Tom Mboya

Politician

Birthday August 15, 1930

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Kilima Mbogo, British East Africa

DEATH DATE 1969-7-5, Nairobi, Kenya (38 years old)

Nationality Kenya

#56495 Most Popular

1930

Thomas Joseph Odhiambo Mboya (15August 1930 – 5July 1969) was a Kenyan trade unionist, educator, Pan-Africanist, author, independence activist, and statesman.

He was one of the founding fathers of the Republic of Kenya.

He led the negotiations for independence at the Lancaster House Conferences and was instrumental in the formation of Kenya's independence party – the Kenya African National Union (KANU) – where he served as its first Secretary-General.

He laid the foundation for Kenya's capitalist and mixed economy policies at the height of the Cold War and set up several of the country's key labour institutions.

Mboya was Minister for Economic Planning and Development when he was assassinated.

Mboya's intelligence, charm, leadership, and oratory skills won him admiration from all over the world.

He gave speeches, participated in debates and interviews across the world in favour of Kenya's independence from British colonial rule.

He also spoke at several rallies in the goodwill of the Civil Rights movement in the United States.

Thomas ("Tom") Joseph Odhiambo Mboya was born at this colonial sisal farm on 15 August 1930, near the town of Thika, in what was called the White Highlands of Kenya.

Mboya's father Leonard Ndiege was later promoted as an overseer at this sisal plantation and worked for 25 years.

Eventually Leonard and Marcella had seven children, five sons and two daughters.

When Mboya was nine years old, his father sent him to a mission school in Kamba region.

Mboya was educated at various Catholic mission schools.

1942

In 1942, he joined St. Mary's School Yala – a Catholic secondary school in Yala, located in Nyanza province where Mboya began his education in English and History.

1946

In 1946, he attended the Holy Ghost College (later Mang'u High School), where he passed well enough to proceed to do his Cambridge School Certificate.

1948

In 1948, Mboya joined the Royal Sanitary Institute's Medical Training School for Sanitary Inspectors at Nairobi, qualifying as an inspector in 1950.

He also enrolled in a certificate course in economics at Efficiency Correspondence College of South Africa.

1950

Mboya's political life started immediately after he was employed at Nairobi City Council as a sanitary inspector in 1950.

During his stint at Nairobi City Council, Mboya was elected as African Staff Association's president and immediately embarked on moulding the association into a trade union named the Kenya Local Government Workers' Union.

This made his employer suspicious, but he resigned from his position before he could be laid off.

He was, however, able to continue working for the Kenya Labour Workers Union as secretary-general before embarking on his studies in Britain.

1953

In 1953, during the Mau Mau War for Independence, Jomo Kenyatta and other leaders of the independence party, Kenya African Union (KAU), were arrested.

They asked Mboya to lead the KAU and continue the struggle.

However, the government banned the KAU.

Mboya then turned to use the trade unions as a platform to fight for independence.

He was elected as Secretary General of the Kenya Federation of Labour (KFL), the umbrella body for trade unions in Kenya.

In that role, Mboya gave speeches in London and Washington, D.C. opposing British colonial rule in Kenya.

He also organized several strikes seeking better working conditions for African workers.

At that point, the colonial government nearly closed down the labour movement in the effort to suppress his activities.

Mboya reached out to other labour leaders across the world, more so in the ICFTU, including American A. Philip Randolph, with whom he was close.

1955

In 1955, he received a scholarship from the Trades Union Congress to attend Ruskin College, where he studied industrial management.

1956

After his graduation in 1956, he returned to Kenya and joined politics at a time when the British colonial authorities were gradually suppressing the Mau Mau rebellion spearheaded by the Kenya Land and Freedom Army.

1958

In 1958, at the age of 28, Mboya was elected Conference Chairman at the All-African Peoples' Conference convened by Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana.

He helped build the Trade Union Movement in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, as well as across Africa.

He also served as the Africa Representative to the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU).

1959

In 1959, Mboya called a conference in Lagos, Nigeria, to form the first All-Africa ICFTU labour organization.

1960

Mboya worked with both John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. to create educational opportunities for African students, an effort that resulted in the Kennedy Airlifts of the 1960s enabling East African students to study at American colleges.

Notable beneficiaries of this airlift include Wangari Maathai.

In 1960, Mboya was the first Kenyan to be featured on the front page cover of Time magazine in a painting by Bernard Safran.

His parents Leonardus Ndiege and Marcella Onyango were from the Luo ethnic group of Kenya, and were both low-income sisal cutters working on the colonial farm of Sir William Northrup McMillan, at today's Juja Farm Area.