On this day … 30 November 1878

The Preston Chronicle carried a report of the visit to Preston of Henry Morton Stanley, the journalist/explorer who tracked down David Livingstone in Africa and reputedly greeted him with his famous, ‘Dr Livingstone, I presume’. Stanley was on a lecture tour of Britain describing his expeditions to the ‘Dark Continent’, and this is how the Chronicle reported the visit:

‘Mr. H. M. Stanley, the African explorer, visited Preston on Wednesday night, and delivered a lecture in the Guild Hall, on the subject — “Through the dark continent” … The lecturer was accompanied by one of his coloured friends, and in the course of his address recounted many stirring scenes of adventure through which he had passed, with respect to natives, climate, and peculiar situations of country.’

Stanley Livinstone meeting in Africa
The drawing illustrating that famed meeting in Stanley’s book, How I found Livingstone: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rencontre_de_Livingstone_-_How_I_found_Livingstone_(fr).png

Given that Stanley’s fame now rests on that meeting with Livingstone, in his lecture he gave only a passing mention to Livingstone, in describing a later expedition to explore the area around Lake Tanganika in present-day Tanzania, telling his audience it was here ‘he had found Livingstone in November, 1871’.

A main thrust of his lecture was the opportunity for further British expansion in Africa:

‘… the whole coast of the East African Sultanate would, in the course of a few years, have more interest for Englishmen than at present. A great portion of the inhabitants were British subjects. Latterly great changes had taken place. Several British merchants had become residents of the island, British missions had been founded a British line of steamers and a British fleet had been anchored on the coast for some years, and the only consequence must be that another annexation must take place.’

What was now needed, he told his audience, were Christian missionaries. M’Teza, the Emperor of Uganda, would welcome them:

‘At M’Teza’s request, he sent a petition to England for missionaries for Uganda. In response to this request, £14,000 was subscribed in England, and a missionary expedition equipped under the auspices of the Church Missionary Society. (Applause)’.

Stanley’s lecture was possibly in the mind of a correspondent to the paper the following week, who signed himself ‘Freedom of Labour’ to attack the ‘strike mania’ in the Lancashire cotton industry by ‘misguided people’. He argued that, ‘There is no sympathy for them, outside their own ranks; and the end will another illustration of the folly of strikes’.

He then recruited Livingstone and Stanley to point the way forward for Lancashire manufacturers:

‘… we have nothing to fear in the future of our colonial trade, either from colonial industry or foreign competition. It is unquestioned that there has been a falling off in our trade with the foreigner, who has fostered his own manufactures by protective tariffs, and is rapidly becoming independent of us. The eyes of Lancashire are, therefore, now being turned to the opening up of Africa, in the rich region which has been made known to us by Livingstone, Stanley, and Cameron; and which appears so promising as a new outlet for British commerce. England’s necessity is Africa’s opportunity.’


Source
Anyone with a Lancashire County Library card can read the Preston Chronicle and many more papers for free here: https://link.gale.com/apps/BNCN?u=lancs&aty=rpas


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