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VERNEY LOVETT CAMERON (1844–1894)

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 109 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VERNEY LOVETT CAMERON (1844–1894)  ,
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English traveller in Central Africa, was born at Radipole, near
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Weymouth, Dorset-
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shire, on the 1st of
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July 1844 . He entered the
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navy in 1857, served in the Abyssinian
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campaign of 1868, and was employed for a considerable time in the suppression of the East
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African slave trade . The experience thus obtained led to his being selected to command an expedition sent by the Royal
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Geographical Society in 1873, to succour Dr . Livingstone . He was also instructed to make
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independent explorations, guided by Living-stone's advice . Soon after the departure of the expedition from
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Zanzibar, Livingstone's servants were met bearing the dead
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body of their master . Cameron's two
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European companions turned back, but he continued his march and reached,
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Ujiji, on Lake Tanganyika, in
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February 1874, where he found and sent to England Livingstone's papers . Cameron spent some time determining the true form of the south
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part of the lake, and solved the question of its outlet by the
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discovery of the Lukuga
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river . From Tanganyika he struck westward to Nyangwe, the Arab
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town on the Lualaba previously visited by Livingstone . This river Cameron rightly believed to be the main stream of the
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Congo, and he endeavoured to procure canoes to follow it down . In this he was unsuccessful, owing to his refusal to countenance
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slavery, and he therefore turned south-west . After tracing the Congo-
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Zambezi
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watershed for hundreds of miles he reached Bihe and finally arrived at the coast op the 28th of November 1875, being the first European to cn ss
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Equatorial Africa from sea to sea .

His travels, which were published in 1877 under the

title Across Africa, contain valuable suggestions for the opening up of the continent, including the utilization of the
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great lakes as a " Cape to Cairo " connexion . In recognition of his
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work he was promoted to the rank of
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commander, made a Companion of the Bath and given the gold medal of the Geographical Society . The remainder of Cameron's
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life was chiefly devoted to projects for the commercial develop-ment of Africa, and to writing tales for the young . He visited the Euphrates valley in 1878–1879 in connexion with a proposed railway to the Persian Gulf, and accompanied
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Sir Richard Burton in his West African journey of 1882 . At the Gold Coast Cameron surveyed the Tarkwa region, and he was joint author with Burton of To the Gold Coast for Gold (1883) . He was killed, near Leighton
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Buzzard, by a fall from horseback when returning from hunting, on the 24th of March 1894 . A second edition of Across Africa, with new
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matter and corrected maps, appeared in 1885 . A
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summary of Cameron's great journey, from his own pen, appears in Dr Robert Brown's The Story of Africa, vol. ii. pp . 266-279 (
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London, 1893) .

End of Article: VERNEY LOVETT CAMERON (1844–1894)
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