The '
United States Virgin Islands', often abbreviated USVI, is a group of islands and cays in the Caribbean to the east of Puerto Rico. Consisting of four larger islands (
Saint Croix,
Saint John,
Saint Thomas, and
Water Island) plus fifty smaller islets and cays, it covers approximately 133 square miles. Like many of its Caribbean neighbors, its history includes native Amerindian cultures, European exploration and exploitation, and slavery.
Overview
Early inhabitants of USVI included the Ciboney, Arawak, and Carib tribes.
The first European to visit the United States Virgin Islands was
Christopher Columbus. The islands were occupied by several nations over the next century, including
England,
Holland,
France, and
Denmark. In 1733, the
Danish West India Company purchased Saint Croix from the
French and brought together Saint Thomas, Saint Croix, and Saint John as the
Danish West Indies.
Danish
slave trading posts were set up on the islands, and thousands of slaves were used to grow sugar cane to enrich the Danish. However, a slave rebellion in 1848 forced governor
Peter von Scholten to officially abolish slavery.
The islands were purchased from the
Danish by the
United States in 1917.
Early history
The Ciboneys
Main articles: Ciboney
Although not much is known about the
Ciboney people who first inhabited the islands during the
Stone Age, they were hunter-gatherers. They made tools of stone and flint, but they left no other artifacts behind.
The Arawaks
Main articles: Arawaks
Experts at canoe building and seamanship, the Arawaks migrated from the
Amazon River Valley and
Orinoco regions of
Venezuela and
Brazil, settling on the islands near coasts and rivers. These peaceful people excelled at fishing and farming. Their main crops were
cotton,
tobacco,
maize,
yuca, and
guava; however, they grew a variety of other fruits and vegetables as well.
The Arawaks developed rich social and cultural lives. For recreation, they held organized sporting events. They also valued artistic endeavors, such as
cave painting and
rock carving, some of which have survived to the present day. Religion played a large role in their daily lives, and through ceremonial rituals they asked their gods for advice to help them through troubled times. Their civilization in the USVI flourished for several hundred years, until the Caribs invaded.
The Caribs
Main articles: Caribs
While the Caribs came from the same area as the Arawaks and may have been distantly related, they didn't share the Arawaks' friendly nature. Not only were they fierce warriors, they supposedly feasted on their adversaries. Their bloodthirsty reputation spawned the English word cannibal, derived from the name the Spanish gave them, Caribal.
Whether or not they actually ate their victims, the Caribs did destroy numerous Arawak villages, murdering as many as they could. By the mid-15th century, the Caribs had slashed the Arawak population from several million to a few thousand. But even the Caribs were no match for the gold-hungry Europeans who were about to descend.
Colonization
Blown off course during his 1493-1496 voyage,
Christopher Columbus landed on Saint Croix, then continued his explorations on Saint Thomas and Saint John. He gave the islands their original
Spanish names (
Santa Cruz, San Tomas, and San Juan), focusing on religious themes. The collection of tiny islets,
cays, and rocks dotting the sea around them reminded Columbus of
Saint Ursula and her 11,000 virgin
martyrs, inspiring the name Las Once Mil Virgenes.
The first encounter Columbus had with the Caribs quickly erupted into a battle. When Columbus and his crew decided to move on to other islands, they kidnapped six Arawaks to guide them. Although Columbus left without founding a colony, many more battles between the Spanish and Caribs followed over the next century.
Other
European explorers finished the job the Spanish had begun. They tried to convert the Caribs and Arawaks to
Catholicism, which largely failed. They also enslaved the native populations to work on plantations. With
tobacco having already been cultivated on the islands, it made a good
cash crop. Later on,
coffee,
sugar, and
cotton also were grown.
Slavery, coupled with murder and disease, took a large toll on both the Arawaks and the Caribs. Several groups of Arawaks committed
mass suicide rather than submit to foreign rule. By the late
17th century, the Arawaks had been completely exterminated and few Caribs remained.
With no native slaves left, the
African slave trade began in
1673. The difficult conditions and inhumane treatment slaves were subjected to bred discontent. In
1733, a long drought followed by a devastating
hurricane pushed slaves in St. John to the breaking point. Members of the
Akwamu tribe from modern
Ghana staged a massive rebellion, seizing control of the island for six months. The
Danish, who controlled the island at that point, enlisted the help of
French authorities from
Martinique to regain control (see
St. John Slave Revolt).
Another slave revolt in
1848 was more successful in the long run. The
governor at the time,
Peter von Scholten, felt enough sympathy for the slaves to grant them emancipation, even though it was against the wishes of Danish Crown and devastated the economy of the islands.
The 20th century
Before
World War I, the
United States wanted to buy the islands due to fear that if Denmark were conquered by
Germany, Germany would attempt to take over Denmark's overseas dependencies. In 1917, a treaty was concluded in which the Unites States purchased the islands for $25,000,000. After the United States bought what is now known as the United States Virgin Islands from the Danish, the islands became an unincorporated U.S. territory. The Organic Act, passed in 1932, granted inhabitants of the islands U.S. citizenship and a degree of self-government.
See also
★
History of the Caribbean
External links
★
"Scholten and the emancipation of Danish Slaves in the Danish West Indies"
References
★
History of the United States Virgin Islands
★
Arawak History