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Dawn in darkest Africa

Chapter 4: LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

The author records expeditions into the Congo region through vivid travel narrative and ethnographic sketches, combining descriptions of local societies with firsthand reportage on the economic and environmental effects of rubber and ivory extraction. He evaluates missionary and philanthropic activity, critiques exploitative colonial practices, and emphasizes the character and conduct of officials as pivotal to governance. Personal observation is paired with policy-minded recommendations for administrative reform and territorial reorganization, and the text is supplemented by illustrations and a map to clarify routes, peoples, and proposed changes.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Mushamalengi, “A Royal Prince” of the Bakuba Kingdom in the Upper Kasai Frontispiece
FACING PAGE
A Light-hearted Carrier 4
The Canoe Singer 4
The Vines of the Tropical Forest 8
Mrs. Harris Canoeing on the Aruwimi, Upper Congo 12
A Rickety Dug-Out 12
Wild Forest Fruit 18
The “Elephant Ear” in the Wet Season 20
Wild Forest Fruit 20
The “Healing” Fetish 24
The Baketi Memorial Ground. Trees uprooted and planted branches downwards in Memory of the Dead 24
The Swastika Cicatrice 26
The Oyster Shell Cicatrice 26
Cicatriced Women of Equatorville 28
The Bangalla “Rasp” Cicatrice 28
Bangalla Chief with Head tightly bound from birth 32
Bangalla Babe with Head tightly bound 32
A Five-Foot Beard 34
Styles of Aruwimi Head-Dress 34
The Witch 38
Slave Graveyard on the Island of San Thomé 38
The Witch Doctor with his Charms for Every Ill 40
A Native Planter in his Funtumia Plantation, Southern Nigeria 50
Rubber Collectors, Kasai River, Upper Congo 50
Women Pounding Oil Palm Nuts 54
Grinding Corn on the Kasai, Upper Congo 56
A Christian Couple returning from the Gardens towards Sunset 58
Weaving Cloth in the Kasai, Upper Congo 58
“Twin Pots” hoisted on Forked Sticks either side of Pathway in honour of newly born Twins, Bangalla, Congo 70
Wild Flowers growing on Trunk of Forest Tree 78
“The Story the Graveyards Tell” 78
Cataract Region below Stanley Pool, Belgian Congo 94
Dr. Sapara of Lagos, a Medical Man in the Service of the British Government 110
Cocoa Farm, Belgian Congo 134
A Congo Chief with some of his Wives and “Basamba” Concubines 144
A Hunter’s “Lucky” Fetish 146
Prince Eleko and Council, Southern Nigeria 168
Land Formation, Loanda, Portuguese Angola 170
Chancel and North Wall of disused Dutch Church, Loanda (see page 171) 172
Cocoa Carrying, Belgian Congo 174
Entrance to Cocoa Roça, Principe Island (Portuguese) 174
Slaves on San Thomé 180
Disused Slave Compound in rear of House, Catumbella 180
Slaves on Cocoa Roça, Principe Island 184
The End of the Slave. Two Slaves carrying Dead Comrade in Sack to Burial 184
Gum Copal for Sale, Upper Congo 214
Government Ivory and Rubber, Upper Congo 214
An Avenue of Oil Palms: Ten Years’ Growth 226
“Walking” up to Gather Fruit. Weaver Birds’ Nests on the Palm Fronds 230
Heads of Oil Palm Fruit 230
The Oil Palm in the Grip of Its Parasitic Enemy:—
The Creeper at an Early Stage 232
Root and Branch in Deadly Grip 232
Fine Heads of Oil Palm Fruit 234
Carrying Rubber Vines to Village 240
Extracting Rubber, Kasai River, Upper Congo 240
Cocoa on San Thomé. Termite Track visible on the Trunk of Tree 246
Cocoa Drying in Sun 256
The Crucifix in African Fetish Hut on the Island of San Thomé 272
Ruin of once imposing Church on the Island of Principe 272
Interior of Missionaries’ House. Basel Industrial Mission Furniture made by Gold Coast Industrial Scholars 284
Map of Central and South African Colonies with “Mother Countries” Drawn To Same Scale at end of text