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Mungo Park (explorer)

Mungo Park (11 September 1771 – 1806) was a Scottish explorer of West Africa. After an exploration of the upper Niger River around 1796, he wrote a popular and influential travel book titled Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa in which he theorized the Niger and Congo merged to become the same river, though it was later proven that they are different rivers. He was killed during a second expedition, having successfully travelled about two-thirds of the way down the Niger.

Mungo Park
Posthumous portrait (1859) by unknown artist
Born11 September 1771 (1771-09-11)
Selkirkshire, Scotland
Died1806 (1807) (aged 35)
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
Known forExploration of West Africa
Scientific career
FieldsAfrican explorer
Surgeon's mate
Mungo Park commemorative medal

If the African Association was the "beginning of the age of African exploration" then Mungo Park was its first successful explorer; he set a standard for all who followed. Park was the first Westerner to have recorded travels in the central portion of the Niger, and through his popular book introduced the public to a vast unexplored continent which influenced future European explorers and colonial ambitions in Africa.

Early life edit

Mungo Park was born in Selkirkshire, Scotland, at Foulshiels on the Yarrow Water, near Selkirk, on a tenant farm which his father rented from the Duke of Buccleuch. He was the seventh in a family of thirteen.[1][2][3] Although tenant farmers, the Parks were relatively well-off. They were able to pay for Park to receive a good education, and Park's father died leaving property valued at £3,000 (equivalent to £258,000 in 2021).[4] His parents had originally intended him for a ministry in the Church of Scotland.[5]

He was educated at home before attending Selkirk grammar school. At the age of fourteen, he was apprenticed to Thomas Anderson, a surgeon in Selkirk. During his apprenticeship, Park became friends with Anderson's son Alexander and was introduced to Anderson's daughter Allison, who would later become his wife.[6]

In October 1788, Park enrolled at the University of Edinburgh, attending for four sessions studying medicine and botany. Notably, during his time at university, he spent a year in the natural history course taught by Professor John Walker. After completing his studies, he spent a summer in the Scottish Highlands, engaged in botanical fieldwork with his brother-in-law, James Dickson, a gardener and seed merchant in Covent Garden. In 1788 Dickson along with Sir James Edward Smith and six other fellows founded the Linnean Society of London.

In 1792, Park completed his medical studies at University of Edinburgh.[7] Through a recommendation by Joseph Banks he obtained the post of surgeon's mate on board the East India Company's ship Worcester. In February 1793 the Worcester sailed to Benkulen in Sumatra. Before departing, Park wrote to his friend Alexander Anderson in terms that reflect his Calvinist upbringing:

My hope is now approaching to a certainty. If I be deceived, may God alone put me right, for I would rather die in the delusion than wake to all the joys of earth. May the Holy Spirit dwell in your heart, my dear friend, and if I ever see my native land again, may I rather see the green sod on your grave than see you anything but a Christian.

— Lupton 1979, p. 14

On his return in 1794, Park gave a lecture to the Linnaean Society, describing eight new Sumatran fish. The paper was not published until three years later.[8][9] He also presented Banks with various rare Sumatran plants.

Travels into the interior of Africa edit

First journey edit

 
View of Kamalia in Mandingo country, Africa, from: Mungo Park, Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa
 
Park was one of the first European explorers of Central Africa, and was one of the first explorers mentioned in Reisen in Central-Afrika – von Mungo Park bis auf Dr. Barth u. Dr. Vogel (1859) (Travels in Central-Africa – from Mungo Park to Dr. Barth and Dr. Vogel)

On 26 September 1794, Mungo Park offered his services to the African Association, then looking for a successor to Major Daniel Houghton, who had been sent in 1790 to discover the course of the Niger River and had died in the Sahara. Supported by Sir Joseph Banks, Park was selected.[3]

On 22 May 1795, Park left Portsmouth, England, on the brig Endeavour, a vessel travelling to Gambia to trade for beeswax and ivory.[10]

On 21 June 1795, he reached the Gambia River and ascended it 200 miles (300 km) to a British trading station named Pisania. On 2 December, accompanied by two local guides, he started for the unknown interior.[11] He chose the route crossing the upper Senegal basin and through the semi-desert region of Kaarta. The journey was full of difficulties, and at Ludamar he was imprisoned by a Moorish chief for four months. On 1 July 1796, he escaped, alone and with nothing but his horse and a pocket compass, and on the 21st reached the long-sought Niger River at Ségou, being the first European to do so.[12] He followed the river downstream 80 miles (130 km) to Silla, where he was obliged to turn back,[3] lacking the resources to go further.[13]

On his return journey, begun on 29 July, he took a route more to the south than that originally followed, keeping close to the Niger River as far as Bamako, thus tracing its course for some 300 miles (500 km).[14] At Kamalia he fell ill, and owed his life to the kindness of a man in whose house he lived for seven months. Eventually he reached Pisania again on 10 June 1797. Unable to book passage directly to England from Bathurst, he boarded a slave ship bound for Charleston. Having learned the Mandinka language during his travels, he served as doctor to the slaves, many of whom died en route.[15] The ship was eventually forced to dock in Antigua, from which he returned to Scotland on 22 December. He had been thought dead, and his return home with news of his exploration of the Niger River evoked great public enthusiasm. An account of his journey was drawn up for the African Association by Bryan Edwards, and his own detailed narrative appeared in 1799 (Travels in the Interior of Africa).[3]

Park was convinced that:

whatever difference there is between the negro and European, in the conformation of the nose, and the colour of the skin, there is none in the genuine sympathies and characteristic feelings of our common nature.

