|
St.Kitts
St. Kitts
and Nevis, like no other islands in the Caribbean, seem to
embody a kind of lush tropical paradise usually associated
with the South Pacific. The atmosphere here is palpably luxuriant,
an intoxicating blend of sunlight, sea air and fantastically
abundant vegetation. At the center of St. Kitts stands the
spectacular, cloud-fringed peak of Mount Liamuiga (pronounced
Lee-a-mweega), a dormant volcano covered by dense tropical
forest. And on Nevis, too, the ground rises upward into a
cloud forest filled with elusive green vervet monkeys and
brilliant tropical flowers. For ecotourists, or simply anyone
who enjoys stunning natural beauty, St. Kitts and Nevis cannot
fail to exceed expectations.
In the
late 18th century, the massive fortress of Brimstone Hill
was known as "The Gibraltar of the West Indies."
Built of black volcanic rock (then called "brimstone"),
it was held at times by both the English and French, but was
a neglected, almost forgotten legacy when efforts to restore
it began in 1965. Today the fort, with one of grandest views
in all the Caribbean, is a national park and the island's
historical centerpiece.
But you
don't have to be a history buff to get caught up in charms
of St. Kitts. This is mostly a low-key island, but shoppers
can survey duty-free bargains in the capital of Basseterre,
while hikers can tackle a variety of mountain and cloud forest
trails in the green interior – including a trek to a
crater lake in the caldera of Mount Liamuiga volcano. Meanwhile,
greens of a more manicured variety can be found at the championship
Royal St. Kitts Golf Course (designed by Peter Thompson, five-time
winner of the British Open).
And like
sister island Nevis, just two miles away, sun and sand are
never in short supply – at least nowadays. Until recent
years, the best beaches (on the southeastern end of St. Kitts)
were mostly inaccessible except by boat. Now a new road has
paved the way, to coin a phrase, to a series of classic, secluded
white-sand strands.
St.Kitts
History
The peaceful
calm of St. Kitts and Nevis--that tranquil atmosphere which
in Nevis especially edges toward slumber--suggests nothing
of the extraordinary histories of these two islands. For centuries,
St. Kitts and Nevis occupied a critical position in the European
struggle for the West Indies, combining exceptional wealth
as sugar colonies with a vital strategic position as gateways
to the Caribbean. As a result, the struggles and conflicts
that marked their history are among the most decisive episodes
in Caribbean history.
Both St.
Kitts and Nevis are volcanic islands, a fact to which they
owe their dramatic central mountains, their rather unpredictable
geologic history, and their lush tropical vegetation. In fact,
St. Kitts' pre-Columbian Carib inhabitants knew their island
as Liamuiga, or "fertile land," a reference to the
island's rich and productive volcanic soil. Today that name
graces St. Kitts' central peak, a 3,792-foot extinct volcano.
As was
the case all over the Caribbean, St. Kitts and Nevis were
first settled by Arawak and Carib Indians moving up through
the islands from South America between five and seven thousand
years ago. When Christopher Columbus arrived in 1493, both
islands had long been occupied by substantial Indian communities.
However, by the early 17th century the inhabitants of Nevis
had disappeared--victims of Spanish attacks, European diseases,
and, possibly, forced labor on an ill-fated Spanish pearl
diving project on Cubagua, an island off the Venezuelan coast.
Until
recently it was thought that Christopher Columbus provided
both St. Kitts and Nevis with their European names. As the
story goes, the Great Navigator dubbed the larger of the two
islands St. Christopher, in honor of the patron saint of travelers.
Although it may not have been Columbus who named the island,
it was almost certainly British sailors who shortened St.
Christopher to the familiar St. Kitts. Whatever its origins,
the gesture toward St. Christopher makes sense, as the islands'
visibility and position--as well as their comforts--made them
common first targets for early trans-Atlantic navigators.
Captain John Smith, for example, landed on Nevis in 1607 on
his way to establish the colony of Virginia. Smith and his
companions spent five days resting and relaxing on the island,
enjoying Nevis' hot sulfur baths while recuperating from the
long passage. Nevis derives its name from the Spanish phrase
"Nuestro Senora del las Nieves"--in English, Our
Lady of the Snows. Columbus had settled upon St. Martin (as
he sighted the island on that saint's feast day), but the
permanent halo of white clouds shrouding the island's central
peak suggested a snow cap to early Spanish sailors.
St. Kitts'
early history, like the island's Carib petroglyphs, is inscribed
in the towns, landmarks, and estates of the island itself.
Colonization began on St. Kitts in 1623, with the arrival
of Sir Thomas Warner, his family, and fourteen others at what
is now Sandy Point and their settlement at Old Road Bay. The
English were joined in 1625 by French settlers led by Pierre
Belain d'Esnambue, who had sought refuge on the island after
a losing fight with a Spanish galleon. The two groups wiped
out the Carib Indians in a massacre at Bloody Point in 1626,
weathered a Spanish attack in 1629, and then turned their
attentions to colonizing the islands around them. From St.
