17
Gazetteer
(a) OF
COLONIAL AND FOREIGN PORTS
ADELAIDE
(South Australia). — Population, 163,430. Capital of South Australia and University
town. The port is seven miles distant, on Gulf St. Vincent.
Exports: Wool, gold, silver, copper, iron, lead, wine, wheat, and tallow.
ADEN. —
Population, 42,000. A bare, rocky peninsula, 75 miles square in extent. A
strongly fortified coaling station on the Red Sea trade route. Nonproductive,
but carries on a great trade with Arabia. Aden and Perim are under the Bombay
Government.
Exports: Coffee, ostrich feathers, tobacco, gum, and hides.
ALBANY (West
Australia). — Population, 3,700. Principal port of West Australia. Naval base
and coaling station.
Exports: Wool, timber, gold, pearls, and hides.
ALEXANDRIA.
— Population, 320,000. Principal port of Egypt. Is well fortified and has two
harbours, a breakwater 2 miles long, and a large floating dock. Consulate.
Exports: Cotton, cotton-seed, wheat, rice, onions and gum.
ALGIERS. —
Population, 120,000. Has a harbour of 220 acres; two dry docks. Coaling
station. Consulate.
Exports: Flour, metals, esparto grass, cork, and phosphates.
AMSTERDAM. —
Population, 523,558. Once the first commercial city of the world; still remains
a centre of great commercial activity. The town contains a Royal Palace of
enormous size, and remarkable from the fact that it stands upon 13,659 piles
driven 70 feet into the ground. Consulate.
ANTWERP. —
Population, 262,255. One of the busiest seaports of the world, possessing wide
thoroughfares and fine buildings. Very extensive quays. Consulate.
Exports: Grain, textiles, chemicals, resins, metals, wines.
ANTIGUA, see St. John's.
APIA
(Samoa). — The residence of the Foreign Consuls in Samoa. Much resorted to by
whalers. Has an open roadstead for harbour. Coaling station. Consulate.
ARGENTINA, see Buenos Ayres.
ASCENSION. —
Population, about 400. An island in the South Atlantic, on the Cape route
between Africa and South America. Coaling station, sanatorium, and Admiralty
depôt. Strongly fortified.
ATHENS. —
Population (including the port of Firmus) 179,755. Capital of Modern Greece.
Contains the Royal Palace. The principal city lies 12 miles from the port, with
Which it is connected by railway.
AUCKLAND
(New Zealand). — Population, 67,226. Fortified coaling station, with one of the
finest of harbours and two graving docks.
Exports: Gold, timber, gum, flax, wool, hides tallow.
AZORES
(Dependencies of Portugal). — Population, 280,000. Consists of nine volcanic
islands with an area of 700 square miles, called St. Michael, St. Mary,
Tercera, Graciosa, St. George, Pico, Fayal, Corvo, Flores.
BAHAMAS, see Nassau.
BAHIA (Brazil).
— Population, 200,000. The second seaport of Brazil. Natural History Museum,
Art Gallery, Public Library, Theological Seminary, Technical College, Ship
Building Yards. Legation and Consulate.
Exports: Tobacco, sugar, coffee, feathers, rubber, coco nuts, tapioca, hides,
fine woods, and diamonds.
BALTIMORE
(U.S.). — Population, 508,957. A thriving city of some commercial importance;
on Chesapeake Bay, 180 miles from the open sea, and midway between New York
and Washington. From its situation on Chesapeake Bay, it is probably destined,
as a grain-distributing centre, to secure pre-eminence among the ports of the
U.S. Has a dry dock 600 feet long, and a Consulate.
Exports: Petroleum, grain, flour, and tobacco.
BANGKOK
(Siam). — Population, 600,000, Chief seaport of Siam. Magnificent Royal Palace
of King Chulalongkorn, and many fine pagodas. Legation.
Exports: Rice, ebony, fish, woods, gum, teak, pepper, ivory, and hides.
BARBADOS
(West Indies). — Population, 182,286. An island about the size of Isle of Man,
locally known as "Bimshire" or "Bims," and claiming to be
"the most densely populated part of the habitable globe." Its chief
town, Bridgetown, is the first port of call for Royal Mail Steamers outward
bound.
Exports: Sugar, rum, and molasses.
BARCELONA
(Spain). — Population, 510,000. The most important commercial centre of Spain.
Fine harbour, floating dock. Consulate.
