Baro (Nigeria)

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Baro
Nowuyin (meaning sea in English)
Nigeria location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Baro
Coordinates: 8°35′N6°25′E / 8.583°N 6.417°E / 8.583; 6.417
CountryNigeria
Elevation
118 m (387 ft)
Population
  Total6,059

Baro is a small port town on the Niger in present Niger State (central Nigeria).

Contents

A crater on Mars has been named after Baro. [1]

Transport

Baro is also a railway town situated approximately 400 miles (650 km) up the Niger River at the limit of river navigation, subject to dredging. The railway terminal or station is on bar 0 (later corrupted to baro) which was the starting point of the Baro to Kano railway. The Baro to Kano railway was built by the Northern Nigerian Protectorate under Sir Fredrick Lugard from 1907 to 1911. The line was later amalgamated with the Lagos Government Railway built by the Lagos Colony (later Southern Nigerian Protectorate) to form one single national railway known as the Nigerian railway department in 1912.

See also

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Baro or Baró may refer to:

The Wushishi tramway was a narrow gauge, 2 ft 6 in, tramway linking Wushishi to Zungeru. The line ran for 12 miles (19 km) and served to connect the highest navigable point on the Kaduna River, Wushishi, with the administrative centre of the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria. Construction began in May 1901 and was finished by December in the same year. A year later it was decided to extend the line 10 mile south along the river as Bari-Juko was judged to provide better facilities than Wushishi. The line was not to last long as by 1910 the Baro-Kano Railway, which ran through Zungero, had been completed. The Wushishi Tramway was no longer so useful and the track was lifted and used to build the Bauchi Light Railway.

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Baro-Kano railway built between 1908 and 1911 by government of the Northern Nigeria Protectorate was opened to traffic in 1912, to serve as the main rail transport facility from Baro in present Niger state to the emporium of Hausa land Kano. The first railway built in Nigeria was the Lagos–Kano Railway built by the Lagos Colony. The Baro-Kano Railway and the Lagos Government Railway was later amalgamated by the British colonial government represented by Frederick Lugard in 1914 to form a national system known as Nigerian Railway Department.

References

  1. "Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature | Baro". usgs.gov. International Astronomical Union . Retrieved 15 October 2021.

08°35′N06°25′E / 8.583°N 6.417°E / 8.583; 6.417