— Park 1799, p. 82

Park encountered a group of slaves when travelling through Mandinka country Mali:

They were all very inquisitive, but they viewed me at first with looks of horror, and repeatedly asked if my countrymen were cannibals. They were very desirous to know what became of the slaves after they had crossed the salt water. I told them that they were employed in cultivating the land; but they would not believe me; and one of them putting his hand upon the ground, said with great simplicity, "have you really got such ground as this, to set your feet upon?" A deeply-rooted idea that the whites purchase Negroes for the purpose of devouring them, or of selling them to others that they may be devoured hereafter, naturally makes the slaves contemplate a journey towards the Coast with great terror, insomuch that the Slatees[a] are forced to keep them constantly in irons, and watch them very closely, to prevent their escape.

— Park 1799, p. 319

His book Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa became a best-seller[6] because it detailed what he observed, what he survived, and the people he encountered.[16] His dispassionate — if not scientific or objective — descriptions set a standard for future travel writers to follow and gave Europeans a glimpse of Africa's humanity and complexity. Park introduced them to a vast continent unexplored by Europeans. If the African Association was the "beginning of the age of African exploration"[17] then Mungo Park was its first successful explorer, he set a standard for all who followed. After his death, European public and political interest in Africa began to increase. Perhaps the most lasting effect of Park's travels, though, was the influence on European colonial ambitions during the 19th century.

Controversy edit

Mungo Park is credited with the original report of the Mountains of Kong - a mountain range rumored to be located in West Africa, beginning near the source of the Niger River and spanning the majority of the African continent from east to west. This mountain range was published by geographer and cartographer James Rennell.[18]

Debate surrounding the existence of the mountain range occurred frequently, however, it was French officer and explorer Louis-Gustave Binger officially reported that the Mountains of Kong did not exist during an expedition in 1887-1888.[18] It was not long after this that the Mountains of Kong were dropped from most map publications.

While the Mountains of Kong have been disproven, it has remained periodically on maps in until the early 20th century.[18]

Between journeys edit

 
Mungo Park's doorplate from his house in Peebles, National Museum of Scotland

Settling at Foulshiels, in August 1799 Park married Allison, daughter of his apprenticeship master, Thomas Anderson.[19] A project to go to New South Wales in some official capacity came to nothing, and in October 1801 Park moved to Peebles, where he practiced as a physician.[20][3]

Second journey edit

In the autumn of 1803, Park was invited by the government to lead another expedition to the Niger. Park, who chafed at the hardness and monotony of life at Peebles, accepted the offer, but the expedition was delayed. Part of the waiting time was occupied perfecting his Arabic; his teacher, Sidi Ambak Bubi, was a native of Mogador (now Essaouira in Morocco) whose behavior both amused and alarmed the people of Peebles.[3]

 
Map of Mungo Park's journeys

In May 1804, Park went back to Foulshiels, where he made the acquaintance of Walter Scott, then living nearby at Ashiesteil and with whom he soon became friendly. In September, Park was summoned to London to leave on the new expedition; he left Scott with the hopeful proverb on his lips,[3] "Freits (omens) follow those that look to them."[21]

Park had at that time adopted the theory that the Niger and the Congo were one, and in a memorandum drawn up before he left Britain he wrote: "My hopes of returning by the Congo are not altogether fanciful."[3]

On 31 January 1805, he sailed from Portsmouth for Gambia, having been given a captain's commission as head of the government expedition. Alexander Anderson, his brother-in-law and second-in-command, had received a lieutenancy. George Scott, a fellow Borderer, was draughtsman, and the party included four or five artificers. At Gorée (then in British occupation) Park was joined by Lieutenant Martyn, R.A., thirty-five privates and two seamen.[3]

The expedition got a late start into the rainy season and did not reach the Niger until mid-August, when only eleven Europeans were left alive; the rest had succumbed to fever or dysentery.[22] From Bamako the journey to Ségou was made by canoe. Having received permission from the local ruler, Mansong Diarra, to proceed, at Sansanding, a little below Ségou, Park made ready for his journey down the still unknown part of the river. Helped by one soldier, the only one capable of work, Park converted two canoes into one tolerably good boat, 40 feet (12 m) long and 6 feet (2 m) broad. This he christened H.M. schooner Joliba (the native name for the Niger River), and in it, with the surviving members of his party, he set sail downstream on 19 November.[3]

Anderson had died at Sansanding on 28 October, and in him Park had lost one of his few remaining valuable members.[23] Those who embarked in the Joliba were Park, Martyn, three European soldiers (one mad), a guide and three slaves. Before his departure, Park gave to Isaaco, a Mandingo guide who had been with him thus far, letters to take back to Gambia for transmission to Britain.[3]

The Muslim traders along this section of the Niger did not believe Park was exploring purely for intellectual curiosity but was scouting European trading routes, they saw Park as a threat to their trading dominance.[22] They lobbied Mansong Diarra to have Park killed, and when Mansong did not, they lobbied tribes further down the river. Park understood the politics and adopted a policy of staying away from the shore towards the middle of the 2-to-3-mile-wide (3-to-5-kilometre) river while attacking anyone who came near.[22] In the process he also avoided paying tolls/bribes to pass through each kingdom, earning the rage of local rulers, Moorish or not, who would send messengers ahead to the next tribe downriver that a dangerous interloper was coming their way. Furthermore, Park's policy of shoot first and not engaging with locals, in some cases slaughtering significant numbers of natives using superior firepower, made the Europeans something of a pariah. Park was running a gauntlet of hostile tribes in part of his own making.[22]

To his wife, Park wrote of his intention not to stop nor land anywhere until he reached the coast, where he expected to arrive about the end of January 1806.[3]

These were the last communications received from Park, and nothing more was heard of the party until reports of disaster reached Gambia.[3]

