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The French Tragedy
(click on photos to enlarge)
'We are, gentlemen, soldiers under fire; let
us salute the comrade who falls in the battle, but let
us think only of the fight of tomorrow and of victory'
French engineer and lobbyist Philippe Bunau-Varilla, 1887 |
Ferdinand de Lesseps depicted as Hercules
separating the two continents. Riding a wave of public
adulation after his triumph at Suez, de Lesseps had
the charisma and force of will to make the Panama dream
a reality. |

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The beginning of the ‘big ditch’.
The French aimed to build a sea-level canal, but massively
underestimated the task ahead. |
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A French ladder excavator.
The machines that had triumphed at Suez proved unable
to cope with the heavy clays of the Chagres valley.
Most work had to be carried out by hand, and soon the
labourers were dying in their thousands. |

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With the press running for cover, the directors of the Canal Company, led by Ferdinand de Lesseps, are brought to trial. Eiffel brings up the rear. The collapse of the canal company led to a fever of recriminations in France. |
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© Matthew Parker
2007 Back
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