14. David Livingston [Livingstone], [near Colesberg], to Rev David G. Watt, Benares, East Indies

Written on the journey to Kuruman, near Colesberg. Comments on his impressions of the "church establishment" [Roman Catholic] at Rio de Janeiro [where their ship was obliged to stop and refit following a storm]; his impressions of Dr [John Philip] & Mrs Philip [whose guest he was for a time upon...

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Order number: CWM/LMS/Africa/Odds/Livingstone, Box 3
Date(s) of creation: 7 Jul 1841
Level: Item
Format: Archive           

collection SOAS Archive
id CWM.LMS.04.08.07.01.014
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
scb_order_with CWM/LMS/Africa/Odds/Livingstone, Box 3
callnumber CWM/LMS/04/08/07/01/014
callnumber_txt CWM/LMS/04/08/07/01/014
callnumber-sort CWM/LMS/04/08/07/01/014
scb_alt_ref_no Livingstone Wooden Box, item 14
prefix_number 014
title 14. David Livingston [Livingstone], [near Colesberg], to Rev David G. Watt, Benares, East Indies
scb_date_creation 7 Jul 1841
scb_level Item
level_sort 8/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File/Item
scb_extent 4pp
format Archive
scb_admin_history David Livingstone was appointed to Bechuanaland in Southern Africa and sailed 8 Dec 1840, arriving at Cape Town on 14 March and at Kuruman on 31 July 1841. David Gilkinson Watt served with the London Missionary Society in Benares [Varanasi], North India, 1841-1848. Dr John Philip (1775-1851) served as Agent of the London Missionary Society in Cape Town and Superintendent of the Society's Mission in South Africa from 1820.
description Written on the journey to Kuruman, near Colesberg. Comments on his impressions of the "church establishment" [Roman Catholic] at Rio de Janeiro [where their ship was obliged to stop and refit following a storm]; his impressions of Dr [John Philip] & Mrs Philip [whose guest he was for a time upon arrival at Cape Town with William Ross], the relationship between Philip and the young Robert Moffat, and the general feeling towards Dr Philip in the Colony; account of the missionary-political situation in the region as he saw it, observing the "most disgraceful" tension prevailing between missionaries north and south of the Orange River and amongst themselves on each side of it; his own enjoyment of travelling in Africa; reference to the rumours of the existence of a great fresh-water lake [Ngami] at a distance of two months' journey north by ox-wagon, of the rivalry between French and British missionaries to be the first to discover it, and of a private gift of £400 to Moffat from "some gent in England" towards the cost of an expedition; visit to settlement at Hankey and the mission station; hopes to acquire the colloquial language by living and mixing with the people; reference to Abyssinia as a sphere for missionary endeavour; considers profitable life as a "forerunner".
scb_access_status Open
scb_use_restrictions For permission to publish, please contact Archives & Special Collections, SOAS Library in the first instance
hierarchy_top_id_raw CWM
hierarchy_sequence CWM.00LMS.0004.0008.0007.0001.00014