Death edit

 
The Mungo Park Monument in Selkirk, Scotland by Andrew Currie

At length, the British government engaged Isaaco to go to the Niger to ascertain Park's fate. At Sansanding, Isaaco found Amadi Fatouma (Isaaco calls him Amaudy),[24] the guide who had gone downstream with Park, and the substantial accuracy of the story he told was later confirmed by the investigations of Hugh Clapperton and Richard Lander.[3]

Amadi Fatouma stated that Park's canoe had descended the river as far as Sibby without incident. After Sibby, three native canoes chased them and Park's party repulsed the pursuers with firearms.[25] A similar incident occurred at Cabbara and again at Toomboucouton. At Gouroumo seven canoes pursued them. One of the party died of sickness leaving "four white men, myself [Amadi], and three slaves". Each person (including the slaves) had "15 musquets apiece, well loaded and always ready for action".[25] After passing the residence of the king of Goloijigi, 60 canoes came after them which they "repulsed after killing many natives". Further along they encountered an army of the Poule nation and kept to the opposite bank to avoid an action. After a close encounter with a hippopotamus they continued past Caffo (3 canoe pursuers) to an island where Isaaco was taken prisoner. Park rescued him, and 20 canoes chased them. This time they merely asked Amadi for trinkets which Park supplied.[26] At Gourmon they traded for provisions and were warned of an ambush ahead. They passed the army "being all Moors" and entered Haoussa, finally arriving at Yauri (which Amadi calls Yaour),[26] where he (Fatouma) landed.

To this point of the journey of some 1,000 miles (1,600 km) Park, who had plenty of provisions, stuck to his resolution of keeping away from the natives. Below Djenné, came Timbuktu, and at various other places the natives came out in canoes and attacked his boat. These attacks were all repulsed, Park and his party having plenty of firearms and ammunition and the natives having none. The boat also escaped the many perils attendant on navigating an unknown stream strewn with many rapids;[3] Park had built Joliba so that she drew only 1 foot (30 cm) of water.

At Haoussa, Amadi traded with the local chief. Amadi reports that Park gave him five silver rings, some powder and flints to give as a gift to the chief of the village. The following day Amadi visited the king where Amadi was accused of not having given the chief a present. Amadi was "put in irons". The king then sent an army to Boussa where there is a natural narrowing of the river commanded by high rock.[27] But at the Bussa rapids, not far below Yauri, Park's boat became stuck on a rock and remained fast. On the bank were gathered hostile natives, who attacked the party with bow and arrow and throwing spears. Their position being untenable, Park, Martyn, and the two remaining soldiers sprang into the river and were drowned. The sole survivor was one of the slaves. After three months in irons, Amadi was released and talked with the surviving slave, from whom was obtained the story of the final scene.[27][3]

Aftermath edit

Amadi paid a Peulh man to obtain Park's sword belt. Amadi then returned first to Sansanding and then to Segou. After, Amadi went to Dacha and told the king what had occurred. The king sent an army past "Tombouctou" (Timbuktu) to Sacha but decided that Haoussa was too far for a punitive expedition. Instead they went to Massina, a small "Paul" Peulh country where they took all the cattle and returned home. Amadi appears to have been part of this expedition: "We came altogether back to Sego" (Segou). Amadi then returned to Sansanding via Sego. Eventually the Peulh man obtained the sword belt and after a voyage of eight months met up with Amadi and gave him the belt. Isaaco met Amadi in Sego and having obtained the sword belt returned to Senegal.[28]

Isaaco, and later Richard Lander, obtained some of Park's effects, but his journal was never recovered. In 1827 his second son, Thomas, landed on the Guinea coast, intending to make his way to Bussa, where he thought his father might be detained a prisoner; but after penetrating a little distance inland he died of fever.[3] Park's widow, Allison, received a previously agreed upon £4,000 settlement from the African Association as a result of the death of Mungo Park. She died in 1840. Mungo Park's remains are believed to have been buried along the banks of the River Niger in Jebba, Nigeria.

With Park's death the mystery of the Niger remained unsolved. Park's theory that the Niger and Congo were the same river became the general opinion in the years after his death. However even while Park was alive, an amateur German geographer named Reichard proposed the Niger delta was the mouth of the river, but his theory was one of many and did not have much currency because the delta had so many small streams it did not appear to be from a great river. In 1821, James McQueen published a book, the result of 25 years of research, in which he correctly (it would later be seen) laid out the entire course of the Niger, however like Reichard, his theories did not receive much notice. A number of failed expeditions were mounted but the mystery would finally be solved 25 years after Park's death, in 1830. Richard Lander and his brother became the first Europeans to follow the course of the Niger from source to ocean.[29]

His son Mungo Park (1800–1823) died in India at the age of 22, while in government service, and was buried at Trichinopoly.

Medal edit

The Royal Scottish Geographical Society award the Mungo Park Medal annually in Park's honour.[30]

Memorial edit

A life-size statue was erected to Park on the High Street in Selkirk in 1859. The monument was sculpted by Andrew Currie. In 1905 the monument had bronze figures added on the corners and two bas-relief panels, all by Thomas J. Clapperton.

In media edit

Circa 1836, Richard Adams Locke (author of the Great Moon Hoax) composed a fictional Lost Manuscript of Mungo Park,[31] in which Park explores the interior of the hollow Earth.

Mungo Park is mentioned in Herman Melville's 1851 novel Moby-Dick (Chapter 5: Breakfast), and several times, parodically, in Ernest Hemingway's short story "A Natural History of the Dead."

Mungo Park appears as one of the two protagonists in T. C. Boyle's 1981 historical novel Water Music.

