(Redirected from Danish West India and Guinea Company)The 'Danish West India Company' or 'Danish West India-Guinea Company' (
Danish: ''Vestindisk kompagni'' or ''Det Vestindisk-Guineiske kompagni'') was a Danish
chartered company that exploited colonies in the
Danish West Indies, the
Caribbean islands of
St. Thomas,
St. John, and
St. Croix (today’s
United States Virgin Islands) and the
Danish Gold Coast in present-day
Ghana.
The
Virgin Islands were for a good two hundred years a Danish colony. The Danes settled on St. Thomas around
1670, on St. John in
1718, and on St. Croix in
1733. The ''Vestindisk kompagni'' was established
March 11 1671, and from
August 30 1680, became known as ''Det Vestindisk-Guineiske kompagni''.
In the 17th and 18th centuries, the company flourished on the
triangle trade, trading on the gold coast for slaves that were then traded for molasses and rum in the West Indies. Until
1754 the company itself was responsible for the colony, but this changed when the Danish government 'Chamber of Revenues' took over the administration. From
1760 to
1848, the governing body was known as ''Vestindisk-guineiske rente- og generaltoldkammer''. This led to a brief establishment of ''Det Guineiske kompagni'' via Royal resolution of
March 18 1765, to maintain the trade with the Danish Gold Coast colonies. In November, they received both the fort Christiansborg and Fredensborg for 20 years; however, the company never received trade monopoly, like the previous West India Company had. The trade remained free for all Danish,
Norwegian,
Schleswig and
Holstein companies.
In the mid 1770s, the company had so much financial trouble that it was liquidated on
November 22 1776. In expectation of this, the Danish government had already retaken control of the granted forts from August-September
1775.