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Ismail saw himself as a builder. He took out huge loans and earned a lot of money from long-staple Cotton , the production of which had quintupled, and the price quadrupled - because of the American Civil War . Among Ismail's list of projects were 910 miles of new railroads, stretching 231 miles southwards from Cairo to Assiut , and including the first line in the Sudan , to Khartoum . Ismail's railroad plans were to wait more than 30 years before they were realized. In 1896 , major Horatio Kitchener decided to build the railroad Ismail had planned, but this railroad was not to bring civilization to the Sudan or to transport cotton, as Ismail had planned, but to feed and supply the army in the field. The man who approved the expenditure for the railroad, Lord Cromer , assumed that the railroad would be narrow gauge, to save money. Kitchener, however, insisted on a gauge of 3 feet 6 inches, the same track width that Cecil Rhodes was then laying between Kimberly and Bulawayo . It turned out that Kitchener had met Rhodes only a few weeks before, when Rhodes stopped in Cairo to obtain some donkeys for use in Rhodesia from Kitchener. There is little doubt why Kitchener insisted on his width of track. Even though Rhodes diverted three locomotives to Kitchener that were intended for his own railroad, it did not prevent Kitchener's railroad from becoming an engineering nightmare. There was a "total lack of suitable labor, tools, and materials".(1) In the end, with the help of some " Fellahin " dragged down from Egypt, and 200 convicts who were paroled for the job, the rail line was completed. There was, however, an unfortunate side effect. The result of the unskilled labor force was "a fairly bumpy ride and frequent accidents — locomotives that flew off tracks and down 15-foot embankments were hoisted back on the rails and continued along as if nothing had happened." (2) The railroad helped win the war for the British, Egyptans, and Sudanese against the Khalifa . The rail line left a gap between Sellal , just south of Aswan, and Wadi Halfa , however. Kitchener's line connected Wadi Halfa with Khartoum, in the Sudan. BIBLIOGRAPHY (1) Strage, Mark. ''Cape to Cairo - Rape of a Continent'', pg. 191 (2) Ibid, p. 192 |
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