Africa
of greatest population or production to the seaports by the nearest route,
but to this rule there was a striking exception. The dense forests of Upper
Guinea and the upper Congo proved a barrier which kept the peoples of the
Sudan from direct access to the sea, and from Timbuktu to Darfur the great
trade routes were either west to east or south to north across the Sahara.
The principal caravan routes across the desert lead from different points
in Morocco and Algeria to Timbuktu; from Tripoli to Timbuktu, Kano and
other great marts of the western and central Sudan; from Bengazi to Wadai;
and from Assiut on the Nile through the Great Oasis and the Libyan desert
to Darfur. South of the equator the principal long-established routes are
those from Loanda to the Lunda and Baluba countries; from Benguella via
Bihe to Urua and the upper Zambezi; from Mossamedes across the Kunene to
the upper Zambezi; and from Bagamoyo, opposite Zanzibar, to Tanganyika.
Many of the native routes have been superseded by the improved
communications introduced by Europeans in the utilization of waterways and
the construction of roads and railways. Steamers have been conveyed
overland in sections and launched on the interior waterways above the
obstructions to navigation. On the upper Nile and Albert Nyanza their
introduction was due to Sir S. Baker and General C. G. Gordon (1871-1876);
on the middle Congo and its affluents to Sir H.M. Stanley and the officials
of the Congo Free State, as well as to the Baptist missionaries on the
river; and on Lake Nyasa to the supporters of the Scottish mission. A small
vessel was launched on Victoria Nyanza 1896 by a British mercantile firm,
and a British government steamer made its first trip in November 1900. On
the other great lakes and on most of the navigable rivers steamers were
plying regularly before the close of the 19th century. However, the
shallowness of the water in the Niger and Zambezi renders their navigation
possible only to light-draught steamers. Roads suitable for wheeled traffic
are few. The first attempt at road-making in Central Africa on a large
scale was that of Sir T. Fowell Buxton and Mr (afterwards Sir W.)
Mackinnon, who completed the first section of a track leading into the
interior fromDar-es-Salaam (1879). A still more important undertaking was
the ``Stevenson road,'' begun in 1881 from the head of Lake Nyasa to the
south end of Tanganyika, and constructed mainly at the expense of Mr James
Stevenson, a director of theAfrican Lakes Company—a company which helped
materially in the opening up of Nyasaland. The Stevenson road forms a link
in the ``Lakes route'' into the heart of the continent. In British East
Africa a road connecting Mombasa with Victoria Nyanza was completed in
1897, but has since been in great measure superseded by the railway. Good
roads have also been made in German East Africa and Cameroon and in
Madagascar.
Railways, the chief means of affording easy access to the interior of the
continent, were for many years after their first introduction to Africa
almost entirely confined to the extreme north and south (Egypt, Algeria,
Cape Colony and Natal). Apart from short lines in Senegal, Angola and at
Lourenco Marques, the rest of the continent was in 1890 without a railway
system. In Egypt the Alexandria and Cairo railway dates from 1855, while in
1877 the lines open reached about 1100 miles, and in 1890, in addition to
the lines traversing the delta, the Nile had been ascended to Assiut. In
Algeria the construction of an inter-provincial railway was decreed in
1857, but was still incomplete twenty years later, when the total length of
the lines open hardly exceeded 300 miles. Before 1890 an extension to Tunis
had been opened, while the plateau had been crossed by the lines to Ain
Sefra in the west and Biskra in the east. In Senegal the railway from Dakar
to St Louis had been commenced and completed during the 'eighties, while
the first section of the Senegal-Niger railway, that from Kayes to
Bafulabe, was also constructed during the same decade. In Cape Colony,
where in about 1880 the railways were limited to the neighbourhood of Cape
Town, Port Elizabeth and East London, the next decade saw the completion of
the trunk-line from Cape Town to Kimberley, with a junction at De Aar with
that from Port Elizabeth. The northern frontier had, however, nowhere been
crossed. In Natal, also, the main line had not advanced beyond Ladysmith.
The settlement, c. 1890, of the main lines of the partition of the
continent was followed by many projects for the opening up of the
possessions and spheres of influence of the various powers by the building
of railways; several of these schemes being carried through in a
comparatively short time. The building of railways was undertaken by the
governments concerned, nearly all the African lines being state-owned. In
the Congo Free State a railway, which took some ten years to build,
connecting the navigable waters of the lower and middle Congo, was
completed in 1898, while in 1906 the middle and upper courses of the river
were linked by the opening of a line past Stanley Falls. Thus the vast
basin of the Congo was rendered easily accessible to commercial enterprise.
In North Africa the Algerian and Tunisian railways were largely extended,
and proposals were made for a great trunk-line from Tangier to Alexandria.
The railway from Ain Sefra was continued southward towards Tuat, the
project of a trans-Saharan line having occupied the attention of French
engineers since 1880. In French West Africa railway communication between
the upper Senegal and the upper Niger was completed in 1904; from the
Guinea coast at Konakry another line runs north-east to the upper Niger,
while from Dahomey a third line goes to the Niger at Garu. In the British
colonies on the same coast the building of railways was begun in 1896. A
line to Kumasi was completed in 1903, and the line from Lagos to the lower
Niger had reached Illorin in 1908. Thence the railway was continued to the
Niger at Jebba. From Baro, a port on the lower Niger which can be reached
by steamers all the year round, another railway, begun in 1907, goes via
Bida, Zungeru and Zaria to Kano, a total distance of 400 miles. A line from
Jebba to Zungeru affords connexion with the Lagos railway.
But the greatest development of the railway systems was in the south and
east of the continent. In British East Africa a survey for a railway from
Mombasa to Victoria Nyanza was made in 1892. The first rails were laid in
1896 and the line reached the lake in December 1901. Meanwhile, there had
been a great extension of railways in South Africa. Lines from Cape Town,
Port Elizabeth, East London, Durban and Delagoa Bay all converged on the
newly risen city of Johannesburg, the centre of the Rand gold mines. A more
ambitious project was that identified with the name of Cecil Rhodes,
namely, the extension northward of the railway from Kimberley with the
object of effecting a continuous railway connexion from Cape Town to Cairo.
The line from Kimberley reached Bulawayo in 1897. (Bulawayo is also reached
from Beira on the east coast by another line, completed in 1902, which goes
through Portuguese territory and Mashonaland.) The extension of the line
northward from Bulawayo was begun in 1899, the Zambezi being bridged,
immediately below the Victoria Falls, in 1905. From this point the railway
goes north to the Katanga district of the Congo State. In the north of the
continent a step towards the completion of the Cape to Cairo route was
taken in the opening in 1899 of the railway from Wadi Haifa to Khartum. A
line of greater economic importance than the lastnamed is the railway
(completed in 1905) from Port Sudan on the Red Sea to the Nile a little
south of Berber, thus placing the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan within easy reach of
the markets of the world. A west to east connexion across the continent by
rail and steamer, from the mouth of the Congo to Port Sudan, was arranged
in 1906 when an agreement was entered into by the Congo and Sudan
governments for the building of a railway from Lado, on the Nile, to the
Congo frontier, there to meet a railway starting from the river Congo near
Stanley Falls. A railway of considerable importance is that from Jibuti in
the Gulf of Aden to Harrar, giving access to the markets of southern
Abyssinia.
Besides the railways mentioned there are several others of less
importance. Lines run from Loanda and other ports of Angola towards the
Congo State frontier, and from Tanga and Dar-es-Salaam on the coast of
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