Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Voh

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
France

INSEE/Postal code
  
98831 /98833

Local time
  
Wednesday 5:02 AM

Population (2014 census)2
  
3,160

Sui generis collectivity
  
New Caledonia

Area
  
804.9 km²

Mayor
  
Guigui Dounehote

Area1
  
804.9 km2 (310.8 sq mi)

Voh httpsc2staticflickrcom43491325274428514cf

Elevation
  
0–1,122 m (0–3,681 ft) (avg. 6 m or 20 ft)

Weather
  
22°C, Wind E at 2 km/h, 94% Humidity

Province
  
North Province, New Caledonia

Voh is a commune in the North Province of New Caledonia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean.

Contents

Map of Voh, New Caledonia

It has become famous for the aerial photography known as The Heart of Voh, a large formation of vegetation that resembles a heart seen from above. Photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand contributed to its popularity by using a photograph of the 'heart' as the cover to his books The Earth from the Air and Earth from Above.

Voh is also the closest large settlement to the enormous Koniambo mine, and it hosted indentured Vietnamese mineworkers from the late 1800s until the 1940s, termed the Chân Dăng.

Colonial establishment

In 1865 Kanak warriors killed workers constructing a fort at Pouangué (Gatope), and it was abandoned in 1869. In 1891 the French administration decided the vallée de Voh would be a good place for French free settlers. Land for farming was reportedly renounced voluntarily by the Kanak inhabitants, on the right bank of the river. At this time, there were no roads. Some 950 ha was surveyed by Piarchi, and lots of 0.15 ha to 380 ha were handed out for housing and livestock farming. By late 1892 23 Europeans including Georges Weiss, Jean-François Jocteur, Alexandre Paulaud and Claude Rousson, Jean-Baptiste Mirandon and former army officers Pancrace Mainard and Marin Poncet arrived and began building and farming. The settlement later expanded to the left bank of the river, and Governor Paul Feillet visited in 1894. Settlers soon turned to coffee production. The town now features a Musée du Café.

Today

Mining has brought new wealth to the region, the growth of employment and new housing, and problems associated with the temporary workforce.

People of Voh

Its most famous son is André Dang Van Nha who was born in the Vietnamese labour camp in 1936, and who now has a controlling interest, as head of SMSP, in the huge Koniambo mine. His father, killed building a wharf in 1937, is buried in the Voh cemetery.

References

Voh Wikipedia