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History of St. Croix Virgin Islands
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HIGHLIGHTS OF CRUZAN HISTORY
from "Divers Information on the Romantic
History of St. Croix"
by Florence Lewisohn
� 1963 Florence Lewisohn on behalf of St. Croix Landmarks Society
St.
Croix today is an hospitable island that has a little of everything except
cold weather.
The island has changed remarkably since Columbus discovered
it in 1493 and was driven off by hostile Indians. In the nearly 500 years
that have intervened, this little area of 84 square miles and 52,628 acres
has alternately suffered and prospered from the blind forces of nature and
history. It has attracted a remarkable variety of people during its
history, not all of whom benefited the island.
During the period of development of the Western Hemisphere,
St. Croix was fought over, colonized, bought, sold, captured and
recaptured because of its strate�gic or economic potential. It is
popularly said to have existed under the flags of seven nations. This
tally does not include periods of possession or use by aboriginal tribes,
pirates, filibusters, squatters, private owners, religious and trading
com�panies, or the few times when it was not occupied by anyone at all.
Our documented history begins with the Indians found on the
island by Colum�bus, and seen again by Governor John White 94 years later
when he stopped here three days on his way to found Virginia in 1587.
THE VANISHED INDIAN. When
Columbus sent his men ashore at St. Croix's Salt River entrance to look
for fresh water, November 14, 1493, the landing party encountered a canoe
full of Indians and a lively fight took place on the water. Columbus' men
got more or less the worst of it, but captured a few Indians whom they
took with them. Columbus named the spot "Cabo de Flechas" or "Cape of The
Arrows."
When the island came to be actually settled in the early
1600's, there were no Indians left. It is assumed that most of them were
carried off in raids by the Spaniards to work the gold mines of Santo
Domingo.
To this day the question remains unsettled as to whether
St. Croix was inhabited by the warlike, cannibalistic Caribs or the
peaceful Arawaks, or both. The Arawak culture predominated, as artifacts
show, but the cultural traits were carried by the women, and the Caribs as
they moved northward through the Antilles from the Orinoco area, liked
nothing better than capturing Arawak women. There is also evidence of
strong relation�ships with the warlike Tainans of Puerto Rico, and the
peaceful Taino of His�paniola, who sometimes had women as chieftains.
In any case, St. Croix has at least forty Indian village
sites, and is rich in Indian artifacts*. The Salt River village site is a
favorite digging spot for local amateurs.
An archaeologist once uncovered a row of flat stone slabs
standing on edge at Salt River, with petroglyphs and pictographs on them.
Hundreds of the "three pointer" religious stones were found there, and
are still to be picked up along shore or inland. The still-visible
earthen fort built there by the French in the 1650's abounds in shell
deposits and other Indian artifacts. There are also sites at Estates St.
George, Fair Plain, Glynn, Grove Place, Plessen, Coakley Bay, Cane Bay,
Longford and Sprat Hall, to mention just a few.
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1493 |
SPAIN.
Columbus discovered St. Croix and named it
Santa Cruz (Holy Cross) on his
second voyage. The Indians called it "Ay Ay"; spelled also as "Iahi" or "Agay"
by early writers. |
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1587
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ENGLAND.
John White, sent by Sir Walter Raleigh as
Governor at Virginia, stayed here three days; found evidence of Indian
habitation. |
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1625 |
 HOLLAND & ENGLAND.
Both nations began small settle�ments;
Dutch near Bassin; English on SW shore area. French filibusters had been
using island as base for careening boats for years. |
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1642
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Holland increased its settlement, called
it Nieuw Zeeland, later Nieuw Wa1cheron. Still held jointly with the
English, but under much dissension. Tobacco and indigo chief products.
English had an early sugar works. |
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DOUBLE DEALINGS BY THE DUTCH, ENGLISH &
FRENCH. The story of these
settlements on St. Croix is a cloak and dagger one with its details lost
in history. The historian John Knox reasons that the Dutch preceded the
English hi a few years, but it is certain that both were there by 1625.
The Dutch and a hundred French Huguenots from St. Kitts lived in or near
Bassin, while the English settled on the south shore not far from
present-day Frederiksted.
Affairs muddled along until 1645. By then
the colonies had a good high tone with a Dutch Governor-General appointed
by their West India Com�pany, and some English noblemen with
letters-patent from the King. By that year there were some 600 persons on
the island.
