Francisco Pizarro, the Spanish conquistador, founded Lima as his capital on January 6th, 1535. Pizarro's forces included Italians, Greeks and Africans, setting the stage for Lima's later position as a multiethnic society. The many foreign visitors and residents helped produce Lima's strong cosmopolitan flavor. (Dobyns, 1976, pg. 69)
Pizarro built his new city on an earlier settlement that involved more than 100 temple mounds. Ceremonial centers, such as this one, dotted the coastline of Peru. In ancient times, pilgrims came to these centers to appease the spirits and gain prestige. These centers influenced group behavior and the distribution of goods and labor. Some major crisis may have caused their decline, and most were gone before the Europeans arrived. (Time-Life, 1994)
Lima developed into a focal point for the export of Peru's riches to foreign countries. A city of 100,000 when Paul Boyton arrived, Lima's poorly paved streets led between long and narrow one-story houses of sun-dried mud to 33 public squares. Hawkers proclaimed their goods in song or shout. Wealthier homes had balconies, known as miradores, overhanging the street. A cart with three mules harnessed abreast or a closed carriage drawn by two horses occasionally passed by. Boyton may have seen men in black suits, but probably few native Indians of the mountains.
Resources:
Dobyns, Henry F. And Paul L. Doughty. 1976. Peru: a cultural history. New York, Oxford University. 336 pp.
Time-Life. 1994. The search for El Dorado. Alexandria, Virginia, Time-Life. 168 pp.
Paul Boyton Arrives in Lima, Peru
Paul Boyton Approached by Peruvian Agent in New York
In Massachusetts, Paul Boyton paddled the entire length of Lake Quinsigamund near Worcester and and in September of 1880, he paddled the Narragansett from Rocky Point to Providence.
Boyton claims it was October, but it was possibly September, when a stranger approached him on Broadway in New York. According to Paul, the man tapped him on the shoulder saying "This is Captain Boyton I believe."
One wonders how much this recounting of the story was influenced by the phrase "Dr. Livingstone, I presume" engendered by the famous meeting of Dr. David Livingstone by Henry Morton Stanley on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Africa. A New York Herald editorial dated the 10th of August 1872 used the phrase when describing that event. (Wikipedia article on David Livingstone)
The stranger went on to say "I have just returned from Europe where I was looking for you. I have a message for you from Don Nicolás de Piérola." He went on to explain that he was an agent of the Peruvian government, and wanted to speak with him in private. He cautioned Paul about Chilean spies that were in New York as well as elsewhere. He asked him to meet that evening at a nearby address.
Resources:
Boyton, Paul. 1892. The story of Paul Boyton: voyages on all the great rivers of the world, paddling over twenty-five thousand miles in a rubber dress. Milwaukee: Riverside. 358 pp.