Tom Fremantle's 2005 travelogue The Road to Timbuktu: Down the Niger on the Trail of Mungo Park details Mungo Park's biography and retraces his travels.

Nigerian singer Burna Boy mentions Park in his song "Monsters You Made" on the 2020 album Twice as Tall.

Works edit

  • Park, Mungo (1797). "Descriptions of eight new fishes from Sumatra. Read 4 November 1794". Transactions of the Linnean Society. 3: 33–38. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1797.tb00553.x.
  • — (1799). Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa: Performed Under the Direction and Patronage of the African Association, in the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797. London: W. Bulmer and Company.
  • — (1815). The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa, in the Year 1805: Together with other documents, official and private, relating to the same mission : to which is prefixed an account of the life of Mr. Park. London: John Murray.[32]
  • — (1903) [1799-1815]. Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa: Performed in the Years 1795, 1796 & 1797, with an Account of a Subsequent Mission to That Country in 1805. London: George Newnes.
  • — (1816a). Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa: Performed in the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797. Vol. 1. London: John Murray.
  • — (1816b). Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa: Performed in the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797. Vol. 2. London: John Murray.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ the black slave-merchants

References edit

  1. ^ Park 1815, p. iii.
  2. ^ Thomson 1890, pp. 37-38.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Chisholm 1911, pp. 826-827.
  4. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  5. ^ Anonymous ("H.B.") 1835, p. 14.
  6. ^ a b Holmes 2008, p. 221.
  7. ^ Lupton 1979, p. 10.
  8. ^ Lupton 1979, pp. 17, 38.
  9. ^ Park 1797.
  10. ^ Anonymous ("H.B.") 1835, p. 34.
  11. ^ Park 1799, p. 29.
  12. ^ Park 1799, p. 194.
  13. ^ Park 1799, p. 211.
  14. ^ Park 1799, p. 238.
  15. ^ Schaffer, Matt (2005). "Bound to Africa: The Mandinka Legacy in the New World". History in Africa. Cambridge University Press. 32: 356–357.
  16. ^ Fyfe 2004.
  17. ^ Kryza 2006, p. 11.
  18. ^ a b c Bassett, Thomas J.; Porter, Philip W. (1991). "'From the Best Authorities': The Mountains of Kong in the Cartography of West Africa*". The Journal of African History. 32 (3): 367–413. doi:10.1017/s0021853700031522. ISSN 1469-5138. S2CID 162635776.
  19. ^ Lupton 1979, p. 121.
  20. ^ Lupton 1979, pp. 125-126.
  21. ^ Park 1815, p. ix "Addenda".
  22. ^ a b c d Bovill 1968, pp. 1-30 "The Death of Mungo Park".
  23. ^ Park 1815, p. 163.
  24. ^ Isaaco 1814, p. 381.
  25. ^ a b Isaaco 1814, p. 382.
  26. ^ a b Isaaco 1814, p. 383.
  27. ^ a b Isaaco 1814, p. 384.
  28. ^ Isaaco 1814, p. 385.
  29. ^ Maclachlan 1898, p. 130-142.
  30. ^ . Royal Scottish Geographical Society. n.d. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  31. ^ Mitchell, S.A. (May 1900). "The Moon Hoax". Popular Astronomy. 8 (5): 266.
  32. ^ Gifford 1815.

Sources edit

  •   Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Park, Mungo". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 826–827.
  • Fyfe, C. (23 September 2004). "Park, Mungo (1771–1806), traveller in Africa". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. from the original on 22 October 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  • Gifford, William, ed. (April 1815). "Review of The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa, in the Year 1805 by Mungo Park". The Quarterly Review. 13: 120–151.
  • Anonymous ("H.B.") (1835). The Life of Mungo Park. Edinburgh: Fraser.
  • Bovill, E. W. (1968). The Niger Explored. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Holmes, Richard (2008). The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science. HarperPress. ISBN 978-0-00-714952-0.
  • Isaaco (1814). Thomson, Thomas (ed.). "Isaaco's journal of a voyage after Mr Mungo Park, to ascertain his life or death". Annals of Philosophy. Robert Baldwin. IV (23): 369–385. The Annals notes that Isaaco's account was "written originally in Arabic, from which it was translated into Joliffe [?], thence to French, and from French into English". The footnote ends: It appears to have been very badly translated, and is in many parts scarcely intelligible".
  • Kryza, Frank T. (2006). The Race for Timbuktu: In Search of Africa's City of Gold. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0060560649.
  • Lupton, Kenneth (1979). Mungo Park: The African Traveler. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-211749-6.
  • Maclachlan, T. Banks (1898). Mungo Park. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
  • Thomson, Joseph (1890). Mungo Park and the Niger. New York: Dodd, Mead and Co.

Further reading edit

  • Anonymous (1810). Proceedings of the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa (Volume 1). London: W. Bulmer and Co. pp. 331–400.
  • Anonymous (May 1815). "Biographic account of the late Mungo Park". Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany. 77 (5): 339–344.
  • Clapperton, Hugh; Lander, Richard (1829). Journal of a second expedition into the interior of Africa, from the Bight of Benin to Soccatoo by the late Commander Clapperton of the Royal Navy to which is added The Journal of Richard Lander from Kano to the Sea-Coast Partly by a More Easterly Route. London: John Murray.
  • L'Etang, H. (October 1971). "Mungo Park (1771-?1806)". The Practitioner. 207 (1240): 562–566. PMID 4943700.
  • McIntyre, Neil (2008). "Mungo Park (1771–1806)". Journal of Medical Biography. 16 (1): 63. doi:10.1258/jmb.2005.005069. PMID 18463070. S2CID 8349527.
  • Mitchell, James Leslie (1934). Niger: The Life of Mungo Park. Lewis Grassic Gibbon (pseud). Edinburgh: Porpoise Press. OCLC 894747.
  • Schwartz, Joel S. (2021). Robert Brown and Mungo Park: Travels and Explorations in Natural History for the Royal Society. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. ISBN 978-3-030-74858-6.
  • Swinton, W.E. (1977). "Physicians as explorers: Mungo Park, the doctor on the Niger". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 117 (6): 695–697. PMC 1879802. PMID 332315.
  • Tait, H.P. (1957). "Mungo Park, surgeon and explorer". Medical History. 1 (2): 140–149. doi:10.1017/s0025727300021050. PMC 1034261. PMID 13417896.
  • Unknown (1851) [1840]. The Life and Travels of Mungo Park: With the Account of His Death. New York: Harper and Brothers.