Kitts, the British settled Nevis, Antigua, Barbuda, Tortuga,
and Montserrat, while the French claimed Martinique and Guadeloupe.
By the middle of the century, as St. Kitts & Nevis became
increasingly prosperous, intermittent warfare between the
French and British took hold. The French exiled the British
from St. Kitts in 1664, only to lose it back to them in 1689.
France captured the island again in 1706 and lost it once
more soon after. Finally, they returned in 1782 to lay seige
to the massive British fort on Brimstone Hill, which fell
after a heroic defense. St. Kitts was returned permanently
to the British in 1783, as part of the Treaty of Versailles.
Nevis,
meanwhile, had risen to become the most celebrated sugar colony
in the Caribbean. The "Queen of the Caribbees,"
as the island was popularly known, had been settled in 1628
by a group of 80 English residents of St. Kitts, headed by
the tobacco planter Anthony Hilton. A larger group of settlers
from England soon joined them, and the island was quickly
cleared and developed for tobacco planting. Nevisian tobacco,
however, was no rival to that of Virginia, and within a few
decades the island turned toward sugar. Despite a small amount
of sugar production in the middle of the 17th century, it
wasn't until the arrival on Nevis of Sephardic jews who had
fled Spanish persecution in Brazil that Nevis really began
to flourish. Along with Dutch traders of the time, the refugees
brought the Spanish secret of crystallizing sugar, preserved
the product for shipping. By the early 18th century, Nevis'
sugar industry had made it a fantastically wealthy colony,
generating revenues equal to those of a number of North American
colonies combined.
Of course,
prosperity brought its own problems. First, the island became
a magnet for pirates and privateers, who sought to ambush
richly-laden merchant ships. In fact, pirates harrassed Nevis
until the 19th century, until they finally disappeared along
with the island's great sugar wealth. Second, Nevis became
so dependent on slave labor that by 1700 about 3/4 of the
residents were slaves. Third, and perhaps most important,
Nevis' sugar wealth made it an attractive target for other
countries--Spain, Holland, and France all made attacks on
Nevis. The most consequential were two large French attacks
in 1706, at the height of the island's prosperity. The attacks
seriously damaged the island, and, all things considered,
marked the beginning of Nevis' decline. Sugar production never
completely recovered, and although Nevis was soon protected
more strongly than ever (by no fewer than 15 fortifications
in 1750) there seemed to be less to protect. Poor crop returns
and a significant exodus from the island ended Nevis' reign
as the Queen of the Caribbean sugar islands.
Nonetheless,
conflicts for control of the island lasted until the late
18th century: the Dutch attacked three times, the Spanish
once, and the French twice before the Treaty of Versailles
finally allowed the islanders a reprieve. The island's rich
sugar economy recovered, and social life on the island became
notoriously extravagant--even dissolute. Nevis became a kind
of 18th-century playground for the rich and famous, with lavish
entertainments at the Bath Hotel and the construction of grand
estate houses--many of which are now among the Caribbean's
finest plantation inns. This was also the era during which
Nevis welcomed Horatio Nelson, who no doubt enjoyed the hospitality
of both the Bath Hotel and the estate of Fanny Nisbet, his
future wife.
However, even by the 1780s the impetus toward the abolition
of slavery--and the free labour that made the sugar industry
both possible and profitable--was becoming clear. After 1834,
when slavery was abolished, the industry diminished rapidly,
and with it Nevis's fortunes. Over the course of the nineteenth
century life on St. Kitts and Nevis was difficult, as economic
inactivity combined with natural disasters frustrated revitalization
efforts. In fact, it wasn't until the rise of tourism in the
last few decades that St. Kitts and Nevis again gained recognition
as pearls of the Caribbean.
Only the
fortress at Brimstone Hill remains as a reminder of the uneasy
history of these islands. Today, the country is a model of
peace and stability in the Caribbean. The Federation of St.
Kitts & Nevis, established as an independent nation within
the British Commonwealth in September of 1983, is democratically
ruled, with an economic focus on tourism, sugarcane, and ecology.
The authors
would like to thank Vincent K. Hubbard, in particular, for
much of the information about Nevisian history contained in
these pages. The history contained here is only a pale sampling
of the rich historical picture of Nevis that is provided by
his Sword, Ships & Sugar: History of Nevis to 1900
for more
history info:
http://www.interknowledge.com/stkitts-nevis
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/sc.html
http://www.islands.com/stkitts
http://www.stkittsnevis.net
http://www.stkittsnevis.net
http://www.stkittscarnival.com
http://gocaribbean.about.com/cs/stkitts
http://www.stkittsnevis.com |