Career
He moved permanently to British East Africa in 1908, where he later led the Livermore expedition, with the aid of A.P.de K.Fourie, that opened up the Ngorongoro Crater to European hunters. He held several world records for big game at various times, and killed over 1,000 rhinos in Kenya, most of them in the Makueni hunting ground, which the Government needed to get rid of, in order to give these lands for re-settlement of the Kamba people. Besides safaris and other control operations for the Kenya Game Department, in Makueni Hunter killed 996 alone, from 26 August 1944 to 31 October 1946.
lieutenant turned out that those lands were useless for human settlement.
In later years, he became concerned about the possible extinction of the wildlife he had so assiduously hunted, and spoke in favor of conservation. His writings were notable for betraying his colonialist attitude, although his writings similarly betrayed a genuine respect and affection for the locales and peoples that he interacted with.
They had 6 children, Doreen, Sheila, Lesley, Gordon, Dennis and David. In his published writings Hunter wrote of his friend and fellow professional hunter, and the tragic circumstances of Hatton"s death.
In 1958 he built the Hunters" Lodge hotel in Makindu, Kenya where he died in 1963.
He wrote several books, some autobiographical, some fiction, based on his life experiences. The original editions are largely out of print, but there is a move to re-publish them. They include:
Hunter, an autobiography.
Hunter"s Tracks, includes various reminiscences, beginning with the story of John Hunter"s role in the capture of the shady kingpin of a gang of ivory poachers and smugglers
White Hunter, specifically about his safaris before World World War II
Tales Of The African Frontier, the early days of East Africa is the subject of this John Hunter book
Based on John Hunter:
African Bush Adventures, Hamish Hamilton, London, 1952
Killers of Kilimanjaro, made into a movie in 1959.