United States Men-Of-War passing through a lock, Panama Canal, Panama, 1926. Artist: Unknown

United States Men-Of-War passing through a lock, Panama Canal, Panama, 1926. Artist: Unknown

1-630-297 - The Print Collector/Heritage Images

United States Men-Of-War passing through a lock, Panama Canal, 1926. The idea of building a canal between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans was first planned by the French civil engineer and builder of the Suez Canal, Ferdinand de Lesseps. The French began work in 1880, but 9 years later the difficulties posed by the terrain, disease and spiralling costs doomed the project to failure. The United States bought the land in 1904 for $40 million, and proceeded to complete the 80 kilometre long canal between 1904 and 1914. The building of the canal cost the lives of an estimated 25,000 workers due to accidents and tropical diseases. From An Outline of Christianity, The Story of Our Civilisation, volume 5: Christianity Today and Tomorrow, edited by RG Parsons and AS Peake, published by the Waverley Book Club (London, 1926).


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Unknown, attributed to: :
People Related
  1. RG Parsons: : Editor
  2. AS Peake: :
  3. Ferdinand de Lesseps: French: Diplomat, entrepreneur

Medium
  1. Photograph

Geographic Hierarchy

World Oceans Pacific Ocean

  1. 00 30 00 S , 091 00 00 W

World North and Central America Panama

  1. 09 00 00 N , 080 00 00 W

World Oceans Atlantic Ocean

  1. 10 00 00 N , 025 00 00 W

Category Hierarchy

Lifestyle & Leisure Transport & Travel

Trade & Industry Shipping Industry

Locations & Buildings Other

History & Politics War & Military Military Uniform & Equipment


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 4815x3630
File Size : 51,207kb


Aliases

  1. 0580014246
  1. 1-630-297
  1. 1630297

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