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David Livingstone



By Callum Murray
Victoria Falls. 

David Livingstone was a famous explorer and doctor, he
also discovered the Victoria Falls
Victory Falls
David's Childhood


David Livingstone was born at Blantyre Scotland, eight miles south of
Glasgow on the 19 March 1813. At the age of ten he was put to work in
the mills, which swallowed him up from six in the morning to eight at
night. He had to attend night school, most where so tired they could do
little but sleep. But David studied hard and would continue with his
lessons far into the night. At the age of twenty three years of age before
he was able to start medicine classes at the Anderson college in
Glasgow. He studied through the winter returning to the mills in the
summer. When he sufficiently far advanced in his studies of medicine
and theology he applied to the London Missionary society.
Where David
Livingstone lived

David livingstone
centre
The smoke of a thousand villages

During this period he attended a meeting addressed by a fellow Scot,
Dr Robert Moffat, who was home on leave from the mission station at
Kuruman, some 500 miles north of Cape Town. This was as far as
missionaries had penetrated into the 'dark continent' of Africa; at that
time, apart from parts of the north and south, only the coastline of this
huge continent was know to the outside world. After listening to Dr
Moffat speaking of the vast, untouched regions of Central Africa, and
the 'smoke of a thousand villages' where the gospel had never been
preached, Livingstone rather shyly asked him whether he thought he
would do for Africa. The outcome was that the London Missionary
Society agreed he should go and, in 1840, Livingstone sailed for Africa
on board the sailing ship, George.
In Africa, Livingstone made his way, mainly by ox-wagon, to Kuruman,
where he was to learn the ways and workings of a mission station
before setting of northwards to establish new stations. His stay at
Kuruman was not a particularly happy one; he was impatient to be off to
those untouched regions and critical, too, that Dr Moffat should confine
his work to the area around Kuruman, when the needy north was
neglected: there was so much to be done and so few people to do it.
For several months Livingstone isolated himself in a native village miles
away from Kuruman so that he might more quickly learn the language
and understand the ways of the Africans. He made several early
journeys of exploration, but the purpose of these was to find healthy
sites for mission stations - sites that were free from the terrible malaria
which made large areas of Africa impassable for Europeans. To a great
extent, this was the object of all his later explorations and, although he
was to become the greatest geographer Africa had never known, he
had never lost sight of his true purpose - to deliver the Christian
message whenever the opportunity offered.
While at Kuruman, Livingstone met Dr Moffat's daughter, Mary, and,
although he had believed until then that he could best accomplish his
work as a bachelor, Mary altered his point of view and they were
married in 1845. Their first home was at Mabotsa, north of Kuruman,
where Livingstone had already opened a mission station and built a
house. It was here that Livingstone was attacked by a lion which
crunched his shoulder so that he never regained full use of his left arm.
Later, the Livingstones moved forty miles further on to Chonuane, into
the country of the Bakwains, and again founded a station.
Here they met Chief Sechele who, after three years' instruction, was
converted to Christianity. However, another move was necessary when
the supply of water dried up; this time they moved to Kolobeng, just
east of the great Kalahari Desert. Chief Sechele and his tribe moved
there, too, and Livingstone built a third house.

David Livingstone
being attacked by a
Lion
These were probably the happiest years of his life - spent with his
young family. In addition to his usual missionary work, Livingstone
studied the geology and natural history of the surrounding countryside.
At Kolobeng, Livingstone heard rumours of fertile plains north of the
Kalahari, which were teeming with population; but the desert which
blocked the way was difficult and waterless. Taking the family with him,
he made several trips northwards. On one of these expeditions he was
accompanied by a hunter friend, W. Cotton Oswell, and together they
discovered Lake Ngami.
As hardships increased, Livingstone's concern for the welfare and
education of his family made him decide they must go to Britain; they
travelled to Cape Town where Mrs Livingstone and the children
boarded ship. Then Livingstone returned to Kolobeng, northwards
across the Kalahari, so that he might carry the Christian message
further; and from this point on he became increasingly an explorer.
