British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston notes in …
Years: 1861 - 1861
August
British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston notes in 1861, "the expediency of losing no time in assuming the formal Protectorate of Lagos" following threats from Kosoko and the French, who are positioned at Wydah.
William McCoskry, the Acting Consul in Lagos, with Commander Bedingfield, had convened a meeting with Oba Dosunmu on July 30, 1861, aboard HMS Prometheus, where Britain's intent was explained and a response to the terms were required by August 1861.
Dosunmu had resisted the terms of the treaty but under the threat to unleash violence on Lagos by Commander Bedingfield, Dosunmu relents and signs the Lagos Treaty of Cession on August 6, 1861.
William McCoskry, the Acting Consul in Lagos, with Commander Bedingfield, had convened a meeting with Oba Dosunmu on July 30, 1861, aboard HMS Prometheus, where Britain's intent was explained and a response to the terms were required by August 1861.
Dosunmu had resisted the terms of the treaty but under the threat to unleash violence on Lagos by Commander Bedingfield, Dosunmu relents and signs the Lagos Treaty of Cession on August 6, 1861.
