Glasgow Times

REVAMPED MUSEUM IS UP FOR TOP PRIZE

Heritage centre is nominated for award following £9.1m makeover

- BY HELEN MCARDLE

ONE of Scotland’s bestknown heritage centres has been nominated in the “Oscars” of the museum world. The David Livingston­e Birthplace Museum is up for Best Permanent Exhibition at the Museums & Heritage Awards 2022, following a £9.1 million revamp funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Historic Environmen­t Scotland and the Scottish Government.

The accolades celebrate the very best in the world of museums, galleries, cultural and heritage visitor attraction­s worldwide.

The small and independen­t David Livingston­e Trust, which owns and manages the museum, is Scotland’s only nomination in the category.

The newly reopened facility, located on the site of the former Cotton Works in Blantyre, South Lanarkshir­e,

where David Livingston­e was born and raised, now offers visitors a more in-depth perspectiv­e on the explorer’s achievemen­ts and failures, as well as a deeper understand­ing of marginalis­ed histories and Scotland’s role in slavery and colonisati­on.

Livingston­e, a Scottish physician and pioneering Christian missionary, became a life-long abolitioni­st and well-respected explorer in Africa. His extraordin­ary story transforme­d him into one of the most celebrated British figures of the Victorian era.

The museum refurbishm­ent involved essential repairs to Shuttle Row and the major upgrading of the visitor experience.

The new permanent exhibition displays more than 40 per cent of the museum’s collection of more than 4,000 objects - an increase of 30% from what was displayed before.

Items on show include Livingston­e’s internatio­nally important letters and journals; the red shirt the explorer was wearing when he first met Henry Morton Stanley in 1871; and objects belonging to two of Livingston­e’s most well-known crew members, Abdullah Susi and James Chuma.

Susi – from what is known today as Mozambique – and Chuma, from today’s Malawi, are included in a dedicated exhibition of their own at the museum, while a special “Legacy Space” presents the impact Livingston­e continues to have on the Sub-Saharan countries he visited in his lifetime.

The exhibition has been praised by the National Lottery Heritage Fund for its “richer, more representa­tive picture of David Livingston­e’s story” – particular­ly for shifting the focus of Livingston­e from that of a “Lone White Explorer”, as was the late 19th and early 20th century interpreta­tion, to instead highlighti­ng the contributi­on of southern and central African crew members who made his expedition­s possible and the input of the Sub-Saharan Africans he met.

Grant MacKenzie, director and trustee at the David Livingston­e Birthplace Museum and David Livingston­e Trust, said: “When many of the books about Livingston­e were initially written, there wasn’t much informatio­n about the people he met and worked with in Africa. Some of them weren’t named, some of them weren’t even written about.

“We have found out lots more about them since then, and the reinterpre­tation of the collection is much more reflective of the real experience­s Livingston­e had.”

 ?? ?? A display of African community objects of the type David Livingston­e would have come across on his travels
A display of African community objects of the type David Livingston­e would have come across on his travels

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