(Redirected from Danish West Indian Islands)
Christiansted, the main town of St. Croix, a former colony of the Danish West Indies
The 'Danish West Indies' (
Danish: ''Dansk Vestindien'' or ''De dansk-vestindiske øer'') or "Danish Antilles", are a former colony of
Denmark in the
Caribbean, now known as the
U.S. Virgin Islands. ''Jomfruøerne'' ("Virgin Islands") was the Danish geographic name for the
Virgin Islands.
History
:''See also:
United States Virgin Islands — History and
History of the United States Virgin Islands.''
The
Danish West India and Guinea Company settled on
St. Thomas island first in
1672, expanding to
St. John in
1683 (a move disputed with the
British until
1718), and purchasing
St. Croix from the
French West Indies Company in
1733. In
1754, the islands were sold to the
Danish king, becoming royal Danish colonies.
At times during the
Napoleonic Wars, the islands were occupied by the British; first from March
1801 to
27 March 1802, and then again from December
1807 to
20 November 1815, when they were returned to Denmark.
Until
1904, there was no official currency for the Danish West Indies, which had led first to the
Spanish milled dollar and then the
United States dollar being used as the local currency. In 1904, the Danish-West Indian National Bank was established to provide an official currency. Rather than continue with the existing U.S. denominations or introducing the Danish
kroner, the bank opted to use the
Latin Monetary Union standard with
francs and
bits.
On
January 17,
1917, the islands were sold to the
United States for $25 million when the United States and Denmark exchanged their respective treaty ratifications. Danish administration ended
March 31,
1917, when the United States took formal possession of the territory and renamed it the
U.S. Virgin Islands.
The United States had been interested in the islands for years because of their strategic position near the approach to the
Panama Canal and because of the fear that
Germany might seize them to use as
U-boat bases during World War I.
Postage stamps
The first
postage stamp of the Danish West Indies was issued in
1856. It had the same square
coat of arms design as the contemporary stamps of
Denmark, but it was denominated 3 cents and of a dark
carmine color on yellowish paper. A yellow
burelage of wavy lines covered the stamp. (In the illustration at right, it is most easily seen along the bottom edge of the larger version.) An
1866 printing was on white paper, with the direction of the burelage lines changed, and in
1872 the stamps were
perforated. In
1873 a 4c value in dull blue was issued.
1874 saw the first
numeral issues of the same sort as used in Denmark. Values ranged from 1c to 50c; all were
bi-colored.
Inverted frames are common for several of the lower values.
As usual for small colonies far away, the Danish West Indies ran out of popular values periodically, and the colonial administration had to improvise. A 1c
surcharge was printed on 7c stamps in
1887, and a 10c surcharge on 50c in
1895. An additional supply of numeral types in new colors came out between
1896 and
1901.
Single-color 1c and 5c stamps were issued in
1900 to meet
UPU regulations. Shortages of 2c and 8c values led to more surcharges in
1902, rectified in the following year by an issue of those values using the arms design of 1900.
Postage due stamps first appeared in 1902 also.
As a result of the currency reform, in
1905, new stamps were issued. Values from 5b to 50b had a
silhouette of King
Christian IX, while 1fr, 2fr, and 5fr depicted the
sailing ship ''
Ingolf'' in St. Thomas harbor. New postage dues were required as well. Additional 5b stamps were produced by surcharging older stamps.
A
definitive series of
1907 depicted
Frederick VIII, followed in
1915 by a series for
Christian X.
A few types are cheaply available today, such as the low values of the 1907 issue, but most fall into the US$10-20 range. Because the letter-writing population was very small, perhaps just a few hundred persons, used copies are often valued more highly by collectors, and both forged and
favor cancellations are known to have been made.
See also
★
List of Governors of the Danish West Indies.
★
Danish colonization of the Americas
★
U.S. Virgin Islands
★
Danish India
Sources, references and external links
★
List of DWI governors
★
Transfer Day, from Denmark's consulate on the U.S. Virgin Islands