:''This article is about the Caribbean island group. For the western
Society Islands in
French Polynesia, see
Leeward Islands (Society Islands); The
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands are also sometimes called the Leeward Islands''.
The 'Leeward Islands' are the northern islands of the
Lesser Antilles.
Explanation of Name
These islands are called "
leeward" because the prevailing winds in the area blow from southeast to northwest. Thus, the Leeward Islands are downwind from, or in the lee of, leeward of, the southeasternmost
Windward Islands, the group of islands that first meet the
trade winds.
List of the Leeward Islands
★ The
Virgin Islands
★
Anguilla
★
St. Martin/Maarten (
Saint Martin (north part) and
Netherlands Antilles (south part))
★
Saba (Netherlands Antilles)
★
Sint Eustatius (Netherlands Antilles)
★
Saint Barthélemy
★
Antigua
★
Barbuda
★
Saint Kitts
★
Nevis
★
Redonda (small and uninhabited)
★
Montserrat
★
Guadeloupe
The small and remote
Isla Aves may perhaps be included with this group for convenience.
The Netherlands Antilles, however, are divided into two groups, one group in the northeast, and one in the southwest, with different naming conventions, see
Netherlands Antilles.
British colonial entity
The name Leeward Islands also designates a British colony on several of these islands (analogous to one on the
British Windward Islands), consisting of
Antigua,
Barbuda, the
British Virgin Islands,
Montserrat,
Saint Kitts,
Nevis,
Anguilla and (to
1940)
Dominica, from
1671 to
1816 and again from
1833 to
1960.
Actually, between 1816-1833, the Leewards Islands were only divide into
Antigua-Barbuda-Montserrat and
Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla-Virgin Islands.
The colony was known as the 'Federal Colony of the Leeward Islands' from
1871 to
1956 and the 'Territory of the Leeward Islands' from
1956 to
1960.
The "Leeward Islands" is still the title of one of the Caribbean
First-class cricket sides.
Postage stamps
The British Leeward Islands -
Antigua,
Dominica,
Montserrat,
Nevis, St. Christopher (
St. Kitts), and the
Virgin Islands all used
postage stamps inscribed "LEEWARD ISLANDS" between
1890 and
1 July 1956, often concurrently with stamps inscribed with the colony's name.
The issue of 1890 was a
key plate design with the usual profile of Queen
Victoria, eight values ranging from
1/2d to 5 shillings. In
1897 they were
overprinted with a logo commemorating Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee, and in
1902 the 4, 6, and 7d were
surcharged with a value of 1d.
The
1890 issue design was also used for stamps of King
Edward VII, as well as for King
George V and
George VI, with several changes of
watermark and colors. In
1928 a large one-pound stamp was introduced, and updated for the new monarch when George VI took the throne.
The
common design commemorative stamps of the Commonwealth between
1946 and
1949 included stamps inscribed "LEEWARD ISLANDS". In
1951 the
West Indies University issue reflected the changeover to cents and dollars, as did the Queen
Elizabeth II definitive series of
1954.
Sources and references
(incomplete)
★
WorldStatesmen- see each present country
See also
★
Antilles
★
Leeward Antilles
★
West Indian cricket team
★
Windward Islands
★
Pre-1958 West Indian federations