Exports: Cork, wines, fruits, lead, iron, silk, copper, and quicksilver.
BATAVIA
(Dutch East Indies). — Population, 105,000. Capital of Java. Commercial
emporium of the Dutch East Indies. Coaling station and Consulate. Magnificent
museum.
Exports: Sugar, coffee, pepper, rice, sago, tin, tea, and tobacco.
BATOUM
(Black Sea). — Population, 23,200. The centre of the corn and petroleum trade
of Transcaucasia, Oil-refining works. Consulate.
Exports: Petroleum and petroleum products, manganese, walnut, and liquorice.
BEIRA
(Portuguese East Africa). — Population, 4,055. Nearest port to Rhodesia, and
Railway Terminus. Exports: Beeswax, ivory, and hides.
BELIZE
(Honduras). — Population, 7,000. The chief town of British Honduras.
Exports: Mahogany, logwood, cedar, coconuts, sponges, and fruit.
BERGEN
(Norway), — Population, 55,000. Important fortified city and seaport with fine
harbour — deep, sheltered, but rocky. Fishing is the principal industry.
Consular Agent. Cathedral, Museum and Naval Academy.
Exports: Codfish, herrings, skins, bones, horses, and sheep.
BERMUDAS
(chief town, Hamilton).--Population, 1,296. Lie some 600 miles east from the
coast of the U.S. Important naval base and naval dockyard.
Exports: Potatoes, tomatoes, beetroot, arrowroot, and onions.
BEYRUT
(Syria), — Population, 100,000. The port of Damascus. Tideless harbour.
Consulate. English and other Schools and Colleges. Small harbour and mole.
Exports: Silk, oils, wool, soap, lemons,
oranges, madder, gums, gall, and cotton.
BILBAO
(Spain). — Population, 50,800. Principal port in the north of Spain. Large
deposits of iron ore in vicinity, much of which is exported to England.
Consulate.
Exports: Iron ore, pig iron, fish, fruits, flour, and wine.
BOMBAY. —
Population, 776,006. Capital of the Indian Presidency so-called. Built on three
islands; magnificent natural harbour, and docks of over 200 acres. University.
Chamber of Commerce.
Exports: Cotton, wheat, opium, indigo, rice, oil, seeds, etc.
BORDEAUX
(France). — Population, 260,000. On the River Garonne, 55 miles from Bay of
Biscay. Numerous docks and shipbuilding yards. The centre of the wine shipping
trade. Consulate.
Exports: Wines, brandy, grain, fruit, seeds, turpentine, and wood.
BOSTON
(U.S.). — Population, 500,000. Capital of State of Massachusetts. Outer and
inner harbours , both excellent; railway termini, large trade with West Indies,
Canada, and Newfoundland. Consulate.
Exports: Cattle, woollens, cottons, beef, pork, fish, ice, petroleum, and lard.
BOULOGNE-SUR-MER.
— Population, 46,001. On the direct route between London and Paris, and within
3/ hours of both capitals. Deep-sea harbour, and wine port. Chief French
fishing port. Consular Agent.
Exports: Cement, fruit, vegetables, fish, silks, wine, brandy, and eggs.
BREMEN
(Germany). — Population, 227,832. One of the chief commercial ports of Germany,
50 miles from the North Sea, on the River Weser. Is one of the Free towns of
the Hanseatic League, Hamburg and Lübeck being the other two. The port is
Bremerhaven, 28 miles distant. Has large docks. Consular Agent.
Exports: Woollens, linens, toys, machinery, glass, iron, steel Ware, and beer.
BREST
(France). — Population, 75,000 (1891). A seaport of Brittany, on the Atlantic.
Arsenal, Observatory, and chief station of the French Navy.
BRINDISI
(Italy). — Population, 17,111. Starting-point of direct mail and passenger
route from Europe to Egypt, Australia, and the East. Consulate.
Exports: Olive oil, wines, figs, almonds, oats, and linseed.
BRISBANE
(Queensland). — Population, 1I9,428. Principal seaport and capital of
Queensland. Government dock. Coaling station.
Exports: Wool, hides, ore, tallow, meat, and timber.
BUENOS AYRES
(Argentina), — Population, 900,000. Capital of the Argentine Republic. On the
Rio de la Plata, which is here 36 miles in width. Fine harbour works and docks.
Exports: Maize, wheat, flax, sheep, cattle, hides, and horns.