External links edit

mungo, park, explorer, other, uses, mungo, park, disambiguation, mungo, park, september, 1771, 1806, scottish, explorer, west, africa, after, exploration, upper, niger, river, around, 1796, wrote, popular, influential, travel, book, titled, travels, interior, . For other uses see Mungo Park disambiguation Mungo Park 11 September 1771 1806 was a Scottish explorer of West Africa After an exploration of the upper Niger River around 1796 he wrote a popular and influential travel book titled Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa in which he theorized the Niger and Congo merged to become the same river though it was later proven that they are different rivers He was killed during a second expedition having successfully travelled about two thirds of the way down the Niger Mungo ParkPosthumous portrait 1859 by unknown artistBorn11 September 1771 1771 09 11 Selkirkshire ScotlandDied1806 1807 aged 35 Bussa NigeriaAlma materUniversity of EdinburghKnown forExploration of West AfricaScientific careerFieldsAfrican explorerSurgeon s mateMungo Park commemorative medalIf the African Association was the beginning of the age of African exploration then Mungo Park was its first successful explorer he set a standard for all who followed Park was the first Westerner to have recorded travels in the central portion of the Niger and through his popular book introduced the public to a vast unexplored continent which influenced future European explorers and colonial ambitions in Africa Contents 1 Early life 2 Travels into the interior of Africa 2 1 First journey 2 2 Controversy 2 3 Between journeys 2 4 Second journey 2 5 Death 2 6 Aftermath 3 Medal 4 Memorial 5 In media 6 Works 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editMungo Park was born in Selkirkshire Scotland at Foulshiels on the Yarrow Water near Selkirk on a tenant farm which his father rented from the Duke of Buccleuch He was the seventh in a family of thirteen 1 2 3 Although tenant farmers the Parks were relatively well off They were able to pay for Park to receive a good education and Park s father died leaving property valued at 3 000 equivalent to 258 000 in 2021 4 His parents had originally intended him for a ministry in the Church of Scotland 5 He was educated at home before attending Selkirk grammar school At the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to Thomas Anderson a surgeon in Selkirk During his apprenticeship Park became friends with Anderson s son Alexander and was introduced to Anderson s daughter Allison who would later become his wife 6 In October 1788 Park enrolled at the University of Edinburgh attending for four sessions studying medicine and botany Notably during his time at university he spent a year in the natural history course taught by Professor John Walker After completing his studies he spent a summer in the Scottish Highlands engaged in botanical fieldwork with his brother in law James Dickson a gardener and seed merchant in Covent Garden In 1788 Dickson along with Sir James Edward Smith and six other fellows founded the Linnean Society of London In 1792 Park completed his medical studies at University of Edinburgh 7 Through a recommendation by Joseph Banks he obtained the post of surgeon s mate on board the East India Company s ship Worcester In February 1793 the Worcester sailed to Benkulen in Sumatra Before departing Park wrote to his friend Alexander Anderson in terms that reflect his Calvinist upbringing My hope is now approaching to a certainty If I be deceived may God alone put me right for I would rather die in the delusion than wake to all the joys of earth May the Holy Spirit dwell in your heart my dear friend and if I ever see my native land again may I rather see the green sod on your grave than see you anything but a Christian Lupton 1979 p 14 On his return in 1794 Park gave a lecture to the Linnaean Society describing eight new Sumatran fish The paper was not published until three years later 8 9 He also presented Banks with various rare Sumatran plants Travels into the interior of Africa editFirst journey edit nbsp View of Kamalia in Mandingo country Africa from Mungo Park Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa nbsp Park was one of the first European explorers of Central Africa and was one of the first explorers mentioned in Reisen in Central Afrika von Mungo Park bis auf Dr Barth u Dr Vogel 1859 Travels in Central Africa from Mungo Park to Dr Barth and Dr Vogel On 26 September 1794 Mungo Park offered his services to the African Association then looking for a successor to Major Daniel Houghton who had been sent in 1790 to discover the course of the Niger River and had died in the Sahara Supported by Sir Joseph Banks Park was selected 3 On 22 May 1795 Park left Portsmouth England on the brig Endeavour a vessel travelling to Gambia to trade for beeswax and ivory 10 On 21 June 1795 he reached the Gambia River and ascended it 200 miles 300 km to a British trading station named Pisania On 2 December accompanied by two local guides he started for the unknown interior 11 He chose the route crossing the upper Senegal basin and through the semi desert region of Kaarta The journey was full of difficulties and at Ludamar he was imprisoned by a Moorish chief for four months On 1 July 1796 he escaped alone and with nothing but his horse and a pocket compass and on the 21st reached the long sought Niger River at Segou being the first European to do so 12 He followed the river downstream 80 miles 130 km to Silla where he was obliged to turn back 3 lacking the resources to go further 13 On his return journey begun on 29 July he took a route more to the south than that originally followed keeping close to the Niger River as far as Bamako thus tracing its course for some 300 miles 500 km 14 At Kamalia he fell ill and owed his life to the kindness of a man in whose house he lived for seven months Eventually he reached Pisania again on 10 June 1797 Unable to book passage directly to England from Bathurst he boarded a slave ship bound for Charleston Having learned the Mandinka language during his travels he served as doctor to the slaves many of whom died en route 15 The ship was eventually forced to dock in Antigua from which he returned to Scotland on 22 December He had been thought dead and his return home with news of his exploration of the Niger River evoked great public enthusiasm An account of his journey was