David Livingstones family
Commerce and Christianity

So far, Livingstone had not come into direct contact with the slave trade. The
Act of Abolition, passed in 1833, had stopped this on the west coast but it
persisted in the east. On this journey, as he neared Linyanti in the very heart of
the continent, Livingstone encountered a party of Arab slave traders driving
their captive Africans, like cattle, to the slave markets on the coast. Livingstone
said he was 'so appalled by this terrible trafficking in human life' that he
determined to put a stop to it. He decided that, if easier routes could be found
by which honest merchants could travel to the interior and establish trade with
the Africans, then the slave trade could not survive. The cure lay in commerce
and Christianity, in that order, and to this end the discovery of such routes
became the immediate object of his quest.
Slave Trade
Here they met Chief Sechele who, after three years' instruction, was
converted to Christianity. However, another move was necessary when the
supply of water dried up; this time they moved to Kolobeng, just east of the
great Kalahari Desert. Chief Sechele and his tribe moved there, too, and
Livingstone built a third house.
These were probably the happiest years of his life - spent with his young
family. In addition to his usual missionary work, Livingstone studied the
geology and natural history of the surrounding countryside. At Kolobeng,
Livingstone heard rumours of fertile plains north of the Kalahari, which were
teeming with population; but the desert which blocked the way was difficult
and waterless. Taking the family with him, he made several trips
northwards. On one of these expeditions he was accompanied by a hunter
friend, W. Cotton Oswell, and together they discovered Lake Ngami.
As hardships increased, Livingstone's concern for the welfare and
education of his family made him decide they must go to Britain; they
travelled to Cape Town where Mrs Livingstone and the children boarded
ship. Then Livingstone returned to Kolobeng, northwards across the
Kalahari, so that he might carry the Christian message further; and from
this point on he became increasingly an explorer.
Africa from West to East

The journey to Luanda took several months; they arrived there - in
May, 1854 - a sorry party. Livingstone himself was ragged and
emaciated, suffering from dysentery and with his mind so fogged that
he could hardly remember his surname. Kindly Portuguese officials
nursed him back to health, and a passage home was offered him in a
British vessel in port at that time. the temptation must have been
great, but this route was clearly no 'highway to the interior'; they must
return to Linyanti.
The outward journey had been bad but the return journey, by almost the
same route, was even worse. Torrential rain, malaria and rheumatic
fever sapped Livingstone's energy, and tribes whose country he passed
through were hostile; but the party pressed on until at least Linyanti was
reached. After only a brief stop, and again with the help of Chief
Sekeletu, Livingstone set out once more, heading eastwards following
the valley of Zambesi. This time the going was much less difficult, and
shortly Livingstone made what was perhaps the most spectacular
discovery. Two years earlier, when he had first reached Sesheke, he
had heard of a giant waterfall which the Africans called 'Mosi-oatunya' (the smoke that thunders). On 17 November 1855, Livingstone
had his first sight of the grandeur of the falls as the waters of the
Zambesi tore headlong over the 1,600-metre-wide ledge, down into the
chasm over 100 metres below. This was one of the few times that
Livingstone put any name other than African ones on his map; he
named the falls the 'Victoria Falls'. The long journey from there to the
coast, although not uneventful, was safely accomplished; most of the
way the party followed the Zambesi. Livingstone became so certain that
this was a navigable river which would provide a highway to the interior
that at one point he made a diversion to reach the coast more quickly,
and in so doing missed out that part of the river which he was later to
find barred from navigation by the Kebrabasa Rapids.
Africa's great rivers might prove to be what Livingstone called 'the highway to
the interior', and so from Linyanti he set out northwards with a party of twentyseven Makalolo carriers furnished for him by Chief Sekeletu. At Sesheke,
Livingstone had his first sight of the great Zambesi River and, turning
northwest, began the hazardous trek which would bring them ultimately to the
port of Luanda on the Atlantic Coast. To show that it was a journey of goodwill,
shields were left behind and only spears were carried; a minimum amount of
baggage and no stores were taken, except for a small quantity of tea, coffee
and sugar. From the outset it was an unfortunate journey. Livingstone, for the
first time, fell victim to malaria (as did most of his companions) - a disease
which was to hamper him for the rest of his life.
