FRENCH COLONIAL EXPANSION 129
established between their Senegal-Niger lands and the
colony of Dahomey.
To make sure of this connection, the French had already
begun active operations in the Dahomey “hinterland.” In
1893 and 1894, Captain Decceur founded Carnotville and
pushed northeast to the Borgu country, while Lieutenant
Baud made treaties with the chiefs of Gambarri and Gourma
and pushed north to Say. But the Royal N iger Company
had been trading for some years in this region. Under
the energetic leadership of Sir George T. Goldie, this com-
pany — organized as the United National African Company
in 1879 and chartered by Great Britain as the Royal Niger
Company in 1886 — had negotiated over three hundred
treaties with native chieftains by 1894 and placed over three
hundred thousand square miles of N igeria, as far north as
Gando and Sokoto, under British protection.! A military
government was established; and an efficient constabulary
was organized from the Hausa tribes. The headquarters
moved north to Lokoja in 1889; and a treaty with France
on August 5, 1890 2 fixed the boundary roughly between the
British and French spheres of influence by a line drawn
from Say on the Niger due east to Lake Chad. But the
western boundary of Nigeria, the Lagos-Dahomey hinter-
land, remained undetermined.
The officials of the company were busy consolidating their
holdings and developing the trade of the region, when the
news of the arrival of Captain Decceur in the vicinity of
west Nigeria reached them. Captain Lugard, who had dis-
tinguished himself in East Africa by saving Uganda for
Great Britain, was ordered to the N igeria frontier. By
forced marches he reached Borgu, Nikki, Kishi, and Gam-
1 See Chapter VII.
* drch. Dip., 1899, vol. 1. French Yellow Book, Affaires d’ Afrique, 1881
93, pp. 211-13.