Thomas Pringle

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(January 5, 1789 – December 5, 1834) Scottish born writer, poet and abolitionist, known as the father of South African Poetry and the founder of South African journalism. Studied at Edinburgh University, and then worked as a clerk and continued writing, soon succeeding to editorships of journals and newspapers, including Blackwoods Magazine in Edinburgh. Emigrated, with his father and brothers, to South Africa in 1820. Here he where he worked in the newly created South African Public Library and pursued his writing career. To supplement his income he opened a school with fellow Scotsman John Fairbairn, and founded a newspaper, the South African Journal (1824), and a magazine South African Commercial Advertiser. Both publications became suppressed for their free criticisms of the Colonial Government, and his school closed. Without a livelihood, and with debts, Thomas returned and settled in London where he became the Secretary of the Anti-Slavery Society in 1827 till his death in 1834 at the age of 45. The first South African English poet of distinction, he wrote Emphemerides (1928) and African Sketches (1834). Other publications include Some Account of the Present State of the English Settlers in Albany, South Africa (1824) and his account of his time in South Africa (Narrative of A Residence in South Africa 2 vols., London: Edward Moxon, 1834 & Reprinted: Brentwood: Doppler Press, 1986) which has become a classic record of the colonial period.

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