Stanley, Sir Henry Morton

Stanley, Sir Henry Morton
orig. John Rowlands

born Jan. 28, 1841, Denbigh, Denbighshire, Wales
died May 10, 1904, London, Eng.

British-U.S. explorer of central Africa.

An illegitimate child, Stanley grew up partly in a British workhouse; he sailed to the U.S. as a cabin boy in 1859. After becoming a journalist for the New York Herald in 1867, he embarked (1871) on a journey to locate David Livingstone, of whom little had been heard since his departure for Africa in 1866. On finding him at Ujiji on Lake Tanganyika, Stanley uttered the famous words "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" He further explored central Africa for extended periods between 1874 and 1884, often in the service of Leopold II of Belgium, for whom he paved the way for the creation of the Congo Free State. Stanley's last expedition (1888) was for the relief of Mehmed Emin Pasha, who had been cut off by the Mahdist revolt in the Sudan; he escorted Emin and 1,500 others to the eastern coast. His highly popular books include Through the Dark Continent (1878) and In Darkest Africa (1890).

Sir Henry Morton Stanley, detail of a portrait by Sir Hubert von Herkomer; in the City Museum & ...

Courtesy of the City Museum & Art Gallery, Bristol, England

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▪ British explorer
Introduction
original name  John Rowlands , Congolese byname  Bula Matari (“Breaker of Rocks”) 
born January 28, 1841, Denbigh, Denbighshire, Wales
died May 10, 1904, London, England
 British American explorer of Central Africa, famous for his rescue of the Scottish missionary and explorer David Livingstone (Livingstone, David) and for his discoveries in and development of the Congo region. He was knighted in 1899.

Early life
      Stanley's parents, John Rowlands and Elizabeth Parry, gave birth to him out of wedlock. He grew up partly in the charge of reluctant relatives, partly in St. Asaph Workhouse. Modern research has shown his own account of ill treatment and a dramatic escape to be almost entirely a fantasy. There seem to have been no extraordinary events attending his departure from the workhouse at age 15, after receiving a reasonable education. The humiliations of institutional life and his mother's consistent neglect did, however, leave deep marks on his personality. After an interlude of dependence on relatives, he sailed from Liverpool as a cabin boy and landed at New Orleans in 1859.

      There Rowlands was befriended by a merchant, Henry Hope Stanley, whose first and last names the boy adopted in an apparent effort to make a fresh start in life with a new identity; “Morton” was added later. Passages in Stanley's Autobiography concerning this period contain serious misstatements, particularly in regard to the movements of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hope Stanley and the degree of intimacy that existed between them and young Rowlands. For some years Stanley led a roving life, as a soldier in the American Civil War, a seaman on merchant ships and in the U.S. Navy, and a journalist in the early days of frontier expansion; he even managed a trip to Turkey, recorded in My Early Travels and Adventures in America and Asia (1895).

      In 1867 Stanley offered his services to James Gordon Bennett of the New York Herald as a special correspondent with the British expeditionary force sent against Tewodros II of Ethiopia, and Stanley was the first to report the fall of Magdala in 1868. An assignment to report on the Spanish Civil War followed, and in 1869 he received instructions to undertake a roving commission in the Middle East, which was to include the relief of Dr. David Livingstone, of whom little had been heard since his departure for Africa in 1866 to search for the source of the Nile (Nile River).

Relief of Livingstone
      On January 6, 1871, Stanley reached Zanzibar, the starting point for expeditions to the interior, and, intent on a scoop, left on March 21 without disclosing his intentions. His secretive conduct caused much offense to the authorities, especially to Sir John Kirk, the British consul, who had been having difficulty in making contact with Livingstone. Leading a well-equipped caravan and backed by American money, Stanley forced his way through country disturbed by fighting and stricken by sickness to Ujiji on Lake Tanganyika (Tanganyika, Lake), Livingstone's last known port of call. There he found the old hero, ill and short of supplies, and greeted him with the famous words, “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?” (The exact date of their meeting is unclear, as both men recorded different dates in their journals; according to Stanley, they met on November 10, 1871, while Livingstone's journal suggests that the event occurred sometime between October 24 and 28.)

      A cordial friendship sprang up between the two men, and, when Stanley returned to the coast, he dispatched fresh supplies to enable Livingstone to carry on. The older man's quest ended a year later with his death in the swamps of Lake Bangweulu, still vainly seeking the Nile in a region that in fact gives rise to the Congo River.

      How I Found Livingstone was published soon after Stanley's arrival in England in the late summer of 1872, when the exploits of this hitherto unknown adventurer gave rise to controversy. Members of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS) resented an American journalist having succeeded in relieving the famous traveler when they, his friends, had failed. Stanley did, however, receive the RGS Patron's Gold Medal. In 1873 Stanley went to Asante (Ashanti; now part of modern Ghana) as war correspondent for the New York Herald and in 1874 published his Coomassie and Magdala: The Story of Two British Campaigns in Africa.

