"Dr. Livingstone, I
presume?"
These were the first
words, spoken by a white man, that the famous Scottish explorer David
Livingstone had heard in five years. For four years, in fact, Livingstone
had been feared dead. But, on November 13th, 1871 an expedition led by a
New York Times journalist by the name of Henry Morton Stanley found
Livingstone, frail and short of supplies, but alive, at Ujiji, on the edge
of Lake Tanganyika, Central Africa. Livingstone’s response to Stanley’s
question was, “You have brought me new life.”
David Livingstone was
born in Blantyre, Scotland in 1813. After receiving a medical degree from
the University of Glasgow he joined the London Missionary Society. Before
long he was sent by the Society to Africa. His work was to convert
Africans to Christianity. He was also keen to put a stop to the centuries
old African slave trade. But Livingstone became known more as an explorer
than as a Christian missionary. He made several trips into the deep
interior of Central Africa, searching for rivers that the missionaries
could use to gain access to the native people living within this region.