The African Lakes Corporation plc (importers and exporters of goods including automobiles, tobacco and tea : 1878-2004 : Glasgow, Scotland : Blantyre, Malawi).

The African Lakes Corporation plc was established in Glasgow, Scotland in 1878 as The Livingstonia Central Africa Company . It was established by a number of philanthropic gentlemen who had been impressed by Dr. David Livingstone 's plea for the establishment of regular trade routes and the introduction of lawful commerce whereby the slave trade, dominated by Arab slavers, might be exterminated and security obtained for the life and property of the native inhabitants of Central Africa . The first directors of the company were James Stevenson, chemical manufacturer; John Stephen, shipbuilder; James White ; James "Paraffin" Young, and James S Napier, merchant. Other distinguished men later on directed the destinies of the company and among these were Sir John N Cuthbertson, Professor Henry Drummond, Mr. Alexander Mitchell, Mr A Low Bruce, Mr. William Ewing, Mr. Robert S Allan and Mr. John G Stephen . The brothers John Moir and Fred Moir, who had contemplated starting a similar company, were appointed joint managers and sent out to Africa in 1878 to start the work in Nyasaland (Malawi) by founding stations, initiating steamboat and other transport facilities, and also trading arrangements. The company faced strong opposition from Swahili slavers, who resented interference with their nefarious traffic, and also from the Portuguese, established on the coast and inland, who regarded the operations of the new company with territorial jealousy. The result was a war with the Swahili traders, the expense of which made a serious inroad upon the finances of the company, and the two Moirs were wounded in the fighting. Ultimately, however, it led to the suppression of the slave trade and the pacification of the country.

For a period the company acted as administrators of the country and in 1891 the country, forming the principal arena of the activities of the company, was brought under the British Government, whose rule had proved eminently beneficial to the local populace. A notable feature of the company is that it was probably the only trading or transport business ever formed not for the express purpose of making money, but rather to fulfil the humanitarian objectives of its initiators - namely, the abolition of the slave trade and the bestowal of freedom and safety on the natives of Nyasaland . Although the subscribed capital with which the company started in 1878 was the modest one of £120 000, nevertheless the company had been successful in earning dividends for its shareholders and its share capital remained intact. By 1938, the company had a chain of branches throughout Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia (Zambia), with a European staff of well over 100 and a record of achievement of which the company felt justly proud. In 1881 the company changed its name to The African Lakes Company Ltd , then became The African Lakes Trading Corporation Ltd in 1893, and changing again to The African Lakes Corporation Ltd in 1894 . The company's shares were acquired by the British South Africa Company in the 1930s, which later absorbed its businesses.

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