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Did you know who the first Kenyan to open a petrol station was?

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 Mbiu Koinange [Photo: Courtesy]

There are now very many privately owned petrol stations in Kenya. Yet, at some point, only multi-nationals like the defunct Esso, BP and Mobil once called the shots.

The other day, Kenyans who buy more tyres than shoes were informed that they will soon bear the cost of higher fuel prices if an energy tribunal allows oil marketers to get compensation for a Sh5 billion loss they claimed to have suffered following the closure of Kenya Petroleum Refineries in Mombasa.

Big players, among them Vivo Energy (licensee for the Shell brand in Kenya), Total Kenya and OiLibya, asked that each litre of petrol and diesel have an additional Sh1 paid by motorists to recover the money.

But did you know that the first Kenyan to open a petrol station was Fred Mbiyu Koinange, the father of TV host Jeff Koinange?

Well, Fred was the son of Senior Chief Koinange after whom Koinange Street is named in the Nairobi CBD. The then 41-year-old opened, Koinange Petrol Station, Kenya’s first indigenous in Kariokor area in 1966 - the year he died.

Never mind he had been detained for seven years after the State of Emergency was declared in 1952.

Did you also know that Fred Mbiyu was also the first African Kenyan to open a car dealership? In 1948 - when Mr Cooper was also opening the Cooper Motor Corporation (CMC Motors) in a wooden hut along Jackson Road, now Parliament Road — Fred also opened his!

In his biography, Through My African Eyes, Jeff writes very interesting stuff about his father’s amorous ways.

Did you know that the first African-owned clothing ‘supermarket’ was Njiiris? It stocked popular brands such as Dash and was opened by Kariuki Njiiri, son of Senior Chief Njiiri after whom Njiiris School is named.

Kariuki Njirii attended Kenya Training Teacher’s College, Githunguri, Lincoln University, USA for his BA and MA, before returning home to take an Education Officer’s post in 1958.

He cemented his place in Kenyan history when he stepped down for Jomo Kenyatta, easing his ascent into the Legislative Council in 1961.

Kariuki’s American wife, Ruth Stutts Njiiri,, was President Jomo Kenyatta’s private secretary.

Njiiri later served as MP for Kigumo and Assistant Minister for Local Government in 1964.

Besides founding the Kikuyu Welfare Association, Kenya Children’s Library, Kenya Education Trust and serving on the Board of Governors of Njiiris High School, Kariuki Njiiri (for that sacrifice to the future president) was granted a licence to operate the upscale, but now defunct, Njiiris, the once favourite shopping store for Kenya’s middle class!

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