The Panama Canal Construction Process through Amazing Vintage Photos

   

The Panama Canal, a 77.1-kilometre (48 mi) ship canal in Panama that connects the Atlantic Ocean (via the Caribbean Sea) to the Pacific Ocean, was began to construct in 1881 by France, but had to stop because of engineering problems and high mortality due to disease. The United States took over the project in 1904, and took a decade to complete the canal, which was officially opened on August 15, 1914.

It's one of the largest and most difficult engineering projects ever undertaken, the Panama Canal shortcut greatly reduced the time for ships to travel between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, enabling them to avoid the lengthy, hazardous Cape Horn route around the southernmost tip of South America via the Drake Passage or Strait of Magellan. The shorter, faster, and safer route to the U.S. West Coast and to nations in and around the Pacific Ocean allowed those places to become more integrated with the world economy.

 
The United States took over the original canal-construction project from the French, 1904

 

 
Theodore Roosevelt visiting the Panama Canal construction site, 1904

 

 
The railroad in use in the Culebra Cut, December 1904
 

 

Steam shovels load rocks blasted away onto twin tracks that remove the earth from the Panama Canal bed, 1908

 

 
President Theodore Roosevelt on a steam-powered digging machine during construction of the Panama Canal, 1908


 
A work crew standing on the tracks by a locomotive while a steam shovel loads a dirt car in the background, 1909

 

 
Loading holes with dynamite, June 6, 1909
 

 

 
North approach, Pedro Miguel Lock, Panama Canal, ca. 1910

 

 
Panama Canal construction, ca. 1910

 

View of the Locks under construction, 1912

 

Panama Canal excavation, 1913

 

The fifty-mile Panama Canal under construction, 1913

 

Workers standing near a landslide that destroyed digging machinery, during the construction of the Panama Canal at Culebra Cut in Panama, May 29, 1913

 

Panama Canal, Gatun Lake spillway, 1914
 

 

The Panama Canal opened on Aug. 15, 1914. The first ship through was the U.S. steamer the SS Ancon

 

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