Having crossed Africa from west to east, a journey of some 4,300 miles,
mostly of foot - Livingstone was the first European to have done this he set out by ship for England, reaching home in 1856. The reception
he received would surely have turned the head of a lesser man.
Honours were conferred upon him, and no one was too distinguished to
seek his friendship. Although reluctant to do so, Livingstone was
persuaded to write a book. He put together his diaries and published
them under the title Missionary Travels; the book was an immediate
best-seller.
Africa and its people had now become so much a part of him that
Livingstone was impatient to return and continue the work he had
begun. At every opportunity, and there were many, Livingstone pleaded
the cause of Africa; he was anxious that Africans should benefit from
European civilisation, and tried hard to persuade others to join in his
work. He was particularly anxious to see the ordinary tradesmen carpenters, builders, farmers and the like - go there as teachers pass
on their skills, so that the Africans might learn new techniques in
building better houses and raising better crops, and be able to enter the
world's commercial markets. These first sixteen years in Africa had
been under the auspices of the London Missionary Society but, while
there was no great rift in the relationship, there was no doubt that some
felt Livingstone had recently become too preoccupied with exploration
to carry out the society's scheme of work. Hence Livingstone felt free to
accept appointment as leader of a government-sponsored expedition to
explore the Zambesi and its tributaries.
of Livingstone's great shortcomings was his inability as a leader of this
expedition; he had worked too long with Africans as his companions men whose instinct told them that they could trust in his judgement and he had not let them down. With his fellow Europeans, however,
there soon arose a feeling of discontent; they did not want instructions
without preliminary consultation and discussion. But Livingstone,
always the 'dour Scot', did not seem to appreciate this, and expected
too much of their initiative without always making the task, or the
purpose of it, clear to them. Charles Livingstone, his brother, came in
for more criticism than he deserved from other members of the party,
who considered him incompetent but shown favouritism by his elder
brother.
Lady Nyasa
Even the one good thing that seemed to have been achieved - the
discovery of Lake Nyasa - had a sting to its tail. Livingstone realised
that this inland sea was one of the centres of the slave trade, and he
set about overcoming this by having a boat specially constructed, at
Partick on the Clyde, which he planned to put on the lake to promote
'honest trade'. The boat was built, using all the money Livingstone had mostly the revenue from his book - but although the Lady Nyassa, as
she was called, had been built in sections for easy transportation, the
further discovery of the Murchison Cataracts proved an insurmountable
obstacle which was then added to by the recall of the expedition by the
British Government. There was nothing else for it but to return.
The Lady Nyassa could not be disposed of in Africa for fear she would
fall into the hands of the slave traders. Livingstone decided, therefore to
sail this frail craft to Bombay; it had been built only for inland waters,
but after careful and painstaking preparation Livingstone, acting as his
own navigator, set sail for India. He timed the voyage to take advantage
of the best conditions, and remained close inshore until only the
shortest crossing of the ocean was necessary, but the weather turned
against him. First he was becalmed and then storm-tossed on this
remarkable voyage which lasted for four months before he reached
Bombay, where the Lady Nyassa was sold. Even that was not the end
of his troubles: the money realised was put into an Indian Bank which
failed shortly afterwards.
From Bombay, Livingstone returned to England, arriving in
London on 23 July 1864, and staying just long enough to put
together his second book - The Zambesi and its Tributaries.
He spent as much time as he could with his children, but
when the opportunity to return to Africa presented itself, he
readily accepted it. In August 1865, Livingstone sailed, for the
third and last time, for Africa. This journey, which lasted for
seven years, had much greater appeal to him. The Royal
Geographical Society had asked him to explore the great
African watersheds - especially the sources of the Nile - but
this time he would be alone and not hampered by restrictions.
