off by a revolt.

James Jameson Picture

Wikimedia CommonsJames S. Jameson

In reality, the expedition had a second purpose: to annex more land for the Belgian Free State colony in the Congo.

It was on this expedition that James Jameson would commit his unspeakable crime.

Varying accounts exist of the incident, from Jameson’s diary, his wife, and a translator on the trip, but what they all agree on is that by June 1888, Jameson was in command of the rear column of the expedition at Ribakiba, a trading post deep in the Congo known for its cannibal population.

They also say that Jameson were dealing directly with Tippu Tip, a slave trader and local fixer.

According to Assad Farran, a Sudanese translator on the trip, Jameson expressed interest in seeing cannibalism first hand.

Tippu Tip

Wikimedia CommonsTippu Tip, a famed slave trader who worked in the area.

Farran would later tell Stanley, when he returned to check up on the rear column, his account of the events, and would later recount them in an affidavit that was published by the New York Times.

He said that Tippu then talked to the chiefs of the village and produced a 10-year-old slave girl, who Jameson paid six handkerchiefs for.

According to a translator, the chiefs then said to their villagers, “This is a present from a white man, who wishes to see her eaten.”

“The girl was tied to a tree,” said Farran, “the natives sharpened their knives the while. One of them then stabbed her twice in the belly.”

In James Jameson’s own diary he then wrote, “Three men then ran forward, and began to cut up the body of the girl; finally her head was cut off, and not a particle remained, each man taking his piece away down the river to wash it.”

Both of them also agree on another count: the girl never screamed throughout the ordeal.

Emin Relief Expedition

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty ImagesDrawing of the Emin Relief Expedition on its way through the Congo.

“The most extraordinary thing was that the girl never uttered a sound, nor struggled, until she fell,” wrote Jameson.

“Jameson, in the meantime, made rough sketches of the horrible scenes,” recounted Farrad in his later testimony. “Jameson afterward went to his tent, where he finished his sketches in watercolors.”

In his own diary, Jameson oddly doesn’t even fully deny making these drawings, writing, “When I went home I tried to make some small sketches of the scene while still fresh in my memory.”

In his account in his diary and his wife’s later account of the incident, the two attempt to play it off as though Jameson went along with the proceedings because he believed it be a joke, and could not imagine that the villagers would actually kill and eat a child.

Emin Pasha Leaders

Wikimedia CommonsHenry Morton Stanley (center; seated) with the officers of the Advance Column of the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition.

However, this account fails to explain why Jameson would pay exactly six handkerchiefs, likely an amount he would have had to procure, for something he didn’t believe would happen.

It also fails to explain why he even attempted to sketch the horrifying event after the murder.

Likely, the account of his crime is true, but James Jameson never faced justice. He died shortly after the accusations of his misconduct made their way to to Stanley in 1888 from a fever he had contracted.

Jameson’s family, with the help of the Belgian government, were able to hush up many of the atrocities, this mission became the last of its kind.

Non-scientific civilian expeditions into Africa were suspended after this time, though military and governmental ones would continue.

All because of the crimes of a whiskey heir and the brave interpreter who told the world what he did.


After this look at James Jameson’s crimes, read the chilling story of Japanese cannibal killer Issei Sagawa.

author
Gabe Paoletti
author
Gabe Paoletti is a New York City-based writer and a former Editorial Intern at All That's Interesting. He holds a Bachelor's in English from Fordham University.
editor
John Kuroski
editor
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.