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Colón, Panama

Colón (Spanish pronunciation: [koˈlon]) is a city and seaport in Panama, beside the Caribbean Sea, lying near the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal. It is the capital of Panama's Colón Province and has traditionally been known as Panama's second city. Originally it was located entirely on Manzanillo Island, surrounded by Limon Bay, Manzanillo Bay, and the Folks River; however, since the disestablishment of the Panama Canal Zone, the city's limits have been redefined to include Fort Gulick, a former U.S. Army base, as well as the former Panama Canal Zone towns of Cristobal, Margarita, and Coco Solo.

This article is about the city in Panama. For the province, see Colón Province.

Colón

 Panama

9 m (30 ft)

78,000

241,817

+507

Population[edit]

Colón's population in 1900 was 3,001. It grew significantly with the building of the Panama Canal, becoming 31,203 by 1920. In 2000, the population was around 204,000.


With the city's economic decline, many of its upper and middle-class residents left, reducing its ethnic diversity. European and American expatriate communities, as well as Panamanians of Greek, Italian, Jewish, Chinese and Indian/South Asian heritage, started moving to Panama City, to former Canal Zone towns, and overseas.


Today, sizable South Asian and Arab communities live in the remaining prosperous areas of the city, as well as in gated communities outside it. The majority of the city's population is of West Indian or mixed mestizo ancestry.


Colón was home to some of the best-educated and most well-heeled Panamanian families of West Indian heritage, such as the Washingtons, the Drews, the Fords, the Moodys, the Robinsons, the Beebys, the Archibolds, the Edwards, the Crowns, the Hoys, the Warehams, the Abrahams, and the McKintoshs. From these families sprang the teachers, professors, doctors, lawyers, engineers, businessmen, and politicians that contributed to the city's prosperity. Most of them eventually left the city for the United States or the United Kingdom. Their influence may still be seen, however, in their descendants that remain in the province.


Colón was also home to Las Amigas de la Caridad ("Women of Charity"), a charitable organization of women of Caribbean descent. The organization met largely in the home of Gladys Booth Ford and her stepdaughter Ruby Ford Drew at Calle 7 and Avenida Sta. Isabel. Ruby Drew was a long-standing member of Christ Church by the Sea.

Sports[edit]

Colón is home to Correcaminos Colon, 2016 Basketball Champion of Panama and member of the FIBA Americas League. The team plays its home games at the Arena Teófilo "Panamá" Al Brown.

Transport[edit]

The city is served by the Panama Canal Railway and Enrique Adolfo Jiménez Airport.

psychologist, educator, testified in Brown v. Board of Education

Kenneth B. Clark

CEO of Copa Holdings

Pedro Heilbron

publisher, journalist and talk show host

Eric Jackson

(1901–1993), British actress, born in Colón[6]

Delia de Leon

(1902–1956), British theatre manager, impresario and playwright

Jack de Leon

American politician, Senator from Arizona from 1986 until his death in 2018, and 2008 Republican presidential nominee, born in the U.S. Navy hospital at the Coco Solo submarine base; the site is now in Colón.[7]

John McCain

U.S. Navy Rear Admiral and double Navy Cross recipient.[8]

George E. Pierce

political commentator on Fox News

Juan Williams

musician, songwriter, bandleader, educator.

Billy Cobham

Carlos Bieberach, Salsa singer with Orquesta La Inmensidad since 1988. Lives in USA since 1982 and in Miami since 1983.

Fort Sherman

List of former United States military installations in Panama

Small, Charles S. (1982). Military Railroads on the Panama Canal Zone. Cos Cob, CT: Railroad Monographs.  9325326.

OCLC

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Official website

extensive site about Colón, Panama

Colón City Panama

Map of Fort De Lesseps