Lottery funding for David Livingstone Centre revamp

David Livingstone CentreA centre dedicated to Scotland’s most famous explorer is to be transformed into a leading heritage attraction thanks to lottery funding.

The multi-million pound revamp of the David Livingstone Centre in Blantyre was awarded a £334,000 grant which will the trust which runs the centre to take forward a bid for £3.5m from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

Trustees hope a revamp will “reawaken interest” in Livingstone’s story and boost visitor numbers.

As well as opening up the existing collections and creating a dynamic new tourist attraction, the aim is to turn the museum into a centre for research supporting community regeneration and international development.



The museum is located around the house where Livingstone was born in 1813 and is run by the National Trust for Scotland and South Lanarkshire Council on behalf of the David Livingstone Trust.

The trust hopes a major redevelopment will boost visitor numbers and interest in Livingstone.

Trust chair, Dr Isabel Bruce, said: “David Livingstone was a remarkable man who lived his life of education, exploration and missionary endeavour to the full, and is warmly known by many Africans as a visionary because of his views on their potential for self-development and his respect for their human rights.

“In spite of the recent bicentenary events to mark his birth, it is still fair to say that today he is better understood and remembered in Africa than he is in the land of his birth.



“This project gives us the opportunity to reawaken his story and provide the memorial he deserves in Scotland, while enhancing his international legacy.”

The trust hopes to completely refurbish the museum and open up all the historic buildings and collections at the site.

Colin McLean, head of the Heritage Lottery Fund in Scotland, said the plan would “put David Livingstone’s birthplace on the world’s stage as a tourist destination and valuable education resource”.

“The life of David Livingstone is both incredible and inspirational yet his pioneering work is recognised more in Africa than it is in Scotland where he was born,” he said.



“We are delighted to support the development of a project which will allow us to celebrate this rich heritage.”


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