It is the story of the Yavari, the oldest single propeller driven iron ship operating en the world today; she sails on the world’s highest navigable waterway, Lake Titicaca, 12, 500 ft above sea level, which straddles the frontier between the high Andean countries of Peru and Bolivia. The actual story of the Yavari began in 1861. Today the ship is recognised by the National Historic Ships Committee of Great Britain as being in the same league as the Cutty Sark, Glenlee or Great Britain. Her attributes include being one of the earliest iron passenger /cargo steam sailers constructed in kit form, later to be ‘jumboized’. She also retains to this day, the collar which once enabled the propeller to be lifted and lowered. In 1861 Peru was a young republic. His president, Ramon Castilla ordered a ship of 300 tons for the Lake Titicaca. The order was placed with British Agents Anthony Gibbs & Sons, and the Peruvian admiral Ignacio Mariategui was dispatched to Britain to contract a shipyard to construct this vessel. The only method of transport up to Lake Titicaca was by mule and porter. Not long after his arrival in Great Britain, Admiral Mariategui discovered and informed his Government that a ship of 300 tons was too big to be built in individual parts light enough for mules to carry. Forthwith the order was changed to two smaller gunboats of 140 tons each. Mariategui commissioned the James Watt Foundry in Birmingham to build the two ships. They, in turn, subcontracted the construction of the wrought iron hulls to the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Co. In line with the very latest technology, each gunboat was bolted together and fitted out in its entirety in the –British shipyard. Each piece and part was then numbered and inventoried. Each ship was then completely disassembled and packed into packing cases, which in their turn, were duly numbered and inventoried. Finally, and together with the two propeller shafts, the Yavari and her sister ship, Yapura, were loaded on the Mayola, a ship bound for Arica, Peru. It arrived in Arica on 15th October 1862. In September 1863 the ships was dispatched by train from to Tacna on one of south America’s oldest railways, a distance of 37 miles across the world’s driest desert, the Atacama. In Tacna the packing cases were unpacked.
1862: Vapor Yavari: Navigation on Lake Titicaca, Peru Originally published in Shvoong: http://www.shvoong.com/humanities/history/174527-1862-vapor-yavari-navigation-lake/
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