THE HISTORY OF CHIEF BALOGUN OSHODI TAPA
OUTSTANDING WARRIOR AND STATESMAN
Died July
2nd 1868
Chief Balogun Landuji
Oshodi Tapa was an outstanding warrior and a statesman. During the reign of
King Eshilokun, he immigrated to Lagos from Bida in what is now
known as the Niger State. This was after he had lost his parents in
a tribal war when he was only six years old. He put himself under the
protection of the King as his servant in order to prevent himself from being
taken and sold into slavery. The King in turn put him under the supervision of
one of his trusted men, Fagbemi.
Some years later, one of
the Portuguese merchants, a friend of King Eshilokun, asked the king to let two
of his children accompany him to Portugal and he promised to bring
them back. The King was very wary of this offer and he thought instead of
risking the lives of any of his own children, he would offer two people loyal
to him. Hence he chose Oshodi and Dada Antonio to go with the Portuguese
merchant.
While the King thought
he was protecting the interests of his own children, he was in fact denying
them an opportunity that would have benefited them more in the future.
Oshodi and Dada Antonio
went with the Portuguese merchant to America and they were later
returned to the King after many years.
On arrival from America, Oshodi was employed by Messrs. G. L.
Gaiser as a Commission Agent and Toll Collector. With the arrival of the ships
of the Portuguese merchants, business flourished, and Oshodi’s commissions from
sales increased and he eventually became a rich man. Oshodi never forgot the
hands that fed him, so to speak; he continued to be loyal to the King and was
made a chief solely responsible for looking after the King’s wives. He was the
only one who could go into the Queen’s apartment to oversee repairs, if the
need arose.
After the death of King
Eshinlokun, Chief Oshodi remained loyal to his children. He particularly cast
his lot with Idowu Ojulari who succeeded his father. After the reign of Chief
Idewu Ojulari, Kosoko, a son of Oshinlokun, was said to be the rightful heir to
the throne, but he was an enemy of Chief Eletu Odibo, whose duty was to install
and crown any new king. It was said at the time,
that young Prince Kosoko had seduced Eletu Odibo’s would-be wife. In
retaliation, Eletu Odibo used his powerful position to crown Oluwole as the
next King of Lagos in 1836.
Kosoko and other
descendants of King Eshilokun were not satisfied with the decision
and were ready to show
their resentment. They waged a war against King Oluwole and Chief Eletu Odibo.
Kosoko and his warriors invaded Isale-Eko. The battle was fierce and prolonged
but ended with victory on the side of the king’s army. Kosoko fled to Whydah,
realizing the consequences of his action.
When King Oluwole died,
Akitoye was crowned in 1841 as the next King of Lagos.
Conscious of the right
of Kosoko to the throne, Akitoye justly decided to search for Kosoko his
nephew, who had taken refuge in Whydah. He believed that he must enjoy his
patronage while on the throne. Akitoye organized a search party under the
command of bold and gallant Chief Oshodi. The rapidity with which the party
achieved its success was directly related to the military might of Chief
Oshodi.
Kosoko finally returned
to Lagos with Chief Oshodi in a vessel belonging to a merchant called,
Domingo.
Henceforth, Chief Oshodi
worked to maintain peace between Kosoko and Akintoye, and eventually brought
the two together on terms. The peace effort was thwarted by Chief Eletu Odibo
who had employed all the persuasive words he could, to dissuade King Akitoye
from bringing Kosoko back to Lagos. He believed
thatLagos would not contain the
two of them. For a while, he did all he could to create conflicts between them,
but later left Lagos for exile in Badagry.
When a war broke out
between King Akitoye and Kosoko, Chief Oshodi loyally pitched his tent with
Kosoko, the son of Eshilokun, through thick and thin. Akitoye asked Eletu Odibo
to return to Lagos with his warriors to fight on his side.
Akitoye’s men led by Eletu Odibo were soundly defeated. Eletu Odibo was
captured in an ambush and killed.
With the death of Eletu
Odibo, the elders advised Akitoye to escape to his mother’s town in Abeokuta. When Kosoko heard about the plan, he
detailed his war chief, Oshodi, to lay ambush for Akitoye, kill him, and bring
his head before him. Akitoye was in fact caught by Oshodi in the Agboyi waters,
but instead of killing him, he paid homage to him and his Lord and prayed for
his safe journey and safe return.
