- Richard Beale Blaize
Infobox Person
name = Richard Blaize
image_size =
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birth_date = 1844
birth_place =Freetown
death_date = 1904
death_place =Lagos , Caxton, Marina
education =
occupation =Businessman
spouse =
parents =
children = Mrs ObasaRichard Beale Blaize (1844-1904) was a
West African businessman ofSierra Leonean andNigerian heritage. He was a prominent member of theRoyal African Society during the second half of the nineteenth century. He was also at various times, anewspaper publisher . He entered thenewsprint business in 1876, with the launch of Lagos Times, a bi-motnhlynewspaper sold for a few pence. The paper brought on Mr Mojola Agbebi, who later became prominent and known for his views oncultural Nationalism .Boniface I. Obichere. Studies in Southern Nigerian History, Routledge, 1982. p 106 ISBN 071463106X] However, the life of the newspaper was short, it folded in 1884. He was thereafter approached by Payne Jackson, aLiberian emigrant who wanted to re-invent the Times. After much prodding, Blaize agreed to publish a new rag: the Lagos Weekly Times. Both papers were involved with promoting views on self government.Life
Richard Blaize was born in
Freetown , Sierra Leone to the family ofemancipated slaves of Yoruba origin. At an early age, he attended a mission school and was nurtured in the Christian way. He started work as anapprentice for a printer in Freetown but soon left the country for Lagos in 1861. He continued along the lines of theprinting industry in Lagos before jettisoning it formerchandise trading and importation. In trading, the participants, especially those from Lagos were numerous; most of the traders mainly dealt with exchanging goods with exporters and a few delved intoexportation . Ayodeji Olukoju. Anatomy of Business-Government Relations: Fiscal Policy and Mercantile Pressure Group Activity in Nigeria, 1916-1933, African Studies Review, Vol. 38, No. 1, Apr., 1995. P 24.] A number of traders owned steamers, which were used to navigate theNiger river to buy goods from groups across river, and some even boasted they showed the imperialists how to move across the river. Blaize was among a few of the Lagosmerchants that was very successful in trading, he was an importer and was also involved with trade across the Niger. Though the ruinous approach of competitors led to many indigenous enterprises foundling not the least helped with the dominance ofsole proprietorships , Blaize thrived in the midst of strong competition and became one of the wealthiest West Africans of his time. Mark R. Lipschutz, R. Kent Rasmussen. Dictionary of African Historical Biography, Aldine Pub. Co., 1978. p 32. ISBN 0520051793.]References
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