Puerto Wilches

Last updated
Puerto Wilches
Municipality and town
Flag of Puerto Wilches (Santander).svg
Colombia - Santander - Puerto Wilches.svg
Location of the municipality and town of Puerto Wilches in the Santander Department of Colombia
CountryFlag of Colombia.svg  Colombia
Department Santander Department
Area
[1]
  Total1,588 km2 (613 sq mi)
Population
 (Census 2018)
  Total31,698 [2]
Demonym Wilchenses
Time zone UTC-5 (Colombia Standard Time)
Website www.puertowilches-santander.gov.co

Puerto Wilches is a town and municipality in the Santander Department in northeastern Colombia.

History

The port of Puerto Wilches was established principally as a fluvial port for the Puerto Wilches railway. The function of the railway and port was to link the department of Santander and the city of Bucaramanga with the world economy by way of fluvial navigation on the Magdalena River on to the caribbean port city of Barranquilla.

The original construction of the railway was via a British company named the Great Northern Railway of Colombia Company Ltd. The company was floated in London in April 1907. The company was authorised by Rafael Reyes's government to float £518,400 of bonds for the first 54 km of the line between Puerto Wilches and Bucaramanga.

The project was initially a success but political opposition to the use of bonds guaranteed by the national government formed within the national political elite and the project was sabotaged by publications in the European press spreading rumours the government had not authorised bonds to be raised in its name. This resulted in problems raising additional capital. Subsquent bonds were heavily devalued and the company did not receive sufficient capital to fund the line. Following repeated disputes with Colombian authorities the company went into liquidation and the concession was bought out by the government in April 1918. A significant proportion of the railway was not completed until 1926 when the 95 km point was reached resulting in stimulation of trade in the surrounding region. [3]

The existence of the railway infrastructure and the status as a fluvial port stimulated urban growth, but shifting to use of road trasportation away from railways led to a lesser economic importance of the port. In recent times the importance of the oil industry in the region has led to renewed importance in the regional economy.

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References

  1. "Municipalities of Colombia". Statoids. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  2. "Censo Nacional de Población y Vivienda 2018" . Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  3. Primmer, Andrew Thomas (September 2021). "RAILWAY NATIONALISM AND «RAILWAY IMPERIALISM» IN COLOMBIA AND THE ECONOMIC DECLINE OF SANTANDER, 1907–1918". Revista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History. 39 (2): 355–389. doi:10.1017/S0212610919000399. ISSN   0212-6109.

7°21′N73°54′W / 7.350°N 73.900°W / 7.350; -73.900