Carpenter's World Travels, From Tangier to Tripoli

Author's account of travels through Algeria, Tunisia, Tripoli and the Sahara Desert with stories about the people, climate, industry and culture.

By : Frank G. Carpenter (1855 - 1924)

01 - Just a Word Before We Start



02 - In The Land of Othello



03 - About Some Matters in Business



04 - Bandit Days in Morocco



05 - Behind the Scenes with the Sultan



06 - In Spanish Africa



07 - In Oran



08 - The Delhi of North Africa



09 - The Tell and Its Farms



10 - In the Heart of the Sahara



11 - A Visit to an Oasis Republic



12 - The Garden Spots of the Desert



13 - An African Capital



14 - Behanzin, King of the Amazons



15 - The Oldest White Race of the World



16 - An Exiled African Queen



17 - The Pompeii of Africa



18 - The Garden of Allah



19 - A City of the Air



20 - Walks about Tunis



21 - Amid the Ruins of Old Carthage



22 - Where the Women Wear Trousers



23 - Kairouan the Holy



24 - To the Colosseum of El Djem by Motor



25 - Tripoli



26 - The Oases of Libya



27 - The Islands of Malta



28 - A Look Ahead in North Africa


Carpenter was born in Mansfield, Ohio, son of George F. and Jennette L. Carpenter. He graduated with a bachelor's degree from University of Wooster in 1877. He began working as a journalist for the Cleveland Leader in 1879, and in 1882 he moved to Washington DC as the correspondent there. He married Joanna D. Condict of Mansfield in 1883. In 1884 he became a correspondent for the American Press Association. In 1877 he worked for the New York World. By this point his writings were being widely syndicated to other newspapers and magazines around the USA.

Carpenter collected enough assignments with newspaper syndicates and Cosmopolitan Magazine to pay for a trip around the world in 1888-1889. He was charged with sending a "letter" each week to twelve periodicals, describing life in the countries to which he traveled. He continued to travel extensively, logging 25,000 miles in South America in 1898, and later doing letter-writing tours of Central America, South America, and Europe. From the mid 1890s until he died, Carpenter traveled almost continuously around the world, authoring nearly 40 books and many magazine articles about his travels. His travels and writings were so extensive historians have trouble placing his exact whereabouts at any given time, though his books speak to where he went.

His writings include personal memoirs and what he called 'geographical readers' for use in geography classes. These would remain standard texts used in American schools for forty years. His writings helped popularize cultural anthropology and geography. He has been noted for his 1922 study of the regeneration of Europe after WWI, and the first granted interview with Chinese statesman Li Hung Chang.

He traveled with his wife, and while not traveling they stayed in Washington, D.C., or at their home near the Shenandoah Valley in the summers. He had two children. His real estate holdings in Washington made him a millionaire. He was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, the National Press Club, and numerous scientific societies.

With his daughter Frances Carpenter, Carpenter photographed Alaska between 1910 and 1924. A collection of over 5,000 images were donated to the Library of Congress by Frances at her death in 1972. The collection at the Library of Congress totals approximately 16,800 photographs and about 7,000 negatives.

Carpenter died of sickness in 1924 while in Nanking, China, on his third round the world trip. The Boston Globe obituary observed he "always wrote fascinatingly, always in a language the common man and woman could understand, always of subjects even children are interested in. [He] had a genius for finding out things, and the things that interest everyone, and then for writing them interestingly."

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