The
Great Ones - David Livingstone 
Mapping
the heart of an unmapped continent
David Livingstone (1813-1873) is often credited with "opening up" the interior of
Africa, and rightfully so. The 19th-century Protestant missionary
and explorer spent most of his life living among Africa's native
people, preaching and exploring the southern and central regions
of what was then called the "Dark Continent." Although he was
eager to bring European ideas to the Africans, Livingstone, who
was adamantly anti-slavery, wasn't motivated by political or economic
gains like other explorers of his era.
Travel
log:
Lived and
traveled for 30 years in Africa, embarking on four official expeditions
in what's now known as Botswana, Zimbabwe, Angola, Zambia, and
Mozambique.
Early adventures:
Born into
a poor, religious family in Scotland, Livingstone began working
in the cotton mills at age 10. He studied theology and medicine
in Glasgow for two years, and, in 1838, he joined the London Missionary
Society. At age 27, he shipped off to Cape Town and later arrived
in Kuruman, his assigned missionary station, about 1,000 miles
north of Cape Town. He almost immediately began exploring the
unmapped territory to the north and befriending the natives. In
1849, he launched his first true expedition, an exploratory trip
to Lake Ngami, about 500 miles north of Kuruman, which earned
him a medal from England's Royal Geographic Society. Later, traveling
with a small group of African companions, he traversed the southern
end of the African continent from west to east, often covering
less than 10 miles a day through the thick jungles. On this trip,
he and his party discovered one of the most spectacular falls
in the world, the mile-wide, 350-foot-high Victoria Falls, which
he named for England's queen.
For the
history books:
When he returned
to England a hero in 1856, Livingstone convinced the British government
and the Royal Geographic Society to sponsor his third African
expedition. He and a group of Europeans set out to navigate the
Zambezi River, which he saw as "a great highway" for trade into
Africa's interior. At the time, the Zambezi Expedition (1858-1864)
was considered a failure--the river proved not to be navigable--but
the geographic information Livingstone gathered turned out to
be invaluable.
In 1866, Livingstone
began his last trip to Africa, an expedition in search of the
source of the Nile, which he believed might be Lake Tanganyika.
He was wrong--it's Lake Victoria--but he spent six years exploring
the area. He suffered from malaria almost constantly, and rumors
circulated in England that he had died. Livingstone was a tired
and broken man when, in October 1871, journalist Henry Morton
Stanley broke through the jungle and found him, near death, in
Ujiji. That's when Stanley reportedly uttered the now famous words,
"Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" (The New York Herald had sent Stanley
on assignment to find the missing explorer.) Stanley and Livingstone
continued searching together for the Nile's source, without avail.
On May 1,1873, he died in Chitambo, in present-day Zambia. His
heart was buried in Africa; the rest of his body was returned
to England and entombed in Westminster Abbey.
Words to
live by:
"I determined
never to stop," Livingstone wrote, "until I had come to the end
and achieved my purpose.
Early
Years of Livingstone
Scotland's Most Famous Explorer
B.B.C's Livingstone