From Zanzibar he made his way up the Ruvuma River and on
to the Lake Tanganyika and round the country of the great
lakes of Mweru and Bangweulu. But this was country
devastated by the slave traders, and Livingstone was
frequently held back by suspicious and hostile tribes who
mistook him for a slave trader. It demanded great courage to
face these people in their angry mood; even his own followers
were often mutinous and unfaithful. At one point, Livingstone's
drugs were stolen, leaving him nothing to counteract fever and
dysentery, yet still he carried on. The map of Africa was no
longer just a coastline; slowly but surely light was beginning to
fall on the 'dark continent', as hills and valleys, rivers and
lakes were carefully plotted. Even the supposedly 'negative'
discoveries of the Kebrabasa Rapids and Murchison
Cataracts, which had seemed to contribute to the failure of the
second expedition, were clearly indicated on maps so that
others who followed might be aware of what lay ahead and
could choose their route. The age-old mystery, the source of
the Nile, seemed close to being solved, and Livingstone
became obsessed with the idea of accomplishing this but,
although frequently convinced that he was on the verge of
success, he always remained baffled. Eventually, with his few
faithfuls - Susi, Chuma and the others - he made his way back
to Ujiji. Just a few days after arriving in Ujiji,
Susi came running to tell him of the approach of 'a white man'
- Stanley, the journalist who had been sent by his paper, the
New York Herald, to find Livingstone. Stanley's arrival was
welcome; he had brought with him stores and medicines,
news and letters from home, and although Stanley was only
just over half Livingstone's age, the two men quickly
developed a great respect for each other during the brief four
months of Stanley's stay at Ujiji. Livingstone felt greatly
refreshed; Stanley tried to persuade him to return home, or at
least to the coast for medical attention and supplies, but
Livingstone would not give in.
David Livingstone I
presume
After Stanley left him, he set out again, travelling South down the east
bank of Lakes Tanganyika and Bangweulu, but torrential rains and
swampy conditions sapped his energy. His followers eventually had to
carry him in a litter, but he was determined to go on until, at Ilala, his
followers realised that Livingstone had neither the strength nor the will
to urge them on. At the village of Chief Chitambo they built a hut for him
to rest in, knowing well that the end was near.
At four o'clock on the morning of 1 May 1873, they found him kneeling
by his bedside having died in prayer. In accordance with their beliefs,
Livingstone's heart was buried under a Mvula tree near the spot where
he died; but his body had to go back to Britain and so Susi, Chuma,
Jacob Wainwright and others set out on the remarkable epic journey
which ultimately brought them to the coast at Bagamoyo. The body
reached England on board the steamer Malwa, and on 18 April 1874 - a
day of national mourning - Livingstone was buried in Westminster
Abbey.
This is my Family tree

David Livingstone is
my 5 uncle
By Callum Murray
David livingstone

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David livingstone

  • 2. Victoria Falls. David Livingstone was a famous explorer and doctor, he also discovered the Victoria Falls
  • 4. David's Childhood David Livingstone was born at Blantyre Scotland, eight miles south of Glasgow on the 19 March 1813. At the age of ten he was put to work in the mills, which swallowed him up from six in the morning to eight at night. He had to attend night school, most where so tired they could do little but sleep. But David studied hard and would continue with his lessons far into the night. At the age of twenty three years of age before he was able to start medicine classes at the Anderson college in Glasgow. He studied through the winter returning to the mills in the summer. When he sufficiently far advanced in his studies of medicine and theology he applied to the London Missionary society. Where David Livingstone lived David livingstone centre
  • 5. The smoke of a thousand villages During this period he attended a meeting addressed by a fellow Scot, Dr Robert Moffat, who was home on leave from the mission station at Kuruman, some 500 miles north of Cape Town. This was as far as missionaries had penetrated into the 'dark continent' of Africa; at that time, apart from parts of the north and south, only the coastline of this huge continent was know to the outside world. After listening to Dr Moffat speaking of the vast, untouched regions of Central Africa, and the 'smoke of a thousand villages' where the gospel had never been preached, Livingstone rather shyly asked him whether he thought he would do for Africa. The outcome was that the London Missionary Society agreed he should go and, in 1840, Livingstone sailed for Africa on board the sailing ship, George.
