Twon-Brass

Coordinates: 4°19′N 6°15′E / 4.317°N 6.250°E / 4.317; 6.250
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Twon-Brass, previously known simply as Brass or Brasstown, is a community on Brass Island in the Nun River estuary of Southern Bayelsa State, Nigeria, in the Brass Local Government Area. Twon Brass was found in the year, 1895 The royal Chief is Alfred Diete-Spiff.[1] The town is on the east shore of the Brass River, one of the branches of the Nun River, which in turn is a branch of the Niger River.

Brass began as a mining village of the Nembe people. In the early 19th-century it was an important location in the slave trade.[2]

At one time the town was the main port of the Nembe Kingdom, called by one historian "the Venice of the Niger Delta", and was dominant in the palm oil trade of the region. When the Royal Niger Company became an increasingly strong rival in the trade, the town's economy was severely damaged.[3] In January 1895 the Nembe king William Koko led a dawn attack of more than a thousand warriors on the company's headquarters at Akassa, which triggered a retaliatory raid that destroyed the kingdom's inland capital of Nembe.[4] The British already had a consulate in Twon-Brass, from which after the fall of Koko they administered the area.[5]

In the mid-20th century it was the base of several fisheries and a center for the shipping of palm products. It was also a location for the shipment of rubber.[6]

There are plans for a multibillion-dollar gas facility on Brass Island.[7] Agip Oil Company and Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas operate terminals in the town.[1] In February 2009 gunmen in two speedboats attacked troops guarding the Agip oil terminal, but were repelled. The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) had threatened to target Italian companies since Italy had apparently offered to supply two attack boats to the Nigerian military.[8]

Tourist attractions include beautiful Atlantic Ocean beaches, the graves of British soldiers who died in the Nembe-British fighting of 1895 and the old consulate buildings, which were in use till the end of the colonial period in 1960.[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Twon-Brass, Baylsa State Nigeria". Nembe Ibe USA. Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  2. ^ Britannica article on Brass
  3. ^ Ian McCall. "NIGERIA, A PERSONAL HISTORY Chapter 11 - GEORGE GOLDIE (2): From Economic to Political Power". Ian McCall. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  4. ^ Sir W. Geary, Nigeria under British Rule (1927), pp. 194-196
  5. ^ a b "Tourism in Bayelsa State". Bayelsa State Union of Great Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  6. ^ Columbia-Lippincott Gazetteer, p. 262
  7. ^ "Brass LNG:A Quantum Leap towards Target". This Day. 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2010-03-05.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Nigeria Troops Repel Attack On Agip Oil Terminal". Reuters. Retrieved 2010-03-05.

4°19′N 6°15′E / 4.317°N 6.250°E / 4.317; 6.250