Explorer Alexander Gordon Laing will become the…
December 1825 CE
Born in Edinburgh in late 1794, he was educated by his father, William Laing, who was a private teacher of classics, and at Edinburgh University.
In 1811, he went to Barbados as clerk to his maternal uncle Colonel Gabriel Gordon.
Through General Sir George Beckwith, the governor of Barbados, he obtained an Ensigncy in the York Light Infantry Volunteers in 1813.
He was promoted Lieutenant without purchase in 1815 and transferred to the 2nd West India Regiment after his former regiment was disbanded in 1817.
In 1822 he transferred into the Royal African Colonial Corps as a Captain.
In that year, while with his regiment at Sierra Leone, he was sent by the governor Sir Charles MacCarthy, to the Mandingo country, with the double object of opening up commerce and endeavoring to abolish the slave trade in that region.
Later that year, Laing visited Falaba, the capital of the Solimana country, and ascertained the source of the Rokel.
He endeavored to reach the source of the Niger, but was stopped by the natives.
He was, however enabled to fix it with approximate accuracy.
He had takenk an active part in the Ashanti War of 1823-24, and was sent home with the dispatches containing the news of MacCarthy's death in action.
While in England in 1824, Laing prepared a narrative of his journeys, which had been published in 1825 and entitled Travels in the Timannee, Kooranko and Soolima Countries, in Western Africa.
Laing believed he had found the source of the Niger and proposed to travel along the river to its delta.
Joseph Banks, president of the African Association supports his project, hoping that the expedition will reveal the location of Timbuktu.
Henry, 3rd Earl Bathurst, secretary for the colonies, instructs Captain Laing to undertake a journey, via Tripoli and Timbuktu, to further elucidate the hydrography of the Niger basin.
Laing had left England in February 1825, and at Tripoli on July 14 he married Emma Warrington, daughter of the British consul.
Two days later, leaving his bride behind, he started to cross the Sahara, accompanied by a sheikh who was subsequently accused of planning his murder.
Ghadames had been reached, by an indirect route, in October 1825, and in December Laing reaches In Salah in the Tuat territory, where he is well received by one particular group of Tuareg.