CALCUTTA. —
Population, 1,026,987, the vast majority being Hindus, about half that number
Mohammedans. Capital of Bengal Presidency. University. Chamber of Commerce.
Observatory, Botanical Garden, and School of Art. Government dockyard.
CALLAO (Peru).
— Population, 35,596. Principal seaport of Peru.
Exports: Guano, silver ore, sugar, and salt. In 1746 it suffered from an
earthquake in which 3,000 of the inhabitants perished.
CANARY
ISLANDS, see Teneriffe.
CAPE TOWN. —
Population, 167,200. Situated on Table Bay, and the principal seaport in South
Africa, Extensive harbour works in process of construction. An Imperial
Garrison, and station of the Cape and West African Squadron. Climate healthy
and dry with uniform temperature.
CAPE VERDE,
see St. Vincent.
CASTRIES or
PORT ISLANDS, (St. Lucia, West Indies). — Population, 8,000. Situated on the
largest and most picturesque of the Windward Islands, possessing one of the
finest ports in the West Indies, and an important naval and coaling station.
CHARLESTOWN
(U.S.). — Population 55,807. An important southern city in the United States,
with a great trade in cotton and lumber.
CHERBOURG
(France). — Population, 31,100. A Naval Station on the English Channel, nearly
opposite the Isle of Wight. Military port and commercial harbour. Magnificent
roadstead.
Exports: Agricultural produce, Macadam stone, etc.
CHILE, see
Valparaiso.
CHRISTIANIA
(Norway). — Population, 227,600. Capital of Norway, on the Christiania Fiord.
Exports: Timber, Wood pulp, fish, paper, skins, minerals, ice, matches,
condensed milk, margarine, and horse-shoe nails.
COLOMBO
(Ceylon). — Population, 154,556. Capital of Ceylon (the population of which
numbers 3,576,990, though the area is but 25,365 square miles).
Exports: Coffee, tea, cinchona, vanilla, cardamoms, cocoa, cinnamon, precious
stones (rubies and cat's-eyes), and pearls.
COLON
(Colombia, Central America). — Population, 5,000. The Atlantic port of the
Isthmus of Panama, founded in 1849, at the commencement of the Panama
(Inter-oceanic) Railway, which is 47 miles in length. Until 1896 a free port.
Exports: Bananas, india-rubber, live stock, cabinet woods, and medicinal
plants.
CONSTANTINOPLE.
— Population (1885), about 1,000,000. Capital and chief port of the Ottoman
Empire, and residence of the Sultan. Possesses a magnificent harbour called the
Golden Horn. Arsenal.
Exports: Tobacco, cereals, fruits, silk, oil-seeds, valonia, mohair, opium,
gum, tragacanth, carpets, and wool.
COPENHAGEN.
— Population, 408,300. The capital and principal port of Denmark.
DANTZIG
(Germany). — Population, 140,539. A seaport and fortress on the Vistula, near
the Baltic Sea. Observatory. Its export trade has largely decreased of late.
Royal dockyard.
DOMINICA
(B.W.I.), see Roseau.
DURBAN
(South Africa). — Population, 48,410. Also called Port Natal. The only harbour
of any importance on the South-east Coast of Africa. Possesses a railway to
Pietermaritzburg, the capital of Natal.
Exports: Coffee, dye-stuffs, hides, and wool. The Colony is also rich in coal
and iron.
GALVESTON
(U.S.). — Population, 37,789. One of the principal cotton shipping ports on the
Gulf of Mexico, and a great railway terminus of lines from the interior.
Wrecked, a few years ago, by a tidal wave, which caused immense damage and loss
of life.
GENOA
(Italy), — Population, 237,486. On the Gulf of Genoa. Fortress, Archbishopric,
numerous palaces and churches, University, and Botanical Gardens. Ample
harbour.
Exports: Macaroni, vermicelli, oils, metals, artificial flowers, etc.
GIBRALTAR. —
Population, 20,355. A rocky promontory 3 miles in length by mile broad, and
1,439 feet high, connected with the mainland of Spain by a low isthmus. A free
port: it enjoys an extensive shipping trade. Garrison, dockyard, and coaling
station. In 1901 nearly 4,000 ships entered the port. Enclosed harbour and
docks, to cost £4,000,000, now in course of construction, and further works
under consideration.
GRENADA
(Windward Islands, West Indies), see St. George's.
