(Redirected from British Windward Islands):''This article is about the Caribbean island group. For the eastern
Society Islands in
French Polynesia, see
Windward Islands (Society Islands). The southeastern
Hawaiian Islands are also occasionally referred to as the Windward Islands''.
The 'Windward Islands' are the southern islands of the
Lesser Antilles.
Name and geography

The Windward Islands
The ''Windward'' Islands are called such because they were more
windward to
sailing ships arriving in the
New World than the
Leeward Islands, given that the prevailing
trade winds in the
West Indies blow east to west. The trans-Atlantic currents and winds that provided the fastest route across the ocean brought these ships to the rough dividing line between the Windward and Leeward islands. Vessels in the
Atlantic slave trade departing from the
African
Gold Coast and
Gulf of Guinea would first encounter the southeasternmost islands of the Lesser Antilles in their west-northwesterly heading to final destinations in the
Caribbean and
North and
Central America.
The Antillean Windward Islands are :
★
Dominica
★
Martinique (French; all the others are part of the Commonwealth of Nations)
★
Saint Lucia
★
Saint Vincent
★ The
Grenadines
★
Grenada
British colonial entity
The name Windward islands was also used to refer to a British colony on several of these islands, existing between
1833 and
1960 and consisting of the islands of
Grenada,
St Lucia,
Saint Vincent, the
Grenadines,
Barbados (seat of the governor to
1885, when it became a separate colony),
Tobago (to
1889 when it was joined to
Trinidad), and
Dominica (from
1940, when it was transferred from the
Leeward Islands colony to the Windward Islands).
The colony was known as the 'Federal Colony of the Windward Islands' from
1871 to June
1956, and then as the 'Territory of the Windward Islands' to its dissolution in
1960.
Its capital was Saint George's on Grenada (originally Bridgetown on Barbados, 1871-1885). They were not a single colony, but a confederation of separate colonies with a common
governor-in-chief, while each island retained its own institutions, and they had neither legislature, laws, revenue nor tariff in common. There was, however, a common court of appeal for the group as well as for Barbados, composed of the chief justices of the respective islands, and there was also a common audit system, while the islands unite in maintaining certain institutions of general utility.
See also
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Colonial Heads of the Windward Islands
★
Windward Islands cricket team
★
West Indian cricket team
★
Leeward Islands
Sources and references
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★
WorldStatesmen- Grenada, also shows flags