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James Sligo Jameson - Wikipedia James Sligo Jameson James Sligo Jameson (17 August 1856 – 17 August 1888) was a Scottish naturalist and traveller in Africa He identified the black honey-buzzard in 1877 Jameson's antpecker, Jameson's firefinch, and Jameson's wattle-eye are named after him
James Jameson Once Bought A Girl To Watch Her Be Eaten By Cannibals In the 1880s, an heir to the vast Jameson Irish Whiskey fortune bought a 10-year-old girl just so he could draw her being eaten by cannibals James S Jameson was the great-great-grandson of John Jameson, the founder of the famed Irish Whiskey company, and as such was heir to the family fortune
In 1888, James Jameson Bought A Girl To Be Cannibalized - Ranker James S Jameson descended from John Jameson, the founder of Jameson Whiskey, and was thus heir to a substantial whiskey empire In 1888, Jameson was a member of one of the last major European exploration trips through the center of Africa, the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition
6 Things You Didn’t Know About Jameson Irish Whiskey If you’ve ever been curious about this monumentally popular Irish whiskey, we explore Jameson ’s origins, distillery history, and production Here are six things you didn’t know about the iconic Jameson brand
Six Handkerchiefs for the Cannibals: The Infamous “Jameson Affair . . . Such an inhuman context was the setting for the scandal of James ‘Sligo’ Jameson, heir of a famous Irish whisky distillery still operating today A naturalist, hunter and explorer, Jameson joined the Emin Pascià Relief Expedition led by Sir Henry Morton Stanley in 1886
James Jameson: The Infamous Un-Naturalist - OddFeed James Jameson, grandson and heir of Jameson Irish whiskey magnate John Jameson, was an esteemed nineteenth-century naturalist He would become infamous for his alleged role in the murder and cannibalization of a young African girl
The Tragic Real-Life Story Of James Jamerson - Grunge Today, James Jamerson is known to have been an uncredited session musician on many hits produced by Motown Records in the 1960s and 1970s According to OZY, Jamerson was the bassist playing on dozens of top songs, such as "Bernadette," "My Girl," "I'm Wondering," and "What's Going On "