HALIFAX
(Nova Scotia). — Population, 47,000. The capital of Nova Scotia. Terminus of
the Intercolonial Railway. Magnificent harbour, and principal Naval Station
in North America. Apples, hay, coal, iron, and fisheries.
HAMBURG. —
Population, 787,446. On the Elbe. The ocean port is Cuxhaven, 65 miles distant.
Hamburg shares with Bremen and Lübeck the major portion of Germany's fast
increasing export trade, these three being known as the Free Hanse Towns, and
retaining their own sovereignty.
HAVANA
(Cuba). — Population, 250,000. The capital of Cuba, in the West Indies. The
island which formed one of the chief causes of the Spanish-American War.
Universally famed for its tobacco.
Exports: Tobacco, cigars, cigarettes, sugar, coffee, and mahogany.
HAVRE
(France). — Population, 119,470. Principal commercial port of Northern France,
at the mouth of the Seine. Arsenal, Fortifications.
HAWAII, see Honolulu.
HOBART
(Tasmania). — Population, 41,585. The capital of the Island, which contains
26,215 square miles. Mean annual temperature of 54 degrees rainfall, 20 inches.
HONDURAS, see Belize.
HONG KONG
(the name of an island off China, of which the chief town is Victoria). —
Population, 248,710. A Crown Colony, consisting of the Island of Hong Kong, and
a portion of the mainland, which have been leased to Great Britain for
ninety-nine years. Area, 252½ square miles. Fine harbour, excellent docks.
Military and Naval Station.
Exports: Opium, tea, cotton, ivory, rice, woollens, silks, etc. White
population, including garrison, about 14,000.
HONOLULU
(Hawaii). — Population, about 30,000. Capital and chief port of the Sandwich
Islands, on the south coast of Oaku. Natural harbour formed by a coral reef.
Cable to San Francisco. Annexed by the United States in 1899.
JAFFA
(Palestine) — the ancient Joppa. — Population, 16,000. The principal port of
Palestine, in Syria, connected with Jerusalem by railway. No harbour, and poor
anchorage.
Exports: Oranges, olive oil, and sesame.
JAVA, see Batavia.
KINGSTON or
KINGSTOWN (Jamaica). — The chief city of the British West Indian Island of
Jamaica, which has a population of 745,104, and an area of 4,193 square miles.
The seat of Government and largest port in the island, recently connected with
Bristol by a direct line of steamers (Elder Dempster Line).
Exports: Bananas, sugar, molasses, pines, dyestuffs, drugs and spices.
KINGSTOWN
(St. Vincent, West Indies). — Population, 4,547. Has been a British possession
since 1783. The scene of the terrible eruption of a volcano known as "La
Soufrière," Which killed many hundreds of persons, and destroyed crops and
buildings throughout a third of the island.
LEEWARD
ISLANDS. — Antigua (with Barbuda and Redonda), St. Christopher (with Nevis and
Anguilla), Dominica, Montserrat, and the Virgin Islands make up the West Indian
Colony known as the Leeward Islands. Population, 127,723.
LISBON. —
Population, 307,661. Capital and chief seaport of Portugal, on the River Tagus,
10 miles from the sea. Castle, Aqueduct, 64 Churches, Archbishopric.
MADAGASCAR,
see Tamatave.
MADRAS. —
Population 509,346. The chief city of the Presidency of that name. Possesses a
large artificial harbour. University. Chamber of Commerce.
MALAGA
(Spain). — Population, 125,579. Capital of the Province of that name on the
Mediterranean.
Chief export: A sweet wine.
MALTA, see Valetta.
MANILA
(Philippines). — Population, 244,000. Capital of the Island of Luzon in the
Philippine Islands, captured by the U.S. from Spain in the war of '98.
Exports: Hemp, sugar, coffee, indigo, copra, and tobacco.
MARSEILLES.
— Population, 442,239. French seaport on the Mediterranean. Important port of
call for steamers to the Far East, and the largest of all French ports.
MONTE VIDEO
(Uruguay). — Population, 238,000. The capital of Uruguay, on the north shore of
the Rio de la Plata. Possesses architecturally imposing and handsome buildings.
It was once a Spanish possession, and the population includes a large proportion
of Spaniards, Italians, and Frenchmen.
Exports: Beef, wool, hides, horns, hair, live stock, and skins.
MONTREAL
(Canada). — Population, 216,651 (1891). On the River St. Lawrence. The
commercial metropolis of the Dominion of Canada, and the centre of the grain
export trade north of Newport.
