Sagana Lodge


Sagana State Lodge is a Kenyan state lodge, located in Kiganjo town in Nyeri County, on the foothills of Mount Kenya. The lodge is used by the President when on official tours of the country.

History

Colonial history

Sagana Lodge was built in 1949–1950 as a royal residence. It was a wedding present in 1947 to the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh from the colony whilst they were in Kenya. The lodge was leased to the couple by the government of Kenya.
In 1952 the Duchess of Edinburgh was staying at Sagana Lodge on their return from Treetops Hotel. The beginning of the Mau Mau Rebellion had made Kenya less secure and Ian Henderson, of Kenya Police Force Special Branch, was appointed head of the security detail at Sagana Lodge. While staying at Sagana Lodge, she received the news that her father King George VI had died and she had succeeded to the throne as Queen Elizabeth II. This was a unique circumstance for such an event. She was the first British monarch since the accession of George I to be outside Great Britain at the moment of succession, and also the first in modern times not to know the exact time of her accession.

Post-colonial history

The lease to Sagana Lodge was given back to Kenya in 1963.
In 1976 it, along with several other official residences of the President of Kenya were declared protected zones. The lodge's most prominent use, in independent Kenya's history was when Mwai Kibaki, then the president of Kenya, and Raila Odinga, used the site as a retreat to come to agreement on Kenya's grand coalition government.