Los Raqueros

Los Raqueros: Personajes tipicos Santanderinos, descritos por Jose Maria de Pereda, que en los siglos XIX y XX frecuentaban las machinas y acostumbraban a darse un cole en Puertochico, buceando en las aguas de la bahia para recoger las monedas que los curiosos les lanzaban.

The Wreckers: Typical Santander characters, described by Jose Maria de Pereda, who in the 19th and 20th centuries used to hang around the cranes and have a swim in Puertochico, diving in the waters of the bay to retrieve the coins that had been thrown in for them by the onlookers.

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In Santander, the raqueros were children who scraped a living from the docks at Puertochico. The term ‘raquero’ is said to come from the English word ‘wreckers’ (as in ship-wreckers) those who salvage what’s left from shipwrecks. Initially scavenging and, by some reports, involved in petty crime, the children combed the bay for anything of value. They were paid a tip for fetching items that fell into the water, and in they jumped naked or half-naked. But it was when they dived into the bay that they made their place in history. They dived into the water holding their breath until they could retrieve the coin or “perra” with their mouths that had been thrown in by sailors and passengers of the ships in the port.

This trick and way of life was immortalised by the Cantabrian writer Jose Maria Pereda in a chapter called ‘El Raquero’ in his book ‘Escenas Montanesas’ published in 1864, 1877 and 1885. The same raquero character appears again briefly in his novel ‘Sotileza’ in 1885 in which the writer describes how the raqueros ‘worked’. Although the word ‘raquero’ and the activity were not unique to Santander or even Spain Pereda’s fictional characters (all bearing nicknames Muergo, Sula, Cole, Guarin and Toletes) brought fame to the Santander scavengers and their city.

It’s not clear whether the whistle was blown on the activity or whether there was no longer a need for the children to ‘wreck’ but it appears to have discontinued in the 1960’s probably as education became accessible to all. There is an account of a raquero Julian who said he dived in the 1960’s for money for sweets and the cinema rather than money to feed his family as was previously the case. The term ‘raquero’ has not died out it’s still used in Santander as a way of describing the rougher or tougher element of society.

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The statues were made by local sculptor Jose Cobo and were set in their bay location in 1999. Cobo is no stranger to public sculptures he also made the statues of the Tonetti clowns by the Sardinero and the memorial to the city fire of 1941 by the Ferry Building.

The raqueros are located exactly where they used to work on the quay parallel to Paseo de Pereda not that far from where the new Botin Centre is located Today this is the most elegant section of the city popular with tourists going for strolls along the bay, it’s hard to imagine the scene 150 years ago when it was an industrial docks.

One of the better-known raqueros, Nicolas Ochoa, or Kalin as he was called published his biography ‘El Puertochico Que Yo Conoci’ (The Puertochico That I Knew) in 2007. Kalin was a well known character in Santander and contributed to radio broadcasts on the COPE radio station under the guise of helping out with the weather reporting. Kalin was proud of his roots and never lost his love for Puertochico, he worked the petrol pumps where the boats fill up in Puertochico just a few metres from his original diving spot. He died aged 74 in January 2009 and his ashes were spread in the water just in front of these sculptures where he had dived as a child. ‘Buen viento’ as they say in Santander.

Main text copied from http://pamelacahill.com/

Technical – Photos as shown top to bottom read left to right

Date taken 01 Nov 2014 14:29:04 02 Nov 2014 19:04:50
Exposure time 1/80 sec 1/2 sec
Aperture Value 6.00 EV (f/8.0) 4.38 EV (f/4.6)
ISO Speed Rating 100 400
Flash Fired No Yes
Metering Mode Pattern Pattern
Exposure Programme Landscape Mode Not Defined
Focal Length 36.0 mm 35.0 mm

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