  • 6. In Africa, Livingstone made his way, mainly by ox-wagon, to Kuruman, where he was to learn the ways and workings of a mission station before setting of northwards to establish new stations. His stay at Kuruman was not a particularly happy one; he was impatient to be off to those untouched regions and critical, too, that Dr Moffat should confine his work to the area around Kuruman, when the needy north was neglected: there was so much to be done and so few people to do it. For several months Livingstone isolated himself in a native village miles away from Kuruman so that he might more quickly learn the language and understand the ways of the Africans. He made several early journeys of exploration, but the purpose of these was to find healthy sites for mission stations - sites that were free from the terrible malaria which made large areas of Africa impassable for Europeans. To a great extent, this was the object of all his later explorations and, although he was to become the greatest geographer Africa had never known, he had never lost sight of his true purpose - to deliver the Christian message whenever the opportunity offered.
  • 7. While at Kuruman, Livingstone met Dr Moffat's daughter, Mary, and, although he had believed until then that he could best accomplish his work as a bachelor, Mary altered his point of view and they were married in 1845. Their first home was at Mabotsa, north of Kuruman, where Livingstone had already opened a mission station and built a house. It was here that Livingstone was attacked by a lion which crunched his shoulder so that he never regained full use of his left arm. Later, the Livingstones moved forty miles further on to Chonuane, into the country of the Bakwains, and again founded a station. Here they met Chief Sechele who, after three years' instruction, was converted to Christianity. However, another move was necessary when the supply of water dried up; this time they moved to Kolobeng, just east of the great Kalahari Desert. Chief Sechele and his tribe moved there, too, and Livingstone built a third house. David Livingstone being attacked by a Lion
  • 8. These were probably the happiest years of his life - spent with his young family. In addition to his usual missionary work, Livingstone studied the geology and natural history of the surrounding countryside. At Kolobeng, Livingstone heard rumours of fertile plains north of the Kalahari, which were teeming with population; but the desert which blocked the way was difficult and waterless. Taking the family with him, he made several trips northwards. On one of these expeditions he was accompanied by a hunter friend, W. Cotton Oswell, and together they discovered Lake Ngami. As hardships increased, Livingstone's concern for the welfare and education of his family made him decide they must go to Britain; they travelled to Cape Town where Mrs Livingstone and the children boarded ship. Then Livingstone returned to Kolobeng, northwards across the Kalahari, so that he might carry the Christian message further; and from this point on he became increasingly an explorer. David Livingstones family
  • 9. Commerce and Christianity So far, Livingstone had not come into direct contact with the slave trade. The Act of Abolition, passed in 1833, had stopped this on the west coast but it persisted in the east. On this journey, as he neared Linyanti in the very heart of the continent, Livingstone encountered a party of Arab slave traders driving their captive Africans, like cattle, to the slave markets on the coast. Livingstone said he was 'so appalled by this terrible trafficking in human life' that he determined to put a stop to it. He decided that, if easier routes could be found by which honest merchants could travel to the interior and establish trade with the Africans, then the slave trade could not survive. The cure lay in commerce and Christianity, in that order, and to this end the discovery of such routes became the immediate object of his quest. Slave Trade
  • 10. Here they met Chief Sechele who, after three years' instruction, was converted to Christianity. However, another move was necessary when the supply of water dried up; this time they moved to Kolobeng, just east of the great Kalahari Desert. Chief Sechele and his tribe moved there, too, and Livingstone built a third house. These were probably the happiest years of his life - spent with his young family. In addition to his usual missionary work, Livingstone studied the geology and natural history of the surrounding countryside. At Kolobeng, Livingstone heard rumours of fertile plains north of the Kalahari, which were teeming with population; but the desert which blocked the way was difficult and waterless. Taking the family with him, he made several trips northwards. On one of these expeditions he was accompanied by a hunter friend, W. Cotton Oswell, and together they discovered Lake Ngami. As hardships increased, Livingstone's concern for the welfare and education of his family made him decide they must go to Britain; they travelled to Cape Town where Mrs Livingstone and the children boarded ship. Then Livingstone returned to Kolobeng, northwards across the Kalahari, so that he might carry the Christian message further; and from this point on he became increasingly an explorer.
  • 11. Africa from West to East The journey to Luanda took several months; they arrived there - in May, 1854 - a sorry party. Livingstone himself was ragged and emaciated, suffering from dysentery and with his mind so fogged that he could hardly remember his surname. Kindly Portuguese officials nursed him back to health, and a passage home was offered him in a British vessel in port at that time. the temptation must have been great, but this route was clearly no 'highway to the interior'; they must return to Linyanti.