Chief Oshodi returned to
report to Kosoko that Akitoye had escaped by the use of a powerful charm which
put them all to sleep when he was passing. Historians were not able to assign
any reason for the treatment which Oshodi gave Akitoye when in fact he was on
orders to bring his head to Kosoko. In 1845, Kosoko defeated Akitoye and
ascended the throne. In the meantime, Chief
Oshodi remained Kosoko’s “Abagbon” war chief.
While in exile,
Akitoye appealed to the British Government for help to restore him to his
throne. A war broke out; the British started to bombard Lagos, setting the town on fire. Kosoko’s
defense under the command of Chief Oshodi was effective and modern by the
international standard of the time. After nine days of consecutive serious
military actions, the British fleet unleashed excessive gun power which
resulted in the defeat of Kosoko’s fleet. Under this unfavorable condition,
Kosoko had to flee to Epe with Chief Oshodi and his warriors on the night of
the 13th of August 1853. Akitoye was brought back
to Lagos by the British Consul and was restored as the King of Lagos.
Akitoye died on the 2nd of September 1853, about two weeks after Kosoko
and his men had fled. In the afternoon of September 3rd, 1853, his son, Dosunmu was formally
installed as the King of Lagos.
On the 26th of January 1854, a peace conference,
historically known as Langbasa meeting, was held at Agbekin (Palaver Island) about four months after King Dosunmu’s
coronation. The British Consul’s party included the Commander of HMS Plato with
other officers under his command, and Kosoko’s party which included Chief
Oshodi Tapa and Chief Onisemo Adeburusi of Epe. They came without Kosoko in
about sixty canoes each containing forty men. King Dosunmu was represented by
several white cap chiefs and war chiefs.
At the opening of
this remarkable conference, the Epe people, led by Chief Oshodi Tapa expressed
their strong desire to return to Lagos to the British Consul
and be at peace with their friends and relatives. Chief Oshodi proposed that
Kosoko be allowed to return to Lagos and live as a private person.
The proposal was not
agreeable to the Consul on the basis that two Kings could not rein in Lagos. As an appeasement, Chief Oshodi was
offered to return alone as the Consul for the people of Epe, but he declined
the offer and insisted on Kosoko’s return from exile. Several years later in
1862, Kosoko was allowed back to Lagos with his war chief,
after signing a peace treaty negotiated with the British Consul by Chief
Oshodi.
Governor Glover was very
grateful for Chief Oshodi’s contributions to peace in Lagos.
On their arrival to Lagos, Governor Glover sought permission from
Aromire to give part of Epetedo to Chief Oshodi. For himself, his family, his followers, and
servants who returned with him from Epe, he held the area under the native
customary law of land tenure, subject to the native system of the devolution of
land.
The palace of Oshodi is located in the center of the area of land in
Epetedo. The area is uniquely laid out into 21 compounds. Four of these
compounds; Oshodi, Akinyemi, Ewumi, and Alagbede courts belong exclusively to
Chief Balogun Oshodi’s extended family.
For the most notable and
extraordinary role of Chief Oshodi in the
restoration of peace to Lagos and his contribution to the Government of Lagos,
he was presented by Governor Glover on the Lagos Race Course grounds with a
sword from Mr. Cardwell, the Secretary of State to the British Government. The
sword was inscribed “presented by the
Government of Queen Victoria to Chief Tapa in commemoration of the loyal
services rendered by him to the Government of Lagos”
With his background of
having been to America, Oshodi did not
miss the opportunity to educate his children. He solicited Governor Glover to
educate one of his children in England. This child later assumed the surname of
Oshodi-Glover.
Chief Balogun Oshodi
Tapa died on 2nd of July1868 about six
years after his return from exile in Epe, leaving forty six surviving children.
His body was laid to rest at the center of Oshodi Street in Epetedo,Lagos. The
descendants of Chief Oshodi constructed an imposing edifice at his burial site,
as a monument to the memory of the renowned warlord, peacemaker, and statesman.
This monument has been classified as a historic site by the Lagos State
Government.
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