drawn up for the African Association by Bryan Edwards and his own detailed narrative appeared in 1799 Travels in the Interior of Africa 3 Park was convinced that whatever difference there is between the negro and European in the conformation of the nose and the colour of the skin there is none in the genuine sympathies and characteristic feelings of our common nature Park 1799 p 82 Park encountered a group of slaves when travelling through Mandinka country Mali They were all very inquisitive but they viewed me at first with looks of horror and repeatedly asked if my countrymen were cannibals They were very desirous to know what became of the slaves after they had crossed the salt water I told them that they were employed in cultivating the land but they would not believe me and one of them putting his hand upon the ground said with great simplicity have you really got such ground as this to set your feet upon A deeply rooted idea that the whites purchase Negroes for the purpose of devouring them or of selling them to others that they may be devoured hereafter naturally makes the slaves contemplate a journey towards the Coast with great terror insomuch that the Slatees a are forced to keep them constantly in irons and watch them very closely to prevent their escape Park 1799 p 319 His book Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa became a best seller 6 because it detailed what he observed what he survived and the people he encountered 16 His dispassionate if not scientific or objective descriptions set a standard for future travel writers to follow and gave Europeans a glimpse of Africa s humanity and complexity Park introduced them to a vast continent unexplored by Europeans If the African Association was the beginning of the age of African exploration 17 then Mungo Park was its first successful explorer he set a standard for all who followed After his death European public and political interest in Africa began to increase Perhaps the most lasting effect of Park s travels though was the influence on European colonial ambitions during the 19th century Controversy edit Mungo Park is credited with the original report of the Mountains of Kong a mountain range rumored to be located in West Africa beginning near the source of the Niger River and spanning the majority of the African continent from east to west This mountain range was published by geographer and cartographer James Rennell 18 Debate surrounding the existence of the mountain range occurred frequently however it was French officer and explorer Louis Gustave Binger officially reported that the Mountains of Kong did not exist during an expedition in 1887 1888 18 It was not long after this that the Mountains of Kong were dropped from most map publications While the Mountains of Kong have been disproven it has remained periodically on maps in until the early 20th century 18 Between journeys edit nbsp Mungo Park s doorplate from his house in Peebles National Museum of ScotlandSettling at Foulshiels in August 1799 Park married Allison daughter of his apprenticeship master Thomas Anderson 19 A project to go to New South Wales in some official capacity came to nothing and in October 1801 Park moved to Peebles where he practiced as a physician 20 3 Second journey edit In the autumn of 1803 Park was invited by the government to lead another expedition to the Niger Park who chafed at the hardness and monotony of life at Peebles accepted the offer but the expedition was delayed Part of the waiting time was occupied perfecting his Arabic his teacher Sidi Ambak Bubi was a native of Mogador now Essaouira in Morocco whose behavior both amused and alarmed the people of Peebles 3 nbsp Map of Mungo Park s journeysIn May 1804 Park went back to Foulshiels where he made the acquaintance of Walter Scott then living nearby at Ashiesteil and with whom he soon became friendly In September Park was summoned to London to leave on the new expedition he left Scott with the hopeful proverb on his lips 3 Freits omens follow those that look to them 21 Park had at that time adopted the theory that the Niger and the Congo were one and in a memorandum drawn up before he left Britain he wrote My hopes of returning by the Congo are not altogether fanciful 3 On 31 January 1805 he sailed from Portsmouth for Gambia having been given a captain s commission as head of the government expedition Alexander Anderson his brother in law and second in command had received a lieutenancy George Scott a fellow Borderer was draughtsman and the party included four or five artificers At Goree then in British occupation Park was joined by Lieutenant Martyn R A thirty five privates and two seamen 3 The expedition got a late start into the rainy season and did not reach the Niger until mid August when only eleven Europeans were left alive the rest had succumbed to fever or dysentery 22 From Bamako the journey to Segou was made by canoe Having received permission from the local ruler Mansong Diarra to proceed at Sansanding a little below Segou Park made ready for his journey down the still unknown part of the river Helped by one soldier the only one capable of work Park converted two canoes into one tolerably good boat 40 feet 12 m long and 6 feet 2 m broad This he christened H M schooner Joliba the native name for the Niger River and in it with the surviving members of his party he set sail downstream on 19 November 3 Anderson had died at Sansanding on 28 October and in him Park had lost one of his few remaining valuable members 23 Those who embarked in the Joliba were Park Martyn three European soldiers one mad a guide and three slaves Before his departure Park gave to Isaaco a Mandingo guide who had been with him thus far letters to take back to Gambia for transmission to Britain 3 The Muslim traders along this section of the Niger did not believe Park was exploring purely for intellectual curiosity but was scouting European trading routes they saw Park as a threat to their trading dominance 22 They lobbied Mansong Diarra to have Park killed and when Mansong did not they lobbied tribes further down the river Park understood the politics and adopted a policy of staying away from the shore towards the middle of the 2 to 3 mile wide 3 to 5 kilometre river while attacking anyone who came near 22 In the process he also avoided paying tolls bribes to pass through each kingdom earning the rage of local rulers Moorish or not who would send