'Port Bell' is a small industrial centre near
Kampala in
Uganda which has a
rail link and a rail/road
ferry wharf used for international traffic across
Lake Victoria to
Tanzania and
Kenya. It is located at the end of a narrow inlet of the lake 7 miles / 10 km to the south-east of Kampala.
The port is named after
Sir Hesketh Bell, a British commissioner, who took over administration of
Britain's interests in Uganda in 1906. Its rail link is a branch line from the Kampala-
Jinja main line.
Lake Victoria ferries operate from Port Bell linking Kampala to other
railhead ports on Lake Victoria including
Jinja,
Kisumu and
Mwanza.
The Port Bell ferry wharf is visible on high-resolution Google Earth photos at latitude 0.2885° longitude 32.653°. A ferry is shown loading truck and rail coaches while another waits.
When the first stage of the
Uganda Railway was completed in 1901, the railhead was at
Kisumu, 12 hours journey from Port Bell by ship. Ferries brought goods by lake between Port Bell and Kisumu. It was not until 1931 that a branch line of the railway from
Nakuru reached
Kampala and then Port Bell.
At present, Uganda Breweries has its main
brewery at Port Bell. In the
1960s one of the first instant
tea factories was located at Port Bell as was a factory distilling
waragi, a strong, indigenous,
alcoholic drink.
Before the
jet airline era, Port Bell was a landing point on the
British flying boat passenger and
mail route from
Southampton to
Durban. Port Bell linked
Khartoum and
Kisumu.