WILLIAM BAMBRIDGE (1820-79)
Sarah Forbes Bonetta (1843-80)
1856RCIN 2906613
This girl, aged about thirteen in the photograph, was the daughter of an African chief. In 1848 the King of Dahomey captured the neighbouring city of Okeadon, sacrificing many inhabitants and leading the rest away into slavery. One of the latter was this young girl, who was about five years old. All her relatives had been killed, but as she was of high rank, she was kept in captivity as a state prisoner, either to be presented to an important visitor, or to be sacrificed at the death of a minister or official, to become his attendant in the next world. In June 1850 Captain Forbes, on board the Sally Bonetta, arrived in Dahomey on a mission to negotiate the suppression of the slave trade. While there, he asked the King for the little girl as a present, whether for himself or on behalf of the Queen is not clear. The request was granted and the child was brought to England, being given the names of Sally Bonetta, after the ship, and Forbes, after the Captain. She lived at first with Captain Forbes's family, then, on 9 November, she was taken to Windsor Castle and received by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. The Queen paid for Sally to be educated and saw her several times in the space of a few years. Sally, a highly intelligent girl, developed a particular talent for music. She married in 1862 and later had a daughter, Victoria, to whom the Queen acted as godmother.
annotation: Sally Bonetta Forbes/1856/by Bambridge [beneath photograph]