messengers ahead to the next tribe downriver that a dangerous interloper was coming their way Furthermore Park s policy of shoot first and not engaging with locals in some cases slaughtering significant numbers of natives using superior firepower made the Europeans something of a pariah Park was running a gauntlet of hostile tribes in part of his own making 22 To his wife Park wrote of his intention not to stop nor land anywhere until he reached the coast where he expected to arrive about the end of January 1806 3 These were the last communications received from Park and nothing more was heard of the party until reports of disaster reached Gambia 3 Death edit nbsp The Mungo Park Monument in Selkirk Scotland by Andrew CurrieAt length the British government engaged Isaaco to go to the Niger to ascertain Park s fate At Sansanding Isaaco found Amadi Fatouma Isaaco calls him Amaudy 24 the guide who had gone downstream with Park and the substantial accuracy of the story he told was later confirmed by the investigations of Hugh Clapperton and Richard Lander 3 Amadi Fatouma stated that Park s canoe had descended the river as far as Sibby without incident After Sibby three native canoes chased them and Park s party repulsed the pursuers with firearms 25 A similar incident occurred at Cabbara and again at Toomboucouton At Gouroumo seven canoes pursued them One of the party died of sickness leaving four white men myself Amadi and three slaves Each person including the slaves had 15 musquets apiece well loaded and always ready for action 25 After passing the residence of the king of Goloijigi 60 canoes came after them which they repulsed after killing many natives Further along they encountered an army of the Poule nation and kept to the opposite bank to avoid an action After a close encounter with a hippopotamus they continued past Caffo 3 canoe pursuers to an island where Isaaco was taken prisoner Park rescued him and 20 canoes chased them This time they merely asked Amadi for trinkets which Park supplied 26 At Gourmon they traded for provisions and were warned of an ambush ahead They passed the army being all Moors and entered Haoussa finally arriving at Yauri which Amadi calls Yaour 26 where he Fatouma landed To this point of the journey of some 1 000 miles 1 600 km Park who had plenty of provisions stuck to his resolution of keeping away from the natives Below Djenne came Timbuktu and at various other places the natives came out in canoes and attacked his boat These attacks were all repulsed Park and his party having plenty of firearms and ammunition and the natives having none The boat also escaped the many perils attendant on navigating an unknown stream strewn with many rapids 3 Park had built Joliba so that she drew only 1 foot 30 cm of water At Haoussa Amadi traded with the local chief Amadi reports that Park gave him five silver rings some powder and flints to give as a gift to the chief of the village The following day Amadi visited the king where Amadi was accused of not having given the chief a present Amadi was put in irons The king then sent an army to Boussa where there is a natural narrowing of the river commanded by high rock 27 But at the Bussa rapids not far below Yauri Park s boat became stuck on a rock and remained fast On the bank were gathered hostile natives who attacked the party with bow and arrow and throwing spears Their position being untenable Park Martyn and the two remaining soldiers sprang into the river and were drowned The sole survivor was one of the slaves After three months in irons Amadi was released and talked with the surviving slave from whom was obtained the story of the final scene 27 3 Aftermath edit Amadi paid a Peulh man to obtain Park s sword belt Amadi then returned first to Sansanding and then to Segou After Amadi went to Dacha and told the king what had occurred The king sent an army past Tombouctou Timbuktu to Sacha but decided that Haoussa was too far for a punitive expedition Instead they went to Massina a small Paul Peulh country where they took all the cattle and returned home Amadi appears to have been part of this expedition We came altogether back to Sego Segou Amadi then returned to Sansanding via Sego Eventually the Peulh man obtained the sword belt and after a voyage of eight months met up with Amadi and gave him the belt Isaaco met Amadi in Sego and having obtained the sword belt returned to Senegal 28 Isaaco and later Richard Lander obtained some of Park s effects but his journal was never recovered In 1827 his second son Thomas landed on the Guinea coast intending to make his way to Bussa where he thought his father might be detained a prisoner but after penetrating a little distance inland he died of fever 3 Park s widow Allison received a previously agreed upon 4 000 settlement from the African Association as a result of the death of Mungo Park She died in 1840 Mungo Park s remains are believed to have been buried along the banks of the River Niger in Jebba Nigeria With Park s death the mystery of the Niger remained unsolved Park s theory that the Niger and Congo were the same river became the general opinion in the years after his death However even while Park was alive an amateur German geographer named Reichard proposed the Niger delta was the mouth of the river but his theory was one of many and did not have much currency because the delta had so many small streams it did not appear to be from a great river In 1821 James McQueen published a book the result of 25 years of research in which he correctly it would later be seen laid out the entire course of the Niger however like Reichard his theories did not receive much notice A number of failed expeditions were mounted but the mystery would finally be solved 25 years after Park s death in 1830 Richard Lander and his brother became the first Europeans to follow the course of the Niger from source to ocean 29 His son Mungo Park 1800 1823 died in India at the age of 22 while in government service and was buried at Trichinopoly Medal editThe Royal Scottish Geographical Society award the Mungo Park Medal annually in Park s honour 30 Memorial editA life size statue was erected to Park on the High Street in Selkirk in 1859 The monument was sculpted by Andrew Currie In 1905 the monument had bronze figures added on the corners and two bas relief panels all by Thomas J Clapperton In media editCirca 1836 Richard Adams Locke author of the Great Moon Hoax