Scope and Contents of the Collection
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Creator: | Hibbert, S. E. |
Title: | S. E. Hibbert Travel Diary |
Inclusive Dates: | 1909 |
Quantity: | 2 volumes. |
Abstract: | British army officer. Journal of a hunting trip south on the White Nile, from Khartoum to near Nimule. |
Language: | English |
Repository: |
Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries 222 Waverly Avenue Syracuse, NY 13244-2010 https://library.syracuse.edu/special-collections-research-center |
Nothing is known of S. E. Hibbert beyond the information given in the collection. He was apparently a British army officer.
The S. E. Hibbert Travel Diary is a two-volume journal of a 1909 hunting trip south on the White Nile, from Khartoum to near Nimule, by a British army officer and three companions.
In 1909 Captain Hibbert of the British Army set out on a steamship voyage down the White Nile with three companions: Darell, Dawson and Lane. The four men worked their way south by steamship or on foot, from Khartoum to Gondokoro on the Nimule Road. Each stop allowed them to hunt, moving inland on foot, camping and following game. Elephants were the principle quarry. Leaving Gondokoro on May 12, 1909 they returned, partially over the same route, to Omdurman, arriving on June 24. Capt. Hibbert's diary details the successes, failures and frustrations of this safari in British Africa, reflecting many of the contemporary attitudes towards wildlife and native tribes. Hazard encountered on the trip include storms, poisonous reptiles, crocodiles, fever, infection, and a wounded elephant. Lack of potable water was also a problem on occasion. The many photographs show natives, British administrators, the hunters and their quarry. None of the photographs are labeled, and a reading of the adjacent text indicates the photographs are unrelated to the event discussed. Some of the photographs are also duplicates.
Also included in the volume is an enlarged photograph of donkeys or mules, plus a 1913 letter to Capt. Hibbert, then at Sheerness (a British military installation on the Isle of Sheppay, at the mouth of the Thames). The letter is in response to Hibbert's query to the Steamer Department of the Sudan Government for current fares. Whether Hibbert made another journey is unknown.
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Preferred citation for this material is as follows:
S. E. Hibbert Travel Diary,
Special Collections Research Center,
Syracuse University Libraries
Transfer from Rare Books, 1969.
Created by: -
Date: circa 1970
Revision history: 9 May 2010 - converted to EAD (MRC);
6 Mar 2018 - rehoused (MRC)