  • 12. The outward journey had been bad but the return journey, by almost the same route, was even worse. Torrential rain, malaria and rheumatic fever sapped Livingstone's energy, and tribes whose country he passed through were hostile; but the party pressed on until at least Linyanti was reached. After only a brief stop, and again with the help of Chief Sekeletu, Livingstone set out once more, heading eastwards following the valley of Zambesi. This time the going was much less difficult, and shortly Livingstone made what was perhaps the most spectacular discovery. Two years earlier, when he had first reached Sesheke, he had heard of a giant waterfall which the Africans called 'Mosi-oatunya' (the smoke that thunders). On 17 November 1855, Livingstone had his first sight of the grandeur of the falls as the waters of the Zambesi tore headlong over the 1,600-metre-wide ledge, down into the chasm over 100 metres below. This was one of the few times that Livingstone put any name other than African ones on his map; he named the falls the 'Victoria Falls'. The long journey from there to the coast, although not uneventful, was safely accomplished; most of the way the party followed the Zambesi. Livingstone became so certain that this was a navigable river which would provide a highway to the interior that at one point he made a diversion to reach the coast more quickly, and in so doing missed out that part of the river which he was later to find barred from navigation by the Kebrabasa Rapids.
  • 13. Africa's great rivers might prove to be what Livingstone called 'the highway to the interior', and so from Linyanti he set out northwards with a party of twentyseven Makalolo carriers furnished for him by Chief Sekeletu. At Sesheke, Livingstone had his first sight of the great Zambesi River and, turning northwest, began the hazardous trek which would bring them ultimately to the port of Luanda on the Atlantic Coast. To show that it was a journey of goodwill, shields were left behind and only spears were carried; a minimum amount of baggage and no stores were taken, except for a small quantity of tea, coffee and sugar. From the outset it was an unfortunate journey. Livingstone, for the first time, fell victim to malaria (as did most of his companions) - a disease which was to hamper him for the rest of his life.
  • 14. Having crossed Africa from west to east, a journey of some 4,300 miles, mostly of foot - Livingstone was the first European to have done this he set out by ship for England, reaching home in 1856. The reception he received would surely have turned the head of a lesser man. Honours were conferred upon him, and no one was too distinguished to seek his friendship. Although reluctant to do so, Livingstone was persuaded to write a book. He put together his diaries and published them under the title Missionary Travels; the book was an immediate best-seller.
  • 15. Africa and its people had now become so much a part of him that Livingstone was impatient to return and continue the work he had begun. At every opportunity, and there were many, Livingstone pleaded the cause of Africa; he was anxious that Africans should benefit from European civilisation, and tried hard to persuade others to join in his work. He was particularly anxious to see the ordinary tradesmen carpenters, builders, farmers and the like - go there as teachers pass on their skills, so that the Africans might learn new techniques in building better houses and raising better crops, and be able to enter the world's commercial markets. These first sixteen years in Africa had been under the auspices of the London Missionary Society but, while there was no great rift in the relationship, there was no doubt that some felt Livingstone had recently become too preoccupied with exploration to carry out the society's scheme of work. Hence Livingstone felt free to accept appointment as leader of a government-sponsored expedition to explore the Zambesi and its tributaries.
  • 16. of Livingstone's great shortcomings was his inability as a leader of this expedition; he had worked too long with Africans as his companions men whose instinct told them that they could trust in his judgement and he had not let them down. With his fellow Europeans, however, there soon arose a feeling of discontent; they did not want instructions without preliminary consultation and discussion. But Livingstone, always the 'dour Scot', did not seem to appreciate this, and expected too much of their initiative without always making the task, or the purpose of it, clear to them. Charles Livingstone, his brother, came in for more criticism than he deserved from other members of the party, who considered him incompetent but shown favouritism by his elder brother.
  • 17. Lady Nyasa Even the one good thing that seemed to have been achieved - the discovery of Lake Nyasa - had a sting to its tail. Livingstone realised that this inland sea was one of the centres of the slave trade, and he set about overcoming this by having a boat specially constructed, at Partick on the Clyde, which he planned to put on the lake to promote 'honest trade'. The boat was built, using all the money Livingstone had mostly the revenue from his book - but although the Lady Nyassa, as she was called, had been built in sections for easy transportation, the further discovery of the Murchison Cataracts proved an insurmountable obstacle which was then added to by the recall of the expedition by the British Government. There was nothing else for it but to return.
