The inauguration of the Suez Canal at Port Said.
The Suez Canal, connecting the Mediterranean and the Red
seas, was inaugurated in an elaborate ceremony attended by
French Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III.
In 1854, Ferdinand de Lesseps, the former French consul to
Cairo, secured an agreement with the Ottoman governor of
Egypt to build a canal 100 miles across the Isthmus of Suez.
An international team of engineers drew up a construction
plan, and in 1856 the Suez Canal Company was formed and
granted the right to operate the canal for 99 years after
completion of the work.
Construction began in April 1859, and at first digging was
done by hand with picks and shovels wielded by forced
laborers. Later, European workers with dredgers and
steam shovels arrived.
Ferdinand de Lesseps, the architect of the
Suez Canal.
A hand-colored postcard showing Ferdinand de Lesseps opening the Suez Canal with the Khedive Ismail and his entourage.
Early photographs of dredging in the Suez Canal from
1868-69. Norbert Schiller Collection.
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