Classroom lesson · Vailima - Robert Louis Stevenson's Home · 🇼🇸 Samoa

Vailima - Robert Louis Stevenson's Home

A famous storyteller's tropical mansion in the hills of Apia

A large white colonial house surrounded by tropical trees and gardens

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Vailima is a grand old house in the hills above Apia, the capital of Samoa. It was once the home of Robert Louis Stevenson, the Scottish author who wrote Treasure Island and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. He loved Samoa so much that he moved there with his family and lived in this beautiful house until the end of his life.

Tell me more

Robert Louis Stevenson came to Samoa in 1890 after sailing across the Pacific. He had been unwell in cold, rainy Scotland, and the warm Samoan climate made him feel much better. He named his home 'Vailima', which means 'five waters' in Samoan, because five small streams run through the property.

The Samoan people loved Stevenson and gave him the nickname 'Tusitala', which means 'teller of tales'. He often told stories to the local children who visited the house. He also helped improve a road in the area, and the villagers were so grateful they built a path called the 'Road of the Loving Heart' in his memory.

Today, Vailima is a museum where visitors can walk through the rooms, see original furniture and photographs, and learn about Stevenson's life. The gardens are lush and tropical, full of the kinds of plants Stevenson wrote about in his Samoan poems and letters. It is a lovely place to learn that great stories can be written anywhere in the world.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Robert Louis Stevenson found a new home far from where he was born. What might it feel like to move to a completely different country?
  2. 02He was called 'Tusitala' - teller of tales. What would your Samoan nickname be, based on something you love to do?
  3. 03Why do you think stories like Treasure Island are still read by children more than 130 years later?
Try this

Classroom activity

Imagine you are Robert Louis Stevenson sailing into Samoa for the first time. Write a short diary entry (5-8 sentences) describing what you see, hear and smell as your ship approaches the island. Use as many describing words as possible.