Discovery and development of the Congo
      When Livingstone died in 1873, Stanley resolved to take up the exploration of Africa where he had left off. The problem of the Nile sources and the nature of the central African lakes had been only partly solved by earlier explorers. Stanley secured financial backing from the New York Herald and the Daily Telegraph of London for an expedition to pursue the quest, and the caravan left Zanzibar on November 12, 1874, heading for Lake Victoria. His visit to King Mutesa I of Buganda led to the admission of Christian missionaries to the area in 1877 and to the eventual establishment of a British protectorate in Uganda. Circumnavigating Lake Victoria (Victoria, Lake), Stanley confirmed the explorer John H. Speke's estimate of its size and importance. Skirmishes with suspicious tribespeople on the lakeshore, which resulted in a number of casualties, gave rise in England to criticism of this new kind of traveler with his journalist's outlook and forceful methods. Lake Tanganyika was next explored and found to have no connection with the Nile system. Stanley and his men pressed on west to the Lualaba River (the very river that Livingstone had hoped was the Nile but that proved to be the headstream of the Congo). There they joined forces with the Arab trader Tippu Tib, who accompanied them for a few laps downriver, then left Stanley to fight his way first to Stanley Pool (now Malebo Pool) and then (partly overland) down to the great cataracts he named Livingstone Falls. Stanley and his men reached the sea on August 12, 1877, after an epic journey described in Through the Dark Continent (1878).

      Failing to enlist British interests in the development of the Congo region, Stanley took service with the king of Belgium, Leopold II, whose secret ambition it was to annex the region for himself. From August 1879 to June 1884 Stanley was in the Congo basin, where he built a road from the lower Congo up to Stanley Pool and launched steamers on the upper river. (It is from this period, when Stanley persevered in the face of great difficulties, that he earned, from his men, the nickname of Bula Matari [“Breaker of Rocks”]). Originally under international auspices, Stanley's work was to pave the way for the creation of the Congo Free State, under the sovereignty of King Leopold. These strenuous years are described in The Congo and the Founding of Its Free State (1885).

Relief of Emin Paşa
      Stanley's last expedition in Africa was for the relief of Mehmed Emin Paşa (Emin Pasha, Mehmed), governor of the Equatorial Province of Egypt, who had been cut off by the Mahdist revolt of 1882 in the environs of Lake Albert. Stanley was appointed to lead a relief expedition and decided to approach Lake Albert by way of the Congo River, counting on Tippu Tib to supply porters. Stanley left England in January 1887 and arrived at the mouth of the Congo in March. The expedition reached the navigable head of the river in June, and there, at Yambuya, Stanley left a rear column with orders to await Tippu Tib's porters. The failure of the rear column to rejoin the main body later gave rise to controversy harmful to Stanley's reputation. Eventually the expedition was assembled at Lake Albert, and, despite Emin's initial reluctance to leave his province, some 1,500 persons set out for the east coast on April 10, 1889, and arrived at Bagamoyo on December 4. On the way, the Ruwenzori Range was revealed to explorers for the first time (identified as Ptolemy's Mountains of the Moon), and the Semliki River was shown to link Lakes Edward (Edward, Lake) and Albert (Albert, Lake); thus were cleared up the few doubtful geographic points regarding the Nile sources. In Darkest Africa (1890) is Stanley's own account of his last adventure on the African continent. He received a Special Gold Medal from the RGS.

      Stanley married Dorothy Tennant on July 12, 1890, and they adopted a son, Denzil. Stanley was renaturalized a British subject in 1892 (he had become a U.S. citizen on May 15, 1885) and sat in Parliament as Liberal Unionist for North Lambeth from 1895 to 1900. In 1897 he visited South Africa and wrote Through South Africa (1898). He was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in 1899, becoming Sir Henry Morton Stanley. The remaining years before his death were spent mainly at Furze Hill near Pirbright, Surrey, a small estate that he bought in 1898.

Additional Reading
Stanley's story as told in his The Autobiography of Sir Henry Morton Stanley, ed. by Dorothy Stanley (1909), was closely adhered to by Frank Hird, H.M. Stanley: The Authorized Life (1935); by Ian Anstruther, I Presume (1956, reissued 1988; also published as Dr. Livingstone, I Presume, 1957); and by Byron Farwell, The Man Who Presumed (1957, reprinted 1989). A new light was thrown on the subject by Richard Hall, Stanley: An Adventurer Explored (1974), a penetrating biography based on most of the extant manuscript collections pertaining to Stanley. This work was carried on by Frank McLynn, Stanley: The Making of an Explorer (1989); and by John Bierman, Dark Safari: The Life Behind the Legend of Henry Morton Stanley (1990). Eyewitness accounts of Stanley in the field are quoted by Iain R. Smith, The Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, 1886–1890 (1972). Norman R. Bennett (ed.), Stanley's Despatches to the New York Herald, 1871–1872, 1874–1877 (1970), contains an illuminating introduction that reassesses Stanley and his place in the history of 19th-century exploration. An authoritative biography is Tim Jeal, Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorer (2007).Dorothy Middleton

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Stanley, sir Henry Morton — ► (1841 1904) Seudónimo de John Rowlands, periodista y famoso explorador británico. Fue enviado por el New York Herald en busca del doctor Livingstone (1871), a quien halló en la región del lago Tanganica. Alcanzó renombre universal por sus… …   Enciclopedia Universal

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