
Latin America
Panama Canal Turns 100: See Photos of Its Construction
Friday marks the 100 anniversary of the Panama Canal, the 48-mile waterway connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

A sketch of an excavator at work on the Panama canal in Tabemilla in 1888.
The construction of the ship canal across the Isthmus of Panama transformed international trade, greatly reducing travel time between the Atlantic and the Pacific by eliminating the need for ships to go around the tip of South America. The decades-long project claimed the lives of an estimated 30,000 workers, many from diseases like malaria and yellow fever.

U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt tests a steam shovel at the Culebra Cut during construction of the Panama Canal, a project he championed, in November 1906.
Roosevelt's visit to Panama made him the first sitting U.S. president to travel abroad. His enthusiasm for the "big ditch" spurred the isthmus to proclaim its independence from Colombia in 1903 and sign a treaty granting perpetual control of the future waterway and adjacent 550-square mile canal zone to the United States.









