Industrielle & Maritime d’Anvers, Le 5 Juin 1880 … Anvers: Lith. S. Mayer [1880]
Magnificent
Pictorial Banquet menu with a map showing the proposed Panama Canal, with
elaborate naval fittings, harbor view and sailing ships in honor of Ferdinand
de Lesseps. Measures 13 ⅝ x 9 ¾ inches, printed in three colors on card stock,
corners bumped, otherwise in fine, clean condition. Includes the multiple
course menu.
Ferdinand Marie, Comte de Lesseps (9
November 1805 – 7 December 1894) was a French diplomat and later developer of
the Suez Canal, which in 1869 joined the Mediterranean and Red Seas,
substantially reducing sailing distances and times between Europe and East
Asia.
He attempted to repeat this success with
an effort to build a Panama Canal at sea level during the 1880s, but the
project was devastated by epidemics of malaria and yellow fever in the area, as
well as beset by financial problems, and the planned Lesseps Panama Canal was
never completed. Eventually, the project was bought out by the United States,
which solved the medical problems and changed the design to a non-sea level
canal with locks. It was completed in 1914.
At the time of this banquet de Lesseps was heavily involved in trying to raise the funds for the construction of his Panama Canal project, it ended in a financial scandal.