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Did you know Eldoret was derived from a Maasai word meaning stony river?

Eldoret was fleshed from the Maasai word, ‘Eldore,’ meaning ‘stony river’ in reference to Sosiani River.

Eldoret is the only town in Kenya which was not founded on British influence. And while other towns developed around the Uganda Railway, Eldoret morphed from South African farmers running way from British colonialism! While the life of early Kenyan towns was lit up by the emergence of dukas from Indian Coolies who had come to construct the railway, the fifth largest town in the country emerged around the Boer farmers, their mud huts and wheat farms, but also a bar called the Rat Pit (which had no door), and the Standard Bank of South Africa which was another matope and mabati affair in 1912.

Standard Chartered, Eldoret branch now stands on the spot previously occupied by Standard Bank,  where a safe fell from an ox-cart and could not be lifted, and so, JM Shaw, the branch manager, decided to build the aforementioned bank around it! What is today Eldoret town was a number as colonial administrators then named places after farm numbers. Eldoret was farm number 64, representing the 64 miles from the town to the Kibigori station of the Uganda Railway. Little wonder, there is today the 64 Stadium, 64 Secondary School and 64 Resort and Sporting Club!

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