2015-04-27: The Nitrate Works of Humberstone (1/3)

I rented a car and drove to Humberstone, a town where nitrate was extracted from the desert, and processed to become saltpetre. A by-product of the process was iodine that was also sold.

During the Pacific war started in 1879, Chile took possession of  the nitrate rich land of the Atacama, and began to exploit it. This proved to be useful as in the early 20th century, about 80% of Chile’s income came from nitrate that was sold all over the world as fertilizer. From 1905 to 1913, Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch developed the ammonia synthesis which resulted in a cheap substitute for the nitrate. The market prices for saltpetre plummeted in the 1930’s, and many nitrate works closed.

James Thomas Humberstone, a chemical engineer who emigrated from England, founded Humberstone as Oficina La Palma in 1872, when this part of the desert still belonged to Peru. As a result of the Pacific war, the Oficina La Palma became Chilean in 1883. It grew quickly, and became one of the biggest nitrate works in the region. In 1934,  when Humberstone as well as Santa Lauta went almost bankrupt as a result of the ammonia synthesis, both  works were acquired by COSATAN (Compañía Salitrera de Tarapacá y Antofagasta), and modernized. In 1940, Humberstone reached its peak with 3700 people living and working there. In 1961, Humberstone finally shut down, and its inhabitants had to relocate in search of new jobs. Humberstone became a ghost town with roofs rattling in the hot desert wind and squealing doors.  UNESCO discovered it and it was declared world heritage in 2005. It is in the process of being revamped for tourism. The church for instance was one of the first building to be refurbished.

Even though it offered some amenities, such as a swimming pool, it was a remote place and work was hard. Despite that, the staff workers and their families typically stayed for 10-15 years before they moved on. Today, there is a reunion of its former inhabitants once every couple of years.

The city is divided into 2 main sections: In the north, the  industrial sector is dominated by a chimney of about 40 meters. The ovens feeding the chimney used to produce steam for the leaching process and  probably for the electrical power plant as well. Waste management was simple — the slag was dumped onto a big hill that still smells after 55 years.

In the southern part, there are the dwellings, the church, the theatre, the market, the hotel, the school, the swimming pool, and the administration, a guest house, and the telephone switch board building.

 

To Humberstone: Heading for the Desert
To Humberstone: Leaving the Outskirts of Iquique and Heading for the Desert

 

 

The Industrial Complex

  Humberstone: Street to the Industrial Sector

Humberstone: Alley leading to the Industrial Sector

 

Humberstone: Rusty House
Humberstone: Rusty Shed

 

1. The Chimney

Humberstone: Electric Power Plant and Chimney
Humberstone: Electric Power Plant and Chimney; Maintenance Sheds behind the Chimney

 

Humberstone: Drying Area for Leche,  Chimney, and Power Plant
Humberstone: Drying Area for Leche, Chimney, and Electric Power Plant

 

Humberstone: Chimney
Humberstone: Chimney

 

Humberstone: Chimney and Iodine Oven in the Foreground
Humberstone: Chimney and Iodine House in the Foreground

 

2. Electric Power Plant

Humberstone: Power Station seen from Slag Hill
Humberstone: Power Station seen from Slag Hill

 

 

Humberstone: Electric Power Plant
Humberstone: Electric Power Plant

 

Humberstone: Electric Generator
Humberstone: Electric Generator

 

3. Workshops & Storage

Humberstone: Maintenance Shops and Stores
Humberstone: Maintenance Shops and Stores

 

Humberstone: Workshops
Humberstone: Workshops ans Stores

 

Humberstone: More Rust than Corrugated Sheet
Humberstone: More Rust than Corrugated Sheet

 

Humberstone: View into Workshop
Humberstone: View from Foreman’s Room into Workshop

 

Humberstone: Bed of Lathe
Humberstone: Bed of Lathe

 

Humberstone: Machine
Humberstone: Machine

 

Humberstone: Blacksmith’s Shop

 

Humberstone: Furnace

 

Humberstone: Storage Rack
Humberstone: Storage Rack

 

Humberstone: Storage Hut with more Wholes than Hut
Humberstone: Storage Hut with more Wholes than Hut

 

4. The Slag Hill

Humberstone: Mountain of Slag: Still Smelling after 55 Years
Humberstone: Mountain of Slag: Still Smelling after 55 Years

 

Humberstone: Mountain of Slag -- Still Smelling after 55 Years
Humberstone: Mountain of Slag — Still Smelling after 55 Years

 

Humberstone: Conveyer Belt on Slag Hill
Humberstone: Leftover of a  Conveyor Belt on Slag Hill

 

Humberstone: Passage through Slag Mountain
Humberstone: Passage through Slag Mountain

 

5. The End Product

Humberstone: THe end Product Salpetre
Humberstone: The End Product Saltpetre

 

Humberstone: Advertisement for Saltpetre Tailored for Egyptian Market
Humberstone: Advertisement for Saltpetre Tailored to Egyptian Market