The island of '
Dominica''s indigenous
Arawak people were expelled or exterminated by
Caribs in the 14th century. The Arawaks were guided to Dominica, and other islands of the
Caribbean, by the
South Equatorial current from the waters of the
Orinoco River. These descendants of the early
Tainos were overthrown by the Kalinago tribe of the Caribs.
The Caribs, or Island-Caribs, not to be confused with the proper Caribs of the mainland, occupied the
Windward Islands,
Guadeloupe, and maybe a few of the southern
Leewards during the time of
Christopher Columbus who landed on the island on Sunday of November 3rd of
1493. Therefore, he named it after the day.
Spanish ships frequently landed on Dominica during the 16th century, but fierce resistance by the Caribs discouraged Spain's efforts at settlement. Carib people presently inhabit the island, but the numbers of Carib population had decreased dramatically after years of brutal treatment by the Spanish, French and English. The British settlers devastated much of the Carib tribe. Many of the remaining Carib people live in Dominica's
Carib Reserve, a 3,700 acre Territory on Dominica's east coast which was granted by the English Queen.
European Colony period
In
1635,
France claimed Dominica. Shortly thereafter, French missionaries became the first European inhabitants of the island. Carib incursions continued, though, and in
1660, the French and
British agreed that both Dominica and
St. Vincent should be abandoned. Dominica was officially neutral for the next century, but the attraction of its resources remained; rival expeditions of British and French foresters were harvesting timber by the start of the 18th century.
Largely due to Dominica's position between
Martinique and
Guadeloupe, France eventually became predominant, and a French settlement was established and grew. As part of the
1763 Treaty of Paris that ended the
Seven Years' War, the island became a British possession. In
1778, during the
American Revolutionary War, the French mounted a successful invasion with the active cooperation of the population, which was largely French. The
1783 Treaty of Paris, which ended the war, returned the island to Britain. French invasions in
1795 and
1805 ended in failure.
In 1763, the British established a legislative assembly, representing only the white population. In
1831, reflecting a liberalization of official British racial attitudes, the
Brown Privilege Bill conferred political and social rights on free nonwhites. Three Blacks were elected to the legislative assembly the following year. Following the abolition of slavery, in
1838 Dominica became the first and only British Caribbean colony to have a Black-controlled legislature in the 19th century. Most Black legislators were small holders or merchants who held economic and social views diametrically opposed to the interests of the small, wealthy English planter class. Reacting to a perceived threat, the planters lobbied for more direct British rule.
In
1865, after much agitation and tension, the colonial office replaced the elective assembly with one comprised of one-half elected members and one-half appointed. The elected legislators were outmaneuvered on numerous occasions by planters allied with colonial administrators. In
1871, Dominica became part of the
Leeward Island Federation. The power of the Black population progressively eroded. Crown Colony government was re-established in
1896. All political rights for the vast majority of the population were effectively curtailed.
Development aid, offered as compensation for disenfranchisement, proved to have a negligible effect.
Following
World War I, an upsurge of political consciousness throughout the Caribbean led to the formation of the representative government association. Marshaling public frustration with the lack of a voice in the governing of Dominica, this group won one-third of the popularly elected seats of the legislative assembly in
1924 and one-half in
1936. Shortly thereafter, Dominica was transferred from the Leeward Island Administration and was governed as part of the
Windwards until
1958, when it joined the short-lived
West Indies Federation.
In
1961, a Dominica Labor Party government led by
Edward Oliver LeBlanc was elected. After the federation dissolved, Dominica became an associated state of the United Kingdom on
February 27,
1967 and formally took responsibility for its internal affairs. LeBlanc retired in
1974 and was replaced by
Patrick John.
Independence
On
November 3,
1978, the Commonwealth of Dominica was granted independence by the United Kingdom.
Independence did little to solve problems stemming from centuries of economic
underdevelopment, and in mid-
1979, political discontent led to the formation of an interim government, led by
Oliver Seraphin. It was replaced after the
1980 elections by a government led by the
Dominica Freedom Party under Prime Minister
Eugenia Charles, the Caribbean's first female prime minister.
Chronic economic problems were compounded by the severe impact of hurricanes in 1979 and in 1980. By the end of the 1980s, the economy had made a healthy recovery, which weakened in the 1990s due to a decrease in banana prices.
In 1995 the government was defeated in elections by the United Workers Party of
Edison James. James became prime minister, serving until the February 2000 elections, when the
Dominica United Workers Party (DUWP) was defeated by the
Dominica Labour Party (DLP), led by
Rosie Douglas. He was a former
socialist activist, and many feared that his approach to politics might be impractical. However, these were somewhat quieted when he formed a coalition with the more conservative Dominica Freedom Party. Douglas died suddenly after only a few months in office, on October 1, 2000, and was replaced by
Pierre Charles, also of the DLP. In 2003,
Nicholas Liverpool was elected and sworn in as president, succeeding
Vernon Shaw. On
January 6 2004, Prime Minister Pierre Charles, who had been suffering from heart problems since 2003, died. He became the second consecutive prime minister of Dominica to die in office of a heart attack. The foreign minister,
Osborne Riviere immediately became prime minister, but the education minister,
Roosevelt Skerrit succeeded him as prime minister and became the new leader of the Dominica Labour Party. Elections were held on
May 5 2005, with the ruling coalition maintaining power.
References
★ Rouse, Irving. "The Tainos : Rise and Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus." New Haven & London: Yale University Press c1992.
★ Honeychurch, Lennox "The Dominica Story:A History of The Island" (1995)
External links
★
History of Dominica by Lennox Honeychurch