The narrative of an explorer in tropical South Africa by Francis Galton
"The narrative of an explorer in tropical South Africa" by Francis Galton is a historical travel narrative written in the mid-19th century. It recounts an overland expedition from the Atlantic coast at Walfisch Bay into the interior of what is now Namibia, mapping routes, assessing terrain and water, and describing encounters with Damara, Hottentot, and Ovampo communities. The work blends practical exploration logistics with ethnographic observation and reflections on missionary prospects and
trade. The opening of the book sets out the aims and scope of the journey: to fill a blank on the map between the Cape Colony and the Portuguese coast up toward Lake ’Ngami, with first reports on the Damaras, Hottentots, and the agriculturally adept Ovampo, and a case for Ondonga as a promising, healthy base for missions and trade. Galton explains why explorations advance step by step, outlines his dates and routes, and then narrates how Boer unrest blocked the usual Bechuana approach, pushing him to choose Walfisch Bay with missionary support. He details preparations—wagons, mules, pack-oxen, barter goods, servants, and dogs—followed by a stark landfall on the mirage-haunted coast, brackish wells at Sand Fountain, tobacco as currency, and the novelty of ride-oxen. Moving inland to Scheppmansdorf, he describes the mission layout and a tense series of lion encounters culminating in killing a notorious cattle-raider, then breaks in pack-oxen, distributes loads, and begins the desert crossing to the Swakop; there, heat, thirst, and a misjudged decision to leave stock unattended lead to lions taking a mule and a horse, a failed nocturnal ambush, and a sobering, reduced push onward. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
The narrative of an explorer in tropical South Africa
Original Publication
London: John Murray, 1853.
Credits
Peter Becker and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)