Jack, The Baboon Who Became a Railway Signalman and His Partner ‘Jumper’ Wide

Jason Ward
Curated Newsletters
5 min readJun 6, 2021

--

Jack the baboon worked for the South African railway for nine flawless years

Jumper, Jack, the signal levers and the trolley. Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain

In the late 19th Century, a railway signalman called James Edwin ‘Jumper’ Wide worked for the South African railways as a guard in a town called Uitenhage. He got his nickname from his dangerous habit of jumping or swinging from one railcar to another.

Unfortunately for Jumper, this predictably went horribly wrong one day. While leaping from one railcar to the next, he slipped on some canvas and fell under a moving train. The heavy steel wheels severed his legs below the knees.

Jumper Wide was lucky to have survived, but he now found himself unemployed. He begged the Cape Railway Government for a job but to no avail. Not one for giving up, Jumper Wide (he retained his nickname) made himself a pair of peg-legs and a trolley to help himself get around.

This was good enough for the railways, and he got a new, less active job as a signalman.

Wide buys Jack the baboon, and a friendship is formed

A few years later, around 1880, Wide visited the Uitenhage market. While there, he witnessed the incredible sight of a young chacma baboon acting as a ‘voorloper’ or oxen leader, driving an

--

--

Jason Ward
Curated Newsletters

Journalist and author. Mostly lives in Asia. Top writer in History and Culture. If you like my articles, see my Substack - https://intriguingtimes.substack.com