MONTSERRAT, see Plymouth.
NAPLES. —
Population, 544,057. Situated on the Gulf of Naples. Castle, Picture Galleries,
Cathedral, University. It is the nearest regular port to Sicily, and Mount
Vesuvius, with Herculaneum and Pompeii, are close by.
Exports: Wine, olive oil, chemicals, perfumery, hemp, and flax.
NASSAU
(Bahamas). — The chief town of the Bahamas, situated upon an island called
Providence, the group having remained a British possession since 1783.
Chief Exports: Sponges, fruits, bananas, coconuts, valuable woods, and fibre
.
NEWPORT NEWS
(U.S.). — Population, 19,635. Both commercially and strategically an important
Atlantic port. Ships large cargoes of beef and grain to Great Britain and the
Continent.
NEW ORLEANS
(U.S.). — Population, 287,104. The principal commercial port on the Gulf of
Mexico. Originally a French settlement, it still retains much that is
characteristic of the Gaul. Ships cotton to Manchester and Liverpool.
NEW YORK. —
Population, 3,437,202. The commercial metropolis of the United States, and one
of the largest and busiest ports of the world. By Railway from Chicago,
twenty-six hours; from San Francisco and Pacific coast ports, four and a half
days; from Washington, six hours, and from Montreal, twelve hours.
ODESSA
(Russia). — Population, 338,000. A seaport on the Black Sea. Has three fine
harbours, which are seldom frozen. The commercial and intellectual capital of
the Province of Novorossoya. Population chiefly Russian, but contains large
numbers of Jews, Roumanians, Slays, and Tartars.
Exports: Grain, flour, wool, hides, and cattle.
OPORTO
(Portugal). — Population, 138,860. The seaport of Portugal, which gave its
name to the "port wines" of Douro. Bishopric, Cathedral, Opera,
Library, Botanical Garden, Hospital. An artificial harbour has been built at
Leixoes.
PALERMO
(Sicily). — Population, 292,799. In the N.W. Province of Sicily. Fort,
Archbishopric, Palaces, Castle, Cathedral, University, Botanical Garden, Mole
and Light.
Exports: Oranges, lemons, grain, oil, wine, and sulphur.
PALESTINE, see Jaffa.
PANAMA, see Colon.
PARAMAIRIBO
(Dutch Guiana). — Population, 28,000. The capital of Dutch Guiana, on the left
bank of the Surinam, 20 miles from the sea.
Exports: Cocoa, sugar, gold, timber, balata, bananas, and coffee.
PERNAMBUCO
(Brazil). — Population, 111,556. A seaport of Brazil, situated on a sandy
island lying near the mainland.
Exports: Sugar, cotton, coffee, tobacco, hides, dyewoods, etc.
PERU, see Callao.
PHILADELPHIA
(U.S. ). — Population, 1,293,697. A growing port, both for commerce and passenger
traffic, on the Atlantic sea-board. One of the oldest cities of the United
States; founded by William Penn.
PHILIPPINES,
see Manila.
PLYMOUTH
(Montserrat, West Indies), — Population, 1,461. Has been a British possession
since 1784.
Chief Exports: Limes and sugar.
PORT OF
SPAIN (Trinidad). — Population, 54,000. One of the most prosperous towns in the
West Indies. The capital and chief port of Trinidad, which is the most
southerly of all the West India Islands, and is separated by a strait but 7
miles broad from Venezuela and the mainland of South America, of which it is
thought to have formed once an integral part. Port of Spain is finely laid out,
possessing an electric tramway and an excellent Botanical Garden. At La Brea is
the celebrated Pitch Lake of Trinidad.
Exports: Sugar, rum, molasses, bitters, cocoa, and coconuts.
PORTLAND
(U.S.). — Population, 50,145. Situated in the State of Maine. The most
northerly transatlantic port of the United States. Terminus of the Canadian
steamship lines when the Canadian ports are closed with ice.
PORTLAND
(U.S.). — Population, 90,426. On the Columbia River in Oregon. The great
grain-shipping port of the Pacific Coast. Headquarters of the Columbia River
salmon-canning industry.
PORT SAID
(Egypt), — Population, 42,000. At the Mediterranean entrance of the Suez Canal.
It bears a sinister reputation.
