The Congo River is divided into three navigable parts, by seagoing ship to Matadi, where there is a wharf and port, a railway bypassing the mighty falls for 200 miles; and then a middle section of over 1000 miles from Leopoldville (Kinshasa) to Stanleyville (Kisangani) where the Stanley Falls breaks the river. The upper section of the river is navigable to Lubumbashi, a measure of 400 miles. The large copper deposits of Katanga are conveyed from Elisabethville (Lumbumbashi). The Congo River was an open river in that it was free for all nations to use as per an 1885 international agreement and was tested by a Brit in the International Court in 1931.
The first river steamers on the Congo was two built in sections and hauled overland to the middle river by Henry Morton Stanley the explorer in 1879. Stanley was instrumental in making the area the personal territory of Leopold II.
The Oxford Baptist Missionary Society and its chief agent Grenfell built the steamer Peace for evangelical work in the area in the 1884. Grenfell led both in contact with the natives and charting and exploring the river system. He would later built 2 larger steamers, one called Goodwill. The steamer Bernaert captured in a civil war of 1892.
Author Joseph Conrad steamed on one trip up the Congo and used the trip as informationn for his famous novel Heart of Darkness.
Conrad was promised a job as a Congo River pilot through the influence of his distant cousin Marguerite Poradowska, who lived in Brussels and knew important officials of the Belgian company which exploited the Congo for its rubber. At this time the Congo, though nominally an independent state, the Congo Free State was virtually the personal property of Leopold II, king of the Belgians, who made a fortune out of it. Later, the appalling abuses involved in the naked colonial exploitation that went on in the Congo was explosed to public view, and international criticism compelled the setting up of a committee of inquiry in 1904. What Conrad saw in 1890 shocked him profoundly and shook his view of the moral basis of all exploring and trading in newly discovered countries and indeed of civilization in general.
As a result of the Belgian genocide and slavery visited on the Africans, the Belgium congo was set up as a government colony in 1908. A portage railway was built from Matadi to Leopoldville. Others were built around Stanley Falls, and on the rocky sections of the upper Congo. A Congo to Nile Railway was planned to connect Stanleyville with the Nile at Uganda. Over 100 steamers on the river by 1900. British and American missionary societies were sent to spread the gospel and monitor governments. Mining companies were set up in the copper belt of Katanga Province, and the Societe Maritime de Haut Congo was established. Railways radiated in a star pattern from Katanga, lines to Angola, Zambia, and halfway to Leopoldville at Ilebo on the Kasai River. Later, ocean maritime empires Societe Maritime Belge and airlines, SABENA were formed to serve the colony.
A few boatnames—Brugesville, flandres, Milz, Deliverance, Henry Reed, Kigomi, Tadora General Olsen, Brabant, Kitambo.
OTRACO was the office of transport or Belgian government shipping agency on the Congo River after 1936.
Gaston Eve comments on travelling by boat during his time in Brazzaville during WWII with the Free French Forces. "The voyage on the Fondère was very pleasant. That paddle steamer was very well run, the food excellent served in a fine refectory. We had cabins but in general slept on the deck. The nights were very beautiful. On the journey we were able to admire the forest lining the river and saw many types of monkey in the trees alongside it. Some were enormous and all this was new."
D'Lynn Waldron who travelled through the Congo at the start of the crises in 1962 explained that 'Most of the river boats were tiny Victorian relics, half rusted away and painted the color of rust so it wouldn’t show. Many of the larger riverboats had been towed across the Atlantic after outliving their usefulness on the Mississippi [(Sic), One boat on the Congo was a copy of the Mississipi type; U.S. boats would not have made the sea voyage nor the impassable lower falls.] These were big, old-fashioned, flat-bottomed, stern wheelers that drew only a few feet of water."
Large paddle steamers were built by this agency OTRACO and worked the river until the Civil War when boats were machine gunned and charges dropped into their boilers.
Bretonnet, Vivi in French Congo and Ubangi River. The north bank of the river being an entirely separate french colony with their own boats.
River steamers ran until the 1980s, when the kleptocracy of Mobuto crippled the country. Diesel pushers were put to work.
Up to 150 people were drowned when ferries collided on the river in 2010. US Kayaker eaten by crocodiles on Congo in 2010.
Further Reading
"Steam Across Africa" New York Times 1902.[1]