Train collected printed books, manuscripts, photographs, maps, artifacts, and artwork on African exploration, big-game hunting, natural history, and wildlife conservation, dating primarily from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In 2004, the Russell E. Train Africana Collection was acquired by the
Smithsonian Institution Libraries, where it is housed in the Joseph F. Cullman 3rd Library of Natural History in Washington, D.C. The collection includes correspondence, drafts of publications, diaries, account books, ephemera, posters, news-clippings, biographies, memoirs, portraits, and the former personal property of selected explorers, big game hunters, missionaries, pioneers, and naturalists in Africa. The Train Collection is particularly strong in archival materials on the following topics: the search for the source of the
Nile and the progress of other exploring expeditions in Africa; the collecting of specimens of African animals, plants, and ethnological materials for zoos and museums (including a significant body of correspondence and photographs from the Smithsonian African Expedition in 1909-1910, led by President
Theodore Roosevelt); and the growth of the African wildlife conservation movement. Besides Roosevelt, the major persons represented in the Train Africana Collection include the journalist and explorer
Henry Morton Stanley and members of his
Emin Pasha Relief Expedition (
Thomas Heazle Parke,
Robert H. Nelson, James S. Jameson, John Rose Troup, William Bonny,
William Grant Stairs,
Edmund Musgrave Barttelot, and
Arthur J. M. Jephson); the medical missionary Dr.
David Livingstone and his father-in-law
Robert Moffat; taxidermist
Carl Akeley; zoologist
Edmund Heller; hunter
Frederick Selous; artist and adventure writer A. Radclyffe Dugmore; explorers
Samuel Baker,
Thomas Baines,
Richard Francis Burton and E.J. Glave; anthropologist
Paul du Chaillu; and royal traveler
Edward VIII (later the Duke of Windsor). ==See also==