  • 18. The Lady Nyassa could not be disposed of in Africa for fear she would fall into the hands of the slave traders. Livingstone decided, therefore to sail this frail craft to Bombay; it had been built only for inland waters, but after careful and painstaking preparation Livingstone, acting as his own navigator, set sail for India. He timed the voyage to take advantage of the best conditions, and remained close inshore until only the shortest crossing of the ocean was necessary, but the weather turned against him. First he was becalmed and then storm-tossed on this remarkable voyage which lasted for four months before he reached Bombay, where the Lady Nyassa was sold. Even that was not the end of his troubles: the money realised was put into an Indian Bank which failed shortly afterwards.
  • 19. From Bombay, Livingstone returned to England, arriving in London on 23 July 1864, and staying just long enough to put together his second book - The Zambesi and its Tributaries. He spent as much time as he could with his children, but when the opportunity to return to Africa presented itself, he readily accepted it. In August 1865, Livingstone sailed, for the third and last time, for Africa. This journey, which lasted for seven years, had much greater appeal to him. The Royal Geographical Society had asked him to explore the great African watersheds - especially the sources of the Nile - but this time he would be alone and not hampered by restrictions.
  • 20. From Zanzibar he made his way up the Ruvuma River and on to the Lake Tanganyika and round the country of the great lakes of Mweru and Bangweulu. But this was country devastated by the slave traders, and Livingstone was frequently held back by suspicious and hostile tribes who mistook him for a slave trader. It demanded great courage to face these people in their angry mood; even his own followers were often mutinous and unfaithful. At one point, Livingstone's drugs were stolen, leaving him nothing to counteract fever and dysentery, yet still he carried on. The map of Africa was no longer just a coastline; slowly but surely light was beginning to fall on the 'dark continent', as hills and valleys, rivers and lakes were carefully plotted. Even the supposedly 'negative'
  • 21. discoveries of the Kebrabasa Rapids and Murchison Cataracts, which had seemed to contribute to the failure of the second expedition, were clearly indicated on maps so that others who followed might be aware of what lay ahead and could choose their route. The age-old mystery, the source of the Nile, seemed close to being solved, and Livingstone became obsessed with the idea of accomplishing this but, although frequently convinced that he was on the verge of success, he always remained baffled. Eventually, with his few faithfuls - Susi, Chuma and the others - he made his way back to Ujiji. Just a few days after arriving in Ujiji,
  • 22. Susi came running to tell him of the approach of 'a white man' - Stanley, the journalist who had been sent by his paper, the New York Herald, to find Livingstone. Stanley's arrival was welcome; he had brought with him stores and medicines, news and letters from home, and although Stanley was only just over half Livingstone's age, the two men quickly developed a great respect for each other during the brief four months of Stanley's stay at Ujiji. Livingstone felt greatly refreshed; Stanley tried to persuade him to return home, or at least to the coast for medical attention and supplies, but Livingstone would not give in. David Livingstone I presume
  • 23. After Stanley left him, he set out again, travelling South down the east bank of Lakes Tanganyika and Bangweulu, but torrential rains and swampy conditions sapped his energy. His followers eventually had to carry him in a litter, but he was determined to go on until, at Ilala, his followers realised that Livingstone had neither the strength nor the will to urge them on. At the village of Chief Chitambo they built a hut for him to rest in, knowing well that the end was near. At four o'clock on the morning of 1 May 1873, they found him kneeling by his bedside having died in prayer. In accordance with their beliefs, Livingstone's heart was buried under a Mvula tree near the spot where he died; but his body had to go back to Britain and so Susi, Chuma, Jacob Wainwright and others set out on the remarkable epic journey which ultimately brought them to the coast at Bagamoyo. The body reached England on board the steamer Malwa, and on 18 April 1874 - a day of national mourning - Livingstone was buried in Westminster Abbey.
  • 24. This is my Family tree David Livingstone is my 5 uncle