Victoria Davies Randle

Victoria Matilda Davies Randle (née Davies, 1863 – 1920) was a socialite in Victorian Lagos, Nigeria.


Victoria Davies Randle
Born1863
Lagos, Colonial Nigeria
Died1920 (1921) (aged 57)
Lagos
NationalityWest African
Other namesVictoria Davies
OccupationSocialite
Known forBeing the goddaughter of Queen Victoria
Spouse(s)
(m. 1890)
ChildrenBeatrice Randle (daughter)
John 'Jack' Romanes Adewale Randle (son)

Life

Victoria Davies was the eldest child of James Pinson Labulo Davies, a wealthy Lagos merchant, and Sara Forbes Bonetta, an Egbado omoba who had been adopted as the goddaughter of Queen Victoria. When she was born in 1863, she was named in honour of the Queen, who accepted to be her godmother as well.[1]

The queen provided her with both an annuity and a golden christening set.[1] She later invited the younger Victoria to Windsor. Like her mother, she also showed considerable intelligence. She was educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College.[2] In 1890, Victoria married Dr. John Randle, a Scottish-trained medical doctor, and two hundred guests - including the governor of the Lagos Colony – were in attendance at the wedding at St. Paul’s Church in Lagos. The service was officiated by the Reverend James Johnson and her wedding gown was a careful selection of the queen's, as her own mother's had been years before.[1]

Victoria Davies Randle later took her children Beatrice and John to visit her godmother in 1900, escorted by Bishop Johnson. In a continuation of tradition, Princess Beatrice then became her own daughter's godmother.[1]

Her marriage eventually fell apart; she lived in exile with the children thereafter, first in the United Kingdom and then in Sierra Leone, only returning to Lagos in 1917. In London, Davies Randle had made the acquaintance of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, the prodigy who would rise to become a prominent Black British musician. She was later mentioned by Coleridge-Taylor as the source of the Yoruba folk song in his collection, Oloba yale mi.[1] Davies Randle provided Coleridge-Taylor with a Yoruba drum theme that he used in his Twenty-four Negro Melodies.[3] Her final years were dedicated to the activities of the Ladies' Club, a group of upper-class women in Lagos.[1]

She died in 1920.[1]

References

  1. "Victoria Davies". LitCaf Encyclopedia. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  2. Laud, Derek (27 January 2015). The Problem With Immigrants. Biteback Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84954-877-9.
  3. Boyce Davies, Carole (2008). Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora: Origins, Experiences, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. p. 927. ISBN 978-1-85109-700-5.
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