Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Lost Diary of Dr. Livingstone – Documentary produced by the PBS series Secrets of the Dead "Victoria Falls: How Livingstone discovered the Falls". by J. Desmond Clark M.A. PH.D. F.S.A. Curator of the Rhodes-Livingstone Museum. 1955; Interactive map of Livingstone's Zambezi expedition Archived 13 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine
"Dr. Livingstone, I presume?", an illustration from Stanley's 1872 book How I Found Livingstone. Stanley travelled to Zanzibar in March 1871, later claiming that he outfitted an expedition with 192 porters. [18] In his first dispatch to the New York Herald, however, he stated that his expedition numbered only 111.
This was Stanley's second journey in central Africa. In 1871–72 he had searched for and successfully found the missionary and explorer David Livingstone.In his publications, Stanley described greeting him with the famous words: "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?", but his report in this is disputed.
Henry Morton Stanley, above, found Dr. Livingstone in Africa and brought tales back to Europe When Stanley returned to Europe in 1878, he had not only found Dr. Livingstone (an event remembered to this day), resolved the last great mystery of African exploration, and ruined his health: he had also opened the heart of tropical Africa up to the ...
Many forget the missionary zeal of Dr. David Livingstone, as he hoped to spread Christianity but also commerce, in Africa. Professor: Great Christian missionary who converted only one: Dr ...
It is the site of the famous meeting on 10 November 1871 [7] when Henry Stanley found Dr. David Livingstone, and reputedly uttered the famous words “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?” Livingstone, whom many thought dead as no news had been heard of him for several years and who had only arrived back in Ujiji the day before, wrote “When my ...
The Livingstone–Stanley Monument at Mugere marks a location where explorer and missionary Dr David Livingstone and journalist and explorer Henry Morton Stanley visited and spent two nights on 25–27 November 1871 in Burundi. It is 12 km south of the largest city and former capital Bujumbura, overlooking Lake Tanganyika.
Stanley and Livingstone is a 1939 American adventure film directed by Henry King and Otto Brower. It is loosely based on the true story of Welsh reporter Sir Henry M. Stanley 's quest to find Dr. David Livingstone , a Scottish missionary presumed lost in Africa, who he finally met on November 10, 1871.