The Ruck Family massacre took place during the Mau Mau Uprising. Farmer Roger Ruck, his wife Esme and six-year-old son Michael, along with one of their African servants, were killed by Mau Mau,[1] one of whom allegedly worked for the family.[2] The killing shocked the European community in Kenya and was widely reported in the Kenyan and British press,[3] with many including graphic photographs of the dead child.[4] The incident was significant in radicalising the settler population.[5] Within 48 hours of the killings, 1,500 European settlers marched on Government House, demanding action from then Governor of KenyaEvelyn Baring.[6][7][8]
The massacre was fictionalised in the novel Something of Value by Robert Ruark, and in the 1957 film version.
^Elkins, Caroline (2005). "Britain's Assault on the Mau Mau". Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya. New York: Henry Holt and Company. pp. 42–43.