QUEBEC. —
Population, 68,824. The capital of the Province of that name in Canada, of
which it is the great seaport, with a considerable export timber trade. Nearly
a million tons of shipping cleared in 1900. The most characteristically "
Old World " city on the American continent. On the Heights of Abram, in
view of the St. Lawrence, is a monument erected in joint memory of the French
and English who fell in the great battle between General Wolfe and Montcalm de
Saint Veran, which, on September 14, 1759, decided Canada's future.
RANGOON
(Burma). — Population, 234,881.
RIO DE
JANEIRO (Brazil). — Population, 674,972. The chief seaport of Brazil, on a bay
of the same name. Fine harbour, Fortifications.
Chief Export
(forming nearly two-thirds of the total), coffee.
Other
Exports are: tobacco, cotton, sugar, cocoa, india-rubber, maize, beans,
cassava-root, and Brazil nuts.
ROSEAU
(Dominica, Leeward Islands). — The port of Dominica, the "Pearl of the
Lesser Antilles," an island famous as the home of the last of the Caribs,
and also for its scenery, especially for its chief mountain, Morne Diablotin
(5,000 feet), named from one of the rarest of birds, and its Boiling Lake, at
which an English traveller with one or two native guides recently lost his
life. The island, long under a cloud through mal-administration, is now making
rapid progress, numerous European estates having been recently formed there.
Exports: Sugar and cane products, cocoa, and limes.
ROTTERDAM
(Holland). — Population, 318,468. The largest commercial city and port in the
Netherlands; situated on the Maas, one of the outlets of the Rhine.
SAMOA, see Apia.
ST. GEORGE'S
(Grenada, West Indies). — The chief town of Grenada, possessing a good harbour
and a fort. The island was discovered by Columbus in 1498, and then named
" Conception." It became a British possession in 1783. Next to
Trinidad, it is one of the most prosperous of these islands, growing cocoa,
spices, sugar, cotton, coffee, and fruit.
ST. JOHN
(New Brunswick, Canada). — Population, 39,179. The principal seaport of New
Brunswick, and the principal winter port of Canada, being free of ice usually
throughout the year.
ST, JOHN'S
(Antigua, West Indies). — Population, 9,262. Chief town of Antigua, settled by
the British in 1632.
Exports: Sugar, rum, molasses.
ST. JOHN'S
(Newfoundland). — Population, 31,142. The site of two Cathedrals, and the
capital of the twelfth largest island in the world, lying six hours by steamer
from the mainland.
Exports: Codfish, cod and seal oil, sealskins, tinned lobsters, copper and
copper ore, and iron pyrites.
ST. LUCIA, see Castries.
ST.
PETERSBURG. — Population, I,267,023. Capital of the Russian Empire, at the head
of the Gulf of Finland, and at the mouth of the Neva, which is frozen over for
about 150 days in the year. Winter Palace, the residence of the Emperor.
Hermitage, Picture Gallery, Cathedral, Academies of Art and Science,
Observatory and University. Its Library ranks next to the Bibliothèque
Nationale and the British Museum. About 85 per cent. of the population belong
to the Greek Church, the remaining 15 per cent. being divided between
Protestants, Roman Catholics, and Jews.
ST. VINCENT
(Cape Verde Islands). — Chief town and port of the Cape Verde Islands, which
belong to Portugal, their area being 1,490 square miles, and population
111,000.
ST. VINCENT
(Windward Islands), see Kingstown.
SAN DIEGO
(U.S.). — Population, 17,700. The principal port of Southern California, a few
miles from the Mexican border, and one of the finest harbours on the American
continent.
SAN
FRANCISCO. — Population, 342,782. The principal Pacific port on the North
American continent, terminus of the trans-continental railways, and chief
shipping port for China, Japan, the Philippines, and Australasia.
SAVANNAH
(U.S.). — Population, 54,244. An important cotton-shipping port and market on
the Atlantic sea-board of the U.S. It has also a considerable export trade in
lumber.
SCARBOROUGH
(Tobago, West Indies). — Population, 1,370. Situated on the island of Tobago,
about 18 miles N.E. of Trinidad, of which island it was constituted a ward in
1899. One of the healthiest islands in the West Indies.
Exports: Sugar and cane products.
SEATTLE
(U.S.). — Population, 80,671. A thriving city on Puget Sound, and the chief
point of embarkation for the Klondyke and the Gold Fields of Alaska.
SHANGHAI (S.
