Most famous for allegedly uttering the words, "Dr.
Livingstone, I presume," Henry Morton Stanley was one of the most
stanleypic well-known of all nineteenth-century British explorers. In his early
years (as a naturalized American) he led a roving life, fighting in the
American Civil War, serving in the merchant marine and the federal navy, and
reporting as a journalist on the early days of frontier expansion. He became
famous when the New York Herald commissioned him to "find
Livingstone" in Africa.
After finding Robert Livingstone (no mean feat, since
Livingstone was living in the interior of Zanzibar, where even his friends
could not find him), and following in the footsteps of Livingstone, Richard
Burton, John Hanning Speke, and others, Stanley went on to explore the rivers
and lakes of central Africa. Through the Dark Continent (1877) is his account
of those explorations. Failing to interest the British government in developing
the Congo, Stanley accepted the invitation of King Leopold of Belgium to
explore the region -- an expedition that led to the establishment of the
"Congo Free State" under the sovereignty of King Leopold, and to
Stanley's book, The Founding of the Congo Free State (1885). Stanley continued
to explore and write until the end of the century, producing In Darkest Africa
in 1890 and Through South Africa in 1898. He died in England in 1904.
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