Panama Canal Railway
The Panama Railway or Panama Railroad was the world's first transcontinental railroad. It stretches 48 miles (77 km) across the isthmus of Panama from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. The Panama Railway was built during the period of 1850 to 1855. The infrastructure of this functioning railroad was of vital importance to the plan to build the Panama Canal decades later.
The need for the railway was inspired by the California Gold Rush. The project was begun in 1850 and the railroad was completed in 1855, with the first train running from ocean to ocean on 28 January of that year.
History
While the Camino Real, and later the Las Cruces trail, served communication across the isthmus for over three centuries, by the 19th century it was becoming clear that a cheaper and faster alternative was required. Given the difficulty of constructing a canal with the available technology, a railway seemed the ideal solution.
President Bolívar of Colombia commissioned a study into the possibility of building a railway from Chagres (on the Chagres River) to the town of Panamá; this study was carried out between 1827 and 1829, and reported that such a railway would be possible. However, the idea was shelved.
In 1836, President Jackson of the United States commissioned a study of proposed routes for interoceanic communication, in order to protect the interests of Americans travelling between the oceans. This resulted in the United States acquiring a franchise for a trans-Isthmian railroad; however, the scheme was a victim of the panic of 1837, and came to nothing.
In 1838 a French company was given a concession for the construction of a road, rail or canal route across the isthmus. An initial engineering study recommended a canal from Limón Bay to the bay of Boca del Monte, twelve miles west of Panama; but the scheme again collapsed for lack of funding.
Following the acquisition of Upper California in 1848, and the increasing movement of settlers to the west coast, the United States once again turned its attention to securing a safe, reliable and speedy link between the oceans. Congress therefore authorized the running of two lines of mail ships, one from New York to Chagres, and the other from Oregon and California to Panamá.
At this stage, the actual transit across the isthmus was by the old trails, which were falling into disrepair; a transit would usually take four or five days. William H. Aspinwall, the man who had taken up the operation of the Pacific mail ships, instigated a scheme to construct a railway across the isthmus; he and his partners created a company, raised $1,000,000 from the sale of stock, and began work. Their venture was singularly well-timed, as the discovery of gold in California created a rush of emigrants wishing to cross the isthmus.
In May 1850, the first sod was turned on the project; but very quickly, the difficulty of the scheme became apparent. The heat was stifling, and deluges of rain for almost half the year required the workers to operate in water up to four feet deep. Yellow fever and malaria took a deadly toll, and despite the continual importation of large numbers of workers, there were times when the work stalled for simple lack of fit workers.
The project's fortunes turned in November 1851, when two steamships were forced to shelter in Limón Bay due to stormy weather. Since the railroad's docks had been completed by this time, and rail had been laid 7 miles up to Gatún, it was possible to unload the ships' cargoes of emigrants and transport them by rail — using construction vehicles — for at least the first part of their journey across the isthmus. The directors of the company immediately ordered passenger cars, and the railway began operation with 40 miles of track still to be laid. This greatly boosted the value of the company's stock, which enabled it to finance the remainder of the project.
The crest of the continental divide, at Culebra, was reached from the Atlantic side in January 1855, thirty-seven miles of track having been laid from Colón. A second team, working under less harsh conditions, completed the eleven-mile track from Panamá to the summit at midnight on January 27, 1855. The next day the first locomotive passed from sea to sea.[1]
Financing
The railway cost some $8 million USD to build (eight times the initial estimate in 1850), and presented considerable engineering challenges, going over mountains and through swamps. Over 300 bridges and culverts needed to be built along the route.
It was largely built and financed by private companies from the United States. Among key individuals in building the railway were William H. Aspinwall, George Muirson Totten, and John Lloyd Stephens. Ownership of the railroad was originally by a publicly traded corporation based in New York City, which bought exclusive rights to build across the isthmus from the government of Colombia, Panama being a province of Colombia at the time. The stock of the Panama Railway Company quickly became some of the most highly valued of the era.
The railway carried significant traffic even while it was under construction, with traffic carried by mules over the unfinished sections. This had not been originally intended, but people crossing the isthmus to California were eager to use such track as had been laid. When only 7 miles (10 km) of track had been completed the railway was doing a brisk business, charging $25 per person for the train ride and another $10 to walk the remaining 40+ miles (60 km) of right-of-way across the isthmus. By the time the line was completed, more than one-third of its cost had already been paid for from fares.
Engineering and medical difficulties made the Panama Railway the most expensive railway (per unit length of track) built at the time. Some swamps were found to require fill over 100 feet (30 m) in depth before a solid bed could be constructed.
Death toll
It is estimated that more than 12,000 people may have died in construction of the railroad, though the Panama Railway company kept no official count and the total may have been much higher. Cholera and malaria killed numerous workers. These railroad workers were from the United States, Europe, China, the West Indies, and also included some African slaves. Many of these workers had come to Panama to seek their fortune, and had arrived with little or no identification. Many died with no known next of kin, nor permanent address, nor even a last name.
Cadaver trade
As disease—spread mainly by the mosquitos that thrived in Panama's swampy conditions—and exhaustion took their toll on the workers, the disposal of unidentifiable bodies was a boon to those with proper connections. Medical schools and teaching hospitals needed cadavers to train budding physicians, and paid handsomely for anonymous bodies pickled in barrels shipped up from the tropics. The Panama Railroad Company itself sold the corpses abroad, and the income generated was sufficient to maintain the Company's own hospital. A journalist reported sighting the chief doctor at the Panama Railroad Company's hospital conscientiously bleaching skeletons of dead workers, in hopes of compiling a skeletal museum of all the known races working on the railroad.
Completion
Upon completion, the 48 mile (77 km) long railway was proclaimed an engineering marvel of the era. The line was built as double track.
The Atlantic terminal is in Colón; the Pacific in Panama City.
Until the opening of the Panama Canal, it carried the heaviest volume of freight per unit length of any railroad in the world. The existence of the railway was key in the selection of Panama as the site of the canal. In 1881 the French Compagnie Universelle du Canal Interocéanique purchased controlling interest in the Panama Railway Company. In 1904 the United States government purchased the railway from the French canal company. At the time railway assets included some 75 miles (120 km) of track, 35 locomotives, 30 passenger cars, and 900 freight cars.
The construction and opening of the Panama Canal
The railway greatly assisted in the building of the canal, which closely paralleled and in some places took over the rail line. Parts of the rail route were moved during the building of the canal, and considerable additions were made to the rail system. The rebuilt and improved Panama Railway beside the canal was completed in 1912.
Post Panama Canal
After World War II few additional improvements were made to the Panama Railway, and it declined after the US government handed over control to the government of Panama in 1979. On 19 June 1998 the government of Panama turned over control to the private Panama Canal Railway Company ("PCRC"), a joint venture between the Kansas City Southern Railroad and privately held Lanigan Holdings, LLC. In 2000 and 2001 a large project upgraded the railway to handle large shipping containers, to complement the Panama Canal in cargo transport. The line is now single track with some strategically placed sections of double track. Motive power as of October 2006 includes 10 ex-Amtrak F40PHs and 1 GP10. Rolling stock is notable for a 1938 dome car.
Gauge
The Panama Railway was originally 60 gauge, but when it was rebuilt in 2000, the gauge was changed to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) so as to use Standard gauge equipment.
See also
- Transcontinental Railroad#Panama
- History of rail transport
- Transportation in Panama
- Rail transport in Panama
- Railroads of Haiti (short note about Panama Railroad Company)