Jotello Festiri Soga
Jotello Festiri Soga | |
---|---|
Born | 1865 |
Died | 6 December 1906 Amalinda, East London, Cape Colony | (aged 40–41)
Alma mater | Edinburgh College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine |
Known for | Rinderpest |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Veterinary surgeon |
Jotello Festiri Soga (1865 - 1906) was South Africa's first black veterinary surgeon[1] who played a leading role in eradicating rinderpest.[2] The library at the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Pretoria is named for him.
Early life
Soga was born in 1865 at the Mgwali Mission, in the former Transkei, South Africa, the fourth and youngest son of Reverend Tiyo Soga (1831–1871), and Scottish missionary Janet Burnside (1827–1903). The couple met when Tiyo Soga was studying theology in Glasgow.[3][4] Soga's father Tiyo had been keen for his children to be educated in Scotland. After Tiyo's death in 1871, Janet relocated the family to Scotland and Jotello and his siblings were educated initially at the Dollar Academy.[5] Jotello Soga went on to study veterinary medicine at Edinburgh College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine from 1882 to 1886. He qualified as a Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in 1886, with a gold medal distinction in botany.[1][6][7]
Personal life
Apart from his youngest sister, Jessie Margaret Soga, LRAM contralto singer and suffragist who remained in Scotland, Soga and his siblings all returned to work and live in South Africa. William Anderson Soga (1858–1948) became a doctor and missionary[8]; John Henderson Soga (1860–1941) also became a missionary;[9] Allan Kirkland Soga (1861–1938) was an early mover in the African National Congress;[10] his sisters, Isabella Macfarlane Soga (1864–1884) and Frances Maria Anne Soga (1868–1942) worked in Christian missions.[10]
Like his father, though Jotello Soga also married a Scottish woman, Catherine Watson Chalmers in 1892: three daughters, Catherine, Doris and Margaret were born of this marriage. Soga died on 6 December 1906 in Amalinda, East London, Eastern Cape.[2]
Early career
In November 1889 he was appointed as the second assistant to Duncan Hutcheon, Colonial Veterinary Surgeon to the Cape of Good Hope.[11] The first assistant being John Borthwick. He was posted to Fort Beaufort and was also responsible for veterinary services for Victoria East, Stockenström and neighbouring districts. His immediate task was to inoculate against contagious lung-sickness, which was decimating cattle in South Africa. He conducted his own inoculation experiments on lung-sickness and his vaccinating method was accepted as standard thereafter.[2]
Eradication of Rinderpest
The second phase of his career began when the threat of rinderpest was on the horizon in the early 1890s. To the north, cattle were becoming sick and dying by the thousands. "Like some belated biblical plague of Egypt . . . it left a trail of bleaching bones and poverty," said one historian of that period. Dr. Soga was among the first to warn of the dangers rinderpest posed to the Cape Colony. "Our new Colonial enemy is rinderpest," he wrote in 1892, "Lung Sickness and Redwater are simple fools to it."
Memorial
The library at the Faculty of Veterinary Science at the University of Pretoria was named in his honour on 5 May 2009[12]
Publications
His publications include:
- Disease "Nenta" in goats, Pretoria, 1891, hdl:2263/10564
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Stamping out rinderpest, Pretoria, 1896, hdl:2263/13445
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Castration - advocating the method of torsion, Pretoria, 1893, hdl:2263/13453
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Rinderpest, Pretoria, 1892, hdl:2263/13454
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
References
Citations
- ^ a b Soga 1983, p. 8.
- ^ a b c Heyne 2009.
- ^ "Janet Burnside Soga". South African History Online. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
- ^ Cousins 1899.
- ^ "Upcoming documentary on the extraordinary life of South African Dollar FP". Dollar Academy. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
- ^ De Beer 1988, p. 169.
- ^ Gutsche 1979, p. 24, 296.
- ^ MacKenzie & Dalziel 2013.
- ^ Lowe n.d.
- ^ a b Davis 2015, pp. 20–37.
- ^ "Vets Past QRS". National Directorate Veterinary Services. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
- ^ "Welcome to the Jotello F Soga Library". Department of Library University of Pretoria. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
Sources
- Cousins, H. T. (Henry Thomas) (1899). From Kafir kraal to pulpit : the story of Tíyo Soga. Library Services University of Pretoria. London : S.W. Partridge.
- Davis, Joanne (27 March 2015). "Family Trees: Roots and Branches – The Dynasty and Legacy of the Reverend Tiyo Soga". Studies in World Christianity. 21 (1): 20–37. doi:10.3366/swc.2015.0103. ISSN 1354-9901.
- De Beer, Mona (1988). Who Did what in South Africa. Ad. Donker. ISBN 978-0-86852-134-3.
- Gutsche, Thelma (1979). There was a Man: The Life and Times of Sir Arnold Theiler, K.C.M.G., of Onderstepoort. H. Timmins. ISBN 978-0-86978-164-7.
- Heyne, Heloise (10 March 2009), Biography of Jotello Festiri Soga, Pretoria, hdl:2263/9207
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Lowe, Christopher (n.d.). "Soga, John Henderson". Dictionary of African Christian Biography. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
- MacKenzie, John M.; Dalziel, Nigel R. (2013). "Scots missions and the frontier". The Scots in South Africa. Manchester University Press. doi:10.7765/9781847794468.00009. ISBN 9780719087837.
- Soga, Tiyo (1983). Donovan Williams (ed.). The journal and selected writings of the Reverend Tiyo Soga. Grahamstown: Published for Rhodes University by A.A. Balkema. ISBN 978-0-86961-148-7.
Further reading
- Skorge, Silvia (2003). Clicking with Xhosa. New Africa Books. ISBN 978-0-86486-645-5.
- "SA's first veterinarian Jotello Soga honoured". SABC. 13 October 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
External links
- Dr. Jotello F Soga
- Making history: UK’s first black vet
- Biography of Jotello Festiri Soga at the S2A3 Biographical Database of Southern African Science