China), — Population, 380,000, including 3,000 foreigners. Situated in the
Province of Kiangsu, on the Yang-tse-kiang. It suffers greatly from heat in
summer, and, generally speaking, is not over healthy, but in respect of the
volume and value of its trade, it is without a rival among the Treaty Ports of
China.
Exports: Silk, tea, raw cotton, paper, wheat, tobacco, wax, wool, skins and
furs, straw and bristles.
SICILY, see Palermo.
SINGAPORE
(Straits Settlements). — Population, 228,555. Founded by Sir Stamford Raffles
in February, 1819. Situated upon a small island off the southern extremity of
the Malay Peninsula. In respect of its shipping, it is one of the greatest
ports of the world, and is well provided with docks, It is also of great
strategical importance, and is well fortified, being frequently alluded to as
the "Gibraltar of the East." The climate is healthy. It has a small
Museum, and fine Botanical Gardens, in which there is a small Menagerie.
Chief Export: Tin.
STOCKHOLM
(Sweden). — Population, 303,356. Capital of Sweden. National Museum, Academy of
Science, of Fine Arts, and National Library. The Port, 40 miles from the open
sea, has 5 miles of quays, but is often closed by ice three months in the year.
Exports: Cattle and butter, paper, matches, stone, iron, steel, oats, timber
and wood products, zinc, and machinery. Average temperature, 41.7 degrees.
SUEZ
(Egypt). — Population, 17,000. Situated on the Gulf of Suez. The southern
terminus of the Suez Canal.
SYDNEY (New
South Wales). — Population, 487,900. The capital of New South Wales, situated
on the shores of the finest harbour in the world — Port Jackson. Royal Mint,
University, Art Gallery, Library, Observatory, and two Cathedrals.
TAMATAVE
(Madagascar). — The port of Madagascar, the fourth largest island in the world,
with an area of 230,000 square miles, the capital of which is Tananarive.
Madagascar became a French possession in 1896, the Malagasy Queen being
deposed by a French military expedition, which suffered considerable losses.
Exports: Cattle, hides, india-rubber, gum-copal, wax, sugar, coffee, and rice.
TENERIFFE
(Canary Islands). — Chief port and capital of the Canary Islands, which belong
to Spain, their area being 3,000 square miles, and population 300,000.
TOBAGO, see Scarborough.
TOULON
(France), — Population, 80,000. French Naval station, on the Mediterranean.
Strongly Fortified Military Station, Magazines, Arsenals, and Naval Hospital.
Observatory.
Exports: Wine, brandy, olive oil, and fruits.
TRIESTE
(Austria). — Population, 158,344. The principal seaport of Austria, at the N.E.
extremity of the Adriatic.
Exports: Corn, rice, wine, oil, sumach, tobacco, hemp, wool, skins, and timber.
Trieste has steamship communication with the Black Sea, Turkey, Egypt, India,
and China.
TRINIDAD, see Port of Spain.
TUNIS
(Barbary, N. Africa). — Population, 153,000. An inland port near the site of
Ancient Carthage, and connected by canal with the Mediterranean. The capital
and commercial emporium of Barbary. Under French protection. Fortifications.
The population consists of: Turks, Moors, Jews, Arabs, Kabyles, and Christians.
Exports: Grain, wool, oil, and esparto grass. Its chief manufactures are silk
and woollen stuffs, carpets, shawls, mantles, fezzes, burnouses; also otto of
roses and jessamine.
URUGUAY, see Monte Video.
VALETTA
(Malta). — Population, 60,763. Fine harbour, and the most important British
port of call in the Mediterranean. Extensive arsenal and dockyards
VALPARAISO
(Chile). — Population, 143,000. Chief seaport of Chile. Arsenal, shipbuilding
yard, and Naval College.
Exports: Nitrate of soda, iodine, gold, copper, silver, iron and coal, skins,
wheat, flour, and guano.
VANCOUVER
(British Columbia). — Population, 30,000. Eighty miles from Victoria, the most
important centre of commerce on the Pacific Coast of British North America, the
western terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and the point of departure
for Japan and the Far East.
VENICE. —
Population, 157,785. A fortified city and port of Italy, built upon 120 islands
connected by nearly 500 bridges. Formerly one of the most important commercial
and maritime cities of the world. Her trade is now outstripped by that of
Trieste, and her commercial supremacy seems to have gone the way of the
Campanile of St. Mark's.
