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Cristo
Redentor, Calle 1ra
Bahia de la ciudad de Colón |
Colon
is all the tropic ports of Joseph Conrad and Somerset Maugham.
Rightly so. Every street corner and bar here knows ten thousand
tales as exuberant or as melancholy or as cockeyed or as
ironic as any those two travellers spun.
Colon is a strange town which has
relished bonanzas and endured depressions throughout its
history. The town was born around the time when California-bound
Fortyniners added gold fever to the other fevers that Colon
endured in those days of trying to find its landfill footing
on the mangrove island that had been declared the Atlantic
terminal of the Western Hemisphere’s first transcontinental
railroad.
Canal construction followed and Colon and its adjacent port
Cristobal, flourished as the waterway’s terminal as
well.
Colon then became one of the world’s busiest cruise
ports as passengers from scheduled liners frolicked down
gangplanks to shop on fabled Front Street.
After this boom in the nineteen fifties, Colon languished
in an economic limbo until the last decade of the century,
despite the Colon Free Zone which grew year by year and
which now generates $10 billion per year in imports and
exports.
Colon now seems poised for another boom. The railroad which
had ground to a halt has been re-built. Four new ports,
the biggest (Manzanillo International Terminal) which alone
is bigger than Miami, are converting Colon into a giant
transhipment center.
Colon is now experiencing a renaissance of the cruise ship
business. The new cruise port, Colon 2000 and Pier 6 in
Cristobal are receiving an increasing number of ships.
Courtesy
of www.focuspublicationsint.com
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