Keamari | |
---|---|
Locality | |
Sydenham Passenger Pavilion at the Keamari Boat Basin was inaugurated in 1914 | |
Nickname: Seaway of Karachi | |
KeamariShow map of SindhKeamariShow map of Pakistan | |
Coordinates: 24°49′N 66°59′E / 24.817°N 66.983°E / 24.817; 66.983 | |
Country | Pakistan |
Government | |
• Constituency | NA-248 (Karachi West-I) |
• National Assembly Member | Abdul Qadir Patel (PPP) |
Keamari (Sindhi: ڪياماڙي, Urdu: کیماڑی) is a neighbourhood in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. Keamari was originally an independent settlement built on a sandy ridge on the eastern side of Karachi Harbour.
History
Keamari was a low lying island located between Manora and the city of Karachi well into the colonial era. During this time, Keamari was the landing point for all goods and people entering Karachi. Kemari's anchorage during the early colonial era was too shallow for large ships, and so those were instead forced to dock at Manora.
The 3-mile-long Napier Mole Road was built in 1854 as a raised embankment which connected Karachi with Keamari. A year earlier in 1853, the Napier obelisk was built to commemorate the late Governor of Sindh, Charles Napier. The British further built a spur of the Sindh Railway to Kemari, which did not follow Napier Mole, but instead along the east part of Chinna Creek. During the colonial era, Kemari had a naval yard, a government commissariat, post office, customs and railway houses. In 1865, the 1,200-foot-long iron Napier Mole Bridge was built as part of an upgrade. In 1914, the Sydenham Passenger Pavilion at Kemari's Boat Basin was inaugurated by Lord Willingdon. In 1917, the imposing Mules Mansion, designed by Iraqi-Jewish architect Moses Somake, was completed.
Neighbourhoods
Most of the neighborhoods of the defunct Kemari Town are densely populated with two exceptions. Baba Bhit is composed of three small islands in Karachi harbour that are home to about 5% of the town's population. Further west, Gabo Pat is mostly rural with about 10% of the town population but half of the total town area. There are small villages in the rural area of Kiamari, including:
- Abdul Rehman Goth
- Arbian
- Baba Bhit
- Bhutta Village
- Darvesh Goth
- Gabo Pat
- Goth Faqir Mohammad
- Goth Ghulam Mohammad
- Goth Haji Behram
- Goth Haji Jumma Khan
- Goth Haji Salar
- Goth Lashkari
- Goth Mauladad
- Goth Mohammad Ali
- Goth Shaikhan
- Gulshan-e-Sikandarabad
- Haji Ali Goth
- Jackson Bazar
- Jamali Goth
- Kakapir
- Kiamari
- KPT Officers Society
- Machar Colony
- Maripur
- Masroor Colony
- Mubarak Goth
- Rais Goth
- Rehman Goth
- Salehabad
- Shams Pir
- Sher Shah
- Somar Goth
- Sultanabad
Sports
Kemari has many semi-professional football teams, including:
- Kemari Mohammadan FC
- Kemari Union FC
- Society Brothers FC (formed 2010, dissolved 2014)
- Mohammad Eleven FC
- Ayaaz Eleven FC
- Usman Shaheed FC (Shirin Jinnah Colony)
- Northern Loon FC (formed 2014, present)
Gallery
- In 1911, Keamari was still an island
- Keamari's Mules Mansion built in 1917, was designed by Iraqi-Jewish architect Moses Somake
- St George's church dates from the colonial era
- The head of Napier Mole Bridge on the mainland
- A view of Keamari Harbour
- Sydenham Passenger Pavilion, inaugurated in 1914
- Native Jetty bridge in 1900
See also
References
- Kiamari Town - Government of Karachi Archived 2006-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
- Office, United States Naval Oceanographic (1976). Sailing Directions for the West Coast of India: Includes Ceylon and Maldive, and Laccadive Islands.
- ^ A Gazetteer of the Province of Sindh. G. Bell and Sons. 1874.
- The Persian Gulf Pilot. J. D. Potter. 1875.
- Napier Mole Bridge to Keamari in Karachi
- Chelmsford (Viscount), Frederic John Napier Thesiger (1919). Speeches: 1916-1917. Printed at the Government Monotype Press.
- "Moses Somake: Mules Mansion at Karachi, Pakistan | Archive | Diarna.org". archive.diarna.org. Retrieved 2020-04-03.