Then things came to a boil. That year the
Dutch Governor killed the Eng�lish one in his house, and a rousing fight
took place between the two colonies, with the Dutch Governor wounded and
dying a few days later. The Dutch chose another Governor and he was asked
to visit the English, who promised him protection. This promise was
violated; he was seized, condemned and publicly shot. The Dutch, being the
weaker, decided to abandon their colony and left for St. Eustatius and St.
Martins. The French, who had sympathized with the Dutch, asked permission
to leave. They were sent off to Guadaloupe in an English ship after they
promised to give the captain their abandoned plantations.
When they arrived at Guadaloupe, the
refugees registered protests against the captain. He was seized,
imprisoned and his ship and cargo sold. "All this," says Knox, "made quite
a noise in England, France and the Islands."
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1646 |
ENGLAND
held island after Dutch and French driven
out.
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1650 |
SPAIN.
Duke of Marlborough's English settlement
massacred or driven out by 1,200 Spaniards from Puerto Rico. Many went to
Bermuda. The Dutch from St. Eustatius tried to recapture it the same year;
defeated by the Spanish Garrison.
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1650 |
 FRANCE.
Governor de Poincy of other French West
Indies took possession for French crown; planned to make it his capitol.
DE POINCY
bought St. Croix and other islands from
French King, for private domain. As a leading Knight of Malta, he sent
other Knights and Frenchmen to colonize St. Croix.
KNIGHTS OF MALTA.
All de Poincy's private possessions in the
West Indies granted �to this Order of St. John. |
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1651 |
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1653 |
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1657 |
Chevalier de la Mothe sent by de Poincy
with supplies for relief of inhabitants. Some 200 rebellious French
colonists put de Mothe in chains and sailed off in his ship, presumably to
Brazil. Two years later, the new Governor, Chevalier du Bois, sent to
restore order. |
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THE DAYS OF THE FRENCH.
Sieur du Bois built a "castle" in 1659 on
Hemer's Peninsula which is now Estate Judith's Fancy. The ruins of this
residence stand today, done in the old French style of a small chateau,
with two unusual towers at either end, one of which is still there. Legend
has it that du Bois brought in our small white tailed deer to the island
to stock his estate park with them.
The French government headquarters lay
along the east bank of Salt River which then was a real river arising near
Canaan and coming down through Estate Concordia into the Salt River Bay.
On the opposite bank of the bay, the
Knights of Malta threw up a triangular �earthenwork, called Fort
S�le. Its outline is still visible today if one scrambles
through the underbrush to find it. Upriver from the Fort just off the
present-day Northshore road was the French landing stage and customs
house. This site was later used by the Danes as a guardpoint. Somewhere
above on the present Kirke�gaard Hill was the Jacobin, or Dominican
monastery shown on old French maps. It was here that P�re Labat, the
famous writer-priest is believed to have once stayed on one of his many
journeys between French islands.
The French had a fairly difficult time on
St. Croix. The Knights were aristocrats and not used to the hard work of
running plantations. There were six-hundred men among them who could bear
arms, but not too many who understood the problems of running a sugar,
indigo or tobacco plantation, all of which they attempted.
It was these Frenchmen who at one time
burned off all they could of St. Croix', dense forests and lived on their
ships until the fires ceased. They wanted more Ian:: for cultivating, and
believed that the forests caused their strange fevers, and nigb: vapours.
By 1671, the French had built another Fort
or Battery at Bassin, the present-day Christiansted. It stood on the point
at the entrance to the harbor, and was called Fort Saint Jean.
Later the Danes rebuilt it and renamed it Fort Louise Augusta.
The Knights of Malta gave up on St. Croix,
but the name they gave the island stayed with it, if not their
pronunciation.
Judith
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whose Fancy the old du Bois estate became
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was Judith A. Letta Benners, born Heyliger in 1762. Her tombstone may be
seen today near the old Castle-Greathouse ruins. Back of the ruin stand
some Danish additions -
a wind�mill and the later-period chimney
from steammill days, with the sugar factory ruins nearby.
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1665 |
FRENCH WEST INDIA COMPANY
bought St. Croix and all the
other islands held by Knights of
Malta. |
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1674 |
FRANCE.
King paid off Company debts and took
possession. |
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1695 |
ABANDONED.
