Chapter 1
Lokoja and the Niger-Benue Confluence Area
The first inhabitants of the historic town of Lokoja settled on the plateau at the top of Mount Patti from about 1811. They were the Nupe of the middle belt who migrated from Gbara in Nupe land in 1759. Their first stop was Bunu in Kabba area before coming to the said plateau overlooking the present city of Lokoja when it was only a small settlement. Within three decades, initial foreign encounters had begun when the Lander brothers passed by the Niger-Benue Confluence on Monday 25th October 1830.
Whatever perspective one chooses—be it commercial, missionary, or colonial—the history of foreign incursion into what now defines the geographical confines and political entity known as Nigeria highlights Lokoja, with its surrounding communities in the Niger-Benue Confluence area, as frontline locations. Indeed, Lokoja rightly claims the status of being the cradle of Christianity in Northern Nigeria and combines the subsequent historical landmarks of the colonial administration and the milestones of the political history of Nigeria, to give it a pride of place from where many other accounts take their bearing.
The first voyage to establish a settlement at the confluence was sponsored by the Liverpool merchant Macgregor Laird. It was primarily a commercial venture and set sail from Liverpool on 19th July 1832. It was a difficult journey and Pedraza records Laird’s feelings:
However, it was the 1841 expedition, led by Captain H.D. Trotter, which made contact with the area again. This time it was called The Philanthropic Experiment, mainly sponsored by the Society for the Extinction of the Slave Trade formed by Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton. The main objective of that expedition was to get in touch with the kings of the interior and make treaties with them to abolish slavery in exchange for regular supply of British merchandise in exchange for the produce of the country. Young Samuel Ajayi Crowther, then a catechist, was on the team as an interpreter. Two more expeditions exposed the Lokoja Niger-Benue Confluence area to foreign influence—in 1854 and 1857–64—both led by Dr William Balfour Baikie. This became the reason for the more permanent attention to Lokoja which was founded as a base for the abolition of slave trade and the conversion of those so freed.
In its present location, it is situated along the valley between Mount Patti and the confluence of the Niger-Benue rivers. It also became the rallying point for neighboring ethnic groups such as the Oworo, Igala Nupe, Bassa-Nge, Kakanda, Igbira-Koto, Bunu, and Yagba, as well as a sprinkling of Hausa settlers who arrived in such neighboring communities as Panda and Koton-Kar: around 1860.As is to be expected, the tussle between some of the claimants to the traditional chieftaincy stool has given rise to a number of versions of historical reconstructions by ethnic groups that want to legitimize their claims to ownership of Lokoja. However, the account by Howard J. Pedraza, and the journals of the explorers and missionaries who had no such sentiments, are more objective. The Niger-Benue Confluence area covered in this study includes the Lokoja, Bassa country to the East of Lokoja, the Oworo to the North, and the Igbira, Kakanda, and Panda settlements to the northeast of Lokoja.
The Niger-Benue Confluence Areas in the Larger Christian History in Nigeria
Compared with the plethora of historical accounts about the beginnings of a more sustained missionary encounter (otherwise known as the replanting of Christianity in 1842, in view of earlier efforts), a major gap exists by way of detailed accounts of missionary activities in this area, especially after the death of Bishop Ajayi Crowther. Concerning the earlier Christian encounter, Ayandele notes:
Other references are made to these earlier efforts by other scholars. Tasie refers to those earlier efforts as some “lesser ripples” in Northern Nigeria in 1688 in Agadez, north of Kano by the Belgian Franciscan Brother Peter Farde, OFM, who introduced Christianity to his master. These scholars also record the efforts of the Spanish Capuchin and Italian Capuchin missions to Benin and Warri in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
The timeline of Christian missionary engagement in the Niger-Benue Confluence may be traced more accurately when viewed against the larger context of early Christian missionary engagement in Nigeria. Already some phases of Christian encounter within the larger context of Nigeria have been suggested by notable scholars. For instance, Ade-Ajayi delineates the period covered by his monumental study (1841–1891) as the first phase which he termed the seedling time preparatory to the more intricate period of British colonial rule. This first phase is marked by the first Niger Expedition at the beginning, and the death of Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther at the end.Tasie, whose major work, Christian Missionary Enterprise in the Niger Delta, covering 1864–1918, has, in a more recent work—an inaugural lecture titled “The Vernacular Church and Nigerian Christianity”—presented a map of missionary engagement under the following categorization:
This study focuses on the next stage of missionary activities in the Lokoja Niger-Benue Confluence area from the time of Bishop Crowther’s death in 1891 to the time of the first centenary of the replanting of Christianity in Nigeria, being 1941. This fifty-year period, being the second half of the missionary presence, poses the challenge to establish whether or not Christianity had been firmly rooted as a credible faith and embraced by the indigenous community. This period also falls within the larger period of what Tasie calls the response stage and a gradual transition from foreign to native leadership as envisaged by the missionary statesman, Henry Venn, the friend of Africa, despite the odds and hiccups in the process.
By this time, Christianity had been planted, and a distinct group of adherents of various descriptions could be identified, ranging from commercially motivated adherents to those of low social rank who were often the ready firstfruits both in apostle Paul’s missionary experience in the early stages of Christianity, and in contemporary mission enterprise. For instance, apostle Paul wrote to the young believers in Corinth: “Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were...