Jackie's human story started in the early half of the 1910s, when South African Albert Marr found the baboon around his farm. He captured Jackie and began training him to be "a member of the family."
War
After Jackie lived a few years in the Marr farm, war broke out in the form of World War One. Marr was drafted in 1915, and refused to leave Jackie at home. Marr's commanding officers, to the soldiers' surprise, acquiesced, so Jackie was made a mascot for the 3rd Transvaal Regiment and brought everywhere with them. Jackie was given an official style uniform with a cap, a ration set, and his own pay book. Jackie would salute to superior officers and light soldiers' cigarettes. He would even stand at ease in the style of a trained soldier. Due to his heightened senses, Jackie was useful to sentries on duty at night. The baboon would be the first to know when an attack was coming or enemy soldiers were moving around nearby. Jackie and Marr survived a battle where the casualty rate was 80%, in Delville Wood, early in the Somme Campaign. When Marr was serving in Egypt he was shot in the shoulder at the Battle of Agagia, 26 February 1916, while Jackie was with him, licking the wound as they awaited help. Jackie was given his own rations while with the army, and ate them with his own knife and fork, as well as his own washing basin. When the regiment was drilled and marched, Jackie would be with them. Jackie spent time in the trenches in France where he tried to build a wall around himself during extreme enemy fire, but a piece of shrapnel from an explosion flew over the wallhitting Jackie in the leg and arm. When stretcher bearers tried to take Jackie away he refused, desperate to finish his wall and hide. Doctors treated Jackie's wounds, but they decided his leg had to be amputated and were surprised that he even survived. Jackie was awarded a medal of valour for the event of his injuries, and promoted from private to corporal. After the war was over, Jackie was discharged with papers at the Maitland Dispersal Camp in Cape Town. Jackie was not the only baboon made part of the South African army, but he was the only baboon to achieve the rank of private or higher.
After the war, Marr brought Jackie back to South Africa, but the baboon died in a fire a year later in May 1921. Marr lived until he died aged 84, in 1973.