Online Encyclopedia

CALLAO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 56 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

CALLAO  , a

city,
See also:
port and coast department of Peru, 81 m. west of
See also:
Lima, in 12° 04' S., 77° 13' W . Pop . (1905) 31,128, of whom 3349 were foreigners . The department includes the city and its environs, Bellavista and La Punta, and the neighbouring islands,
See also:
San Lorenzo, Fronton, the Palominos, &c., and covers an
See also:
area of 141 sq. m . Callao is the
See also:
principal port of the republic, its harbour being a large
See also:
bay sheltered by a tongue of
See also:
land on the south called La Punta, and by the islands of San Lorenzo and Fronton . The anchorage is good and safe, and the harbour is one of the best on the Pacific coast of South
See also:
America . The city stands on the south side of the bay, and is built on a flat point of land only 8 ft. above sea-level . The houses are for the most
See also:
part low and cheaply built, and the streets are narrow, badly paved, irregular and dirty . The
See also:
climate is good and the coast is swept by cool ocean breezes, the
See also:
average temperatures ranging from 65° to 77° F., but notwithstanding this, Callao has a
See also:
bad reputation for fevers and contagious diseases, chiefly because of its insanitary condition . Its noteworthy public buildings are the custom-house and its storehouses which occupy the old quadrangular fortress built by the
See also:
Spanish government between 1770 and 1775, and cover 15 acres; the prefecture, the military and
See also:
naval offices and barracks, the
See also:
post-office, three Catholic churches, a hospital, market, three clubs and some
See also:
modern commercial houses . The
See also:
present city is
See also:
half a mile north of the site of the old
See also:
town, which was destroyed by an
See also:
earthquake and tidal
See also:
wave in 1746 . For a short time the commercial interests of the stricken city centred at Bellavista, 14 m. east, where wheat
See also:
granaries were built and still remain, but later the greater convenience of a waterside site drew the merchants and population back to the vicinity of the submerged town .

The importance of Callao in colonial times, when it was the only open port south of

See also:
Panama, did not continue under the new
See also:
political order, because of the unsettled state of public affairs and the loss of its monopoly . This decline in its prosperity was checked, and the modern development of the port began, when a railway was built from Callao into the heart of the
See also:
Andes, and Callao is now an important factor in the development of copper-
See also:
mining . The port is connected with Lima by two
See also:
railways and an electric
See also:
tramway, with Oroya by railway 138 M. long, and with Cerro de Pasco by railway 221 M . A short railway also runs from the port to the Bellavista storehouses . The port is provided with modern harbour improvements, consisting of sea-walls of concrete blocks, two
See also:
fine docks with berthing spaces for 30 large vessels, and a large floating-
See also:
dock (300 ft. long on the blocks and capable of receiving vessels up to 21 ft. draught and 5000 tons
See also:
weight), which was built in
See also:
Glasgow and was sent out to Callao in 1863 . The docks are provided with
See also:
gas and electric lights, 18 steam cranes for loading and discharging vessels, a triple
See also:
line of railway and a supply of fresh
See also:
water . Callao was formerly the head-quarters in South America of the Pacific Steam Navigation Co., Ltd . (incorporated 1840), but
See also:
Valparaiso now occupies that position . There are, owing perhaps to the proximity of Lima, few
See also:
industrial establishments in the city; among them are a large
See also:
sugar refinery, some
See also:
flour-mills, a brewery, a factory for making effervescent drinks, and a number of foundries and repair shops . Being a port of the first class, Callao is an important distributing centre for the
See also:
coasting trade, in which a large number of small vessels are engaged . The
See also:
foreign steam-
See also:
ship companies making it a
See also:
regular port of call are the Pacific Steam Navigation Co . (
See also:
British), the Compania Sud-America (Chilean), the Kosmos and Roland lines (German), the Merchants line (New York), and a
See also:
Japanese line from the ports of
See also:
Japan and
See also:
China .

A subsidized Peruvian line is also contemplated to ply between the Pacific ports of South America with an eventual

extension of the service to
See also:
Europe . The arrivals from and clearances for foreign ports in 1907 were as follows: Steamers . ,Sailing Vessels . No .
See also:
Tonnage . No . Tonnage . Arrivals 518 937,302 924 174,165 Clearances . 517 937,706 931 163,365 The exports from Callao are guano, sugar, cotton, wool, hides,
See also:
silver, copper, gold and
See also:
forest products, and the imports include
See also:
timber and other
See also:
building materials, cotton and other textiles, general merchandise for
See also:
personal, household and industrial uses, railway material,
See also:
coal, kerosene, wheat, flour and other food stuffs . The maintenance of peace and order, and the mining development of the interior, have added to the trade and prosperity of the port . The
See also:
history of Callao has been exceptionally eventful . It was founded in 1537, two years after Pizarro had founded Lima .

As the port of that

capital and the only open port below Panama it grew rapidly in importance and
See also:
wealth . It was raised to the dignity of a city in 167r . The appearance of
See also:
Sir Francis Drake in the bay in 1578 led to the fortification of the port, which proved strong enough to repel an attack by the Dutch in 1624 . The city was completely destroyed and partly submerged by the
See also:
great earthquake of the 28th of
See also:
October 1746, in which about 6000 persons perished . The new city was strongly fortified and figured prominently in the struggle for independence, and also in the various revolutions which have convulsed the republic . Its political autonomy
See also:
dates from 1836, when it was made a coast department . The Callao fortifications were bombarded by a Spanish
See also:
fleet under
See also:
Admiral Mendez Nunez on the 2nd of May 1866, when there were heavy losses both in lives and material . Again, in 188o, the city wasbombarded by the Chileans, though it was almost defenceless, and fell into the possession of the invaders after the capture of Lima in the following
See also:
year . Before the surrender all the Peruvian naval vessels in the harbour were sunk, to prevent their falling into the possession of the enemy .

End of Article: CALLAO
[back]
CALLANDER
[next]
JOHN WALL CALLCOTT (1766-1821)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.