VERA CRUZ
(Mexico). — Population, 24,000 (1889), The chief seaport of Mexico.
Exports:
Silver and gold, flax and hemp, tobacco, cochineal, sugar, indigo, drugs,
vanilla, logwood, timber, hides, and skins.
VLADIVOSTOCK.
— Population, 14,900 (chiefly Military, 1891). The chief Naval station of
Russia, on the Pacific. A great Naval and Military base, and terminus of the
Siberian Railway.
WINDWARD
ISLANDS. — These include Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Grenada, and the
Grenadines. Barbados (v. Bridgetown), though included in the list, is a
separate colony.
YOKOHAMA
(Japan). — Population, 193,762. An "open" seaport of Japan.
Government dry docks; sheltered harbour.
Exports: Silk, rice, tea, fish, copper, coal, matches, camphor, straw plaits,
and marine products
(b) OF IMPORTANT
SHIPPING EVENTS
[By kind permission,
from Lloyd's Calendar.]
1492 America discovered. 1508
First Marine Insurance in England. 1545
First Treatise on Navigation issued. 1550
Sextant invented. 1642
New Zealand discovered.
1666
Fire of London. 1688
First notice of Lloyd's Coffee House in Tower Street. 1694
Bank of England founded. 1700
First Dock opened in Liverpool.
1704
Gibraltar taken by the English.
1707 Union of England and Scotland.
1709
First London Daily Paper. 1714
First Steam Engine built.
1758
First English Canal. 1767 Nautical Almanac published.
1768
Capt. Cook's first voyage.
1786
Shipping first registered in the River Thames, and
throughout the Empire in 1787. Board of Trade constituted.
1788
London Times established. First Settlement in Australia.
1790
Lifeboat first used at South Shields. 1799
H.M.S. Lutine wrecked.
1801
Union of Great Britain and Ireland. 1802
West India Docks opened. 1805
London Docks opened. 1806
East India Docks opened. 1807
Gas first used in London. 1812 First steamboat (Comet)
on the Clyde. 1815
First Steam Vessel on the Thames. 1817
Present Custom House opened in London. 1818
First Steamer crossed the Atlantic. 1824
National Lifeboat Institution established. 1825
First steam voyage to India. 1828
St. Katherine's Docks opened. 1831
New London Bridge opened. 1833
Trade with India thrown open. 1838
First regular steamboat service across Atlantic; voyage 17
days. 1840
First Cunard Steamer Britannia
sailed. P. & O. Steam Navigation Company opened. Penny Post introduced.
1843
Iron Steamships first built in Great Britain. Thames Tunnel opened.
1845
Penny Steamers commenced. 1847
Gold discovered in California. 1848
North-West Passage discovered. 1850
Inman Company established. 1851 First Submarine Telegraph. 1858
Great Eastern Steamer launched. First message by Atlantic cable.
1860
First Steam Ironclad launched. 1863
Twin screws first used. 1866 Atlantic cable laid by Great Eastern.
1869
Suez Canal opened. 1870 Telegraphs transferred to Government.
1880
Royal Albert Docks opened. 1882
New Eddystone Lighthouse opened.
1886
Tilbury Docks opened. 1887 Jubilee of Queen Victoria. 1890
Forth Bridge opened. 1893 Corinth Ship Canal opened. 1894
Tower Bridge opened. Manchester Ship Canal opened.
1895
Southampton Graving Dock opened. Kaiser Wilhelm Canal opened.
1896
New Docks inaugurated at Cuxhaven. 1897
Blackwall Tunnel opened. War between Greece and Turkey.
1898
War between United States and Spain.
Imperial Penny Postage instituted.
1899
Launch of steamship Oceanic.
1900
British Pacific cable authorised. Merchant Shipping (Liability of Shipowners) Act passed. Subsidised Steamship Service with Jamaica arranged.
1901
Commonwealth of Australia established. Death of Queen Victoria. Accession of King Edward VII. International Exhibition at Glasgow. Royal tour of the Empire.
1902
Atlantic (Morgan) Steamship Trust formed.
First successes
with Trans-Atlantic Wireless Telegraphy (Marconi). Introduction of Wireless Telegraphy into the Navy. End of South African War. Treaty of Alliance with Japan. Report of Royal Commission on the Port of London issued. Volcanic Eruption at Martinique and St. Vincent. Successful trials of British Submarines.
1903
Reform of Naval Education. |
|