composed a fictional Lost Manuscript of Mungo Park 31 in which Park explores the interior of the hollow Earth Mungo Park is mentioned in Herman Melville s 1851 novel Moby Dick Chapter 5 Breakfast and several times parodically in Ernest Hemingway s short story A Natural History of the Dead Mungo Park appears as one of the two protagonists in T C Boyle s 1981 historical novel Water Music Tom Fremantle s 2005 travelogue The Road to Timbuktu Down the Niger on the Trail of Mungo Park details Mungo Park s biography and retraces his travels Nigerian singer Burna Boy mentions Park in his song Monsters You Made on the 2020 album Twice as Tall Works editPark Mungo 1797 Descriptions of eight new fishes from Sumatra Read 4 November 1794 Transactions of the Linnean Society 3 33 38 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1797 tb00553 x 1799 Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa Performed Under the Direction and Patronage of the African Association in the Years 1795 1796 and 1797 London W Bulmer and Company 1815 The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa in the Year 1805 Together with other documents official and private relating to the same mission to which is prefixed an account of the life of Mr Park London John Murray 32 1903 1799 1815 Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa Performed in the Years 1795 1796 amp 1797 with an Account of a Subsequent Mission to That Country in 1805 London George Newnes 1816a Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa Performed in the Years 1795 1796 and 1797 Vol 1 London John Murray 1816b Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa Performed in the Years 1795 1796 and 1797 Vol 2 London John Murray See also editPhysician writerNotes edit the black slave merchantsReferences edit Park 1815 p iii Thomson 1890 pp 37 38 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Chisholm 1911 pp 826 827 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Anonymous H B 1835 p 14 a b Holmes 2008 p 221 Lupton 1979 p 10 Lupton 1979 pp 17 38 Park 1797 Anonymous H B 1835 p 34 Park 1799 p 29 Park 1799 p 194 Park 1799 p 211 Park 1799 p 238 Schaffer Matt 2005 Bound to Africa The Mandinka Legacy in the New World History in Africa Cambridge University Press 32 356 357 Fyfe 2004 Kryza 2006 p 11 a b c Bassett Thomas J Porter Philip W 1991 From the Best Authorities The Mountains of Kong in the Cartography of West Africa The Journal of African History 32 3 367 413 doi 10 1017 s0021853700031522 ISSN 1469 5138 S2CID 162635776 Lupton 1979 p 121 Lupton 1979 pp 125 126 Park 1815 p ix Addenda a b c d Bovill 1968 pp 1 30 The Death of Mungo Park Park 1815 p 163 Isaaco 1814 p 381 a b Isaaco 1814 p 382 a b Isaaco 1814 p 383 a b Isaaco 1814 p 384 Isaaco 1814 p 385 Maclachlan 1898 p 130 142 Mungo Park Medal Royal Scottish Geographical Society n d Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 December 2015 Mitchell S A May 1900 The Moon Hoax Popular Astronomy 8 5 266 Gifford 1815 Sources edit nbsp Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Park Mungo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 826 827 Fyfe C 23 September 2004 Park Mungo 1771 1806 traveller in Africa Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Archived from the original on 22 October 2023 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Gifford William ed April 1815 Review of The Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa in the Year 1805 by Mungo Park The Quarterly Review 13 120 151 Anonymous H B 1835 The Life of Mungo Park Edinburgh Fraser Bovill E W 1968 The Niger Explored London Oxford University Press Holmes Richard 2008 The Age of Wonder How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science HarperPress ISBN 978 0 00 714952 0 Isaaco 1814 Thomson Thomas ed Isaaco s journal of a voyage after Mr Mungo Park to ascertain his life or death Annals of Philosophy Robert Baldwin IV 23 369 385 The Annals notes that Isaaco s account was written originally in Arabic from which it was translated into Joliffe thence to French and from French into English The footnote ends It appears to have been very badly translated and is in many parts scarcely intelligible Kryza Frank T 2006 The Race for Timbuktu In Search of Africa s City of Gold New York HarperCollins ISBN 0060560649 Lupton Kenneth 1979 Mungo Park The African Traveler Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211749 6 Maclachlan T Banks 1898 Mungo Park Edinburgh Oliphant Anderson amp Ferrier Thomson Joseph 1890 Mungo Park and the Niger New York Dodd Mead and Co Further reading editAnonymous 1810 Proceedings of the Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa Volume 1 London W Bulmer and Co pp 331 400 Anonymous May 1815 Biographic account of the late Mungo Park Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany 77 5 339 344 Clapperton Hugh Lander Richard 1829 Journal of a second expedition into the interior of Africa from the Bight of Benin to Soccatoo by the late Commander Clapperton of the Royal Navy to which is added The Journal of Richard Lander from Kano to the Sea Coast Partly by a More Easterly Route London John Murray L Etang H October 1971 Mungo Park 1771 1806 The Practitioner 207 1240 562 566 PMID 4943700 McIntyre Neil 2008 Mungo Park 1771 1806 Journal of Medical Biography 16 1 63 doi 10 1258 jmb 2005 005069 PMID 18463070 S2CID 8349527 Mitchell James Leslie 1934 Niger The Life of Mungo Park Lewis Grassic Gibbon pseud Edinburgh Porpoise Press OCLC 894747 Schwartz Joel S 2021 Robert Brown and Mungo Park Travels and Explorations in Natural History for the Royal Society Cham Switzerland Springer ISBN 978 3 030 74858 6 Swinton W E 1977 Physicians as explorers Mungo Park the doctor on the Niger Canadian Medical Association Journal 117 6 695 697 PMC 1879802 PMID 332315 Tait H P 1957 Mungo Park surgeon and explorer Medical History 1 2 140 149 doi 10 1017 s0025727300021050 PMC 1034261 PMID 13417896 Unknown 1851 1840 The Life and Travels of Mungo Park With the Account of His Death New York Harper and Brothers External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mungo Park Works by Mungo Park at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Mungo Park at Internet Archive Works by Mungo Park at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mungo Park explorer amp oldid 1205276963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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