French King ordered all inhabitants
removed to Santo Do�mingo. France still claimed it but island was not
officially settled. Sometimes it was uninhabited; ships of all nations
used harbor. English planned a settlement in 1720, but did not carry it
out. French renewed their claim in 1727 by taking seven English merchant
vessels in the harbor. An undetermined number of English fam�ilies were
squatters there, and remained under the Danes. |
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1733 |
DANISH WEST INDIA AND GUINEA COMPANY
bought St. Croix from the
French Crown. |
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1755 |
DENMARK.
took over the island as a Crown Colony |
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THE DAYS OF THE DANES.
The first colonization of St. Croix under
Denmark came in 1734, when a few Moravian missionaries cleared six estates
given them by the Danish Chamberlain de Plus . . . they found the British
families raising cane and making rum when they arrived. The next year,
the West India and Guinea Company began to survey the island and to divide
it into 150 and 300 acre plantations, as well as into nine quarters! To
encourage settlement, land costs were extremely low, and some tax benefits
were offered. The planters Flocked in from St. Thomas, Tortola, Virgin
Gorda, Montserrat and other islands. Soon there were five English estates
to every one held by a Dane. Things did not go too well however, and 1753
found the settlers petitioning the Danish King to make St. Croix a Crown
Colony as the Company was almost bankrupt. This was accomplished by sale
at about one and one-half million dollars. The settlement Flourished with
a population of over 10,000 by 1755, and some 375 plantations under
cultivation with sugar, cotton, indigo and tobacco as main crops.
During the following half century St.
Croix's economy, based on sugar and rum and the slave trade, rose steadily
to a phenomenal peak. The first event to disturb this picture was the
protracted quarrel over slavery which went on between the planters on St.
Croix and the more liberal government in Denmark. This same problem
confronted every European nation which had colonies in the West Indies or
trading stations in Africa. In St. Croix it culminated in:
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1792 |
The Danish Government declared the slave
trade to be planters to buy slaves during a transition period.
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1795-1800 |
These years marked the peak of prosperity
and of the sugar and rum economy; planters foresaw the beginning of the
end.
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1801 |
St. Croix captured by the British;
restored to Denmark in a few months.
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1803 |
The slave trade was completely abolished
by Denmark.
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1807-1815 |
Taken and held by British during
Napoleonic Wars. The English planters, who had complained of stiff Danish
trade restrictions and limited markets were not dissatisfied. The island,
however, was returned to Denmark. During the next 30 years, the island's
economy worsened with droughts, political upheavals and wars in Europe,
and a general depression. |
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1848 |
Governor von Scholten freed the slaves on
St. Croix, after rioting began. |
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1866 |
A disastrous fire in Christiansted in
February. |
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1867 |
Earthquake and tidal wave. Further decline
in economy. |
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1871 |
Capitol moved from St. Croix to St.
Thomas. |
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1872 |
Severe hurricane destroyed crops and
buildings. |
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1875 |
The Danish government lent the island
money to build a Central Sugar Factory,
and construction began the next year. |
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1876
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A severe hurricane; followed by depression
years until about 1888.
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1878-1892 |
Serious labor riots took place in 1878 and
Frederiksted was partially burned. Later the Capitol was divided, with
the Governor to reside six months in St. Croix and six in St. Thomas each
year. Financial difficulties came through valueless Mexican silver; this
silver was abandoned, causing local riots in 1892. The
island's economy was at a low ebb.
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1917 |
 THE UNITED STATES.
When the United States bought the three
islands in 1917,
mainly
to keep them out of the hands of the Germans during the First World War,
hopes rose high in St. Croix for better days ahead; hopes that were not
fulfilled for some years. The island became first a possession under U.S.
Navy administration, a period which was satisfactory to no one. As the
economy began a gradual slow rise, it was dashed again by the impact of
Prohibition on rum industry. Later, toward the end of the depression
years, the U.S. Co gave the island its Territorial Organic Act or
Constitution, which defined relationship to the U.S. under the Department
of The Interior, with an appointed Governor and an elected local Senate.
St. Croix continued to muddle along an uneven economy until the mid-1950's
when the influx of tourists began. Since then there has been a steady
growth, based on the island's re-discovery, by seeking retirement, new
business enterprise and investment, or just a lovely tropical vacation.
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*The Folmer Anderson Collection given to the
National Park Service in Christiansted by the former St. Croix Museum
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