(Redirected from Saint Thomas, United States Virgin Islands)
Map of U.S. Virgin Islands
'Saint Thomas' is an
island in the
Caribbean Sea, a
county and constituent
district of the
United States Virgin Islands (USVI), an unincorporated territory of the
United States. Located on the island is the territorial capital and port of
Charlotte Amalie. As of the
2000 census, the population of Saint Thomas was 51,181
[1], about 47 percent of the U.S. Virgin Islands total. The district has a land area of 80.9 km² (31.24 sq mi).
Sub-districts

Districts and Sub-districts of the US Virgin Islands
Saint Thomas is divided into the following sub-districts:
#
Charlotte Amalie
#East End
#Northside
#Southside
#Tutu
#
Water Island
#West End
Pre-colonial history
The island was originally settled around
1500 B.C. by the
Ciboney people. They were later replaced by the
Arawaks and then the
Caribs.
Christopher Columbus sighted the island in
1493 on his second voyage to the "
New World". The Caribs seem not to have survived the first decades of contact with Europeans, either due to disease or deportation and extermination.
Pirates likely made use of the island as an occasional base over the next 150 years.
Danish colonial period
The
Danish established a presence on Saint Thomas as early as
1666, and by
1672 had established control over the entire island through the
Danish West India and Guinea Company. The land was divided into
plantations and
sugar cane production became the primary economic activity. As a result, the economies of Saint Thomas and neighboring islands of
Saint John and
Saint Croix became highly dependent on
slave labor and the slave trade. In
1685 the
Brandenburg American Company took control of the slave trade on Saint Thomas, and for some time the largest slave auctions in the world were held there. Saint Thomas was known for its fine natural
harbor, known as "Taphus" for the drinking establishments located nearby. In
1691 the primary settlement there was renamed
Charlotte Amalie in honor of the wife of Denmark's King
Christian V. It was later declared a
free port by
King Frederick V.
While the sugar trade had brought prosperity to the island's free citizens, by the early
19th century Saint Thomas was in decline. The continued export of sugar was threatened by hurricanes, drought, and
American competition. In
1848, slavery was abolished and the resulting rise in labour costs further weakened the position of Saint Thomas' sugar producers. Given its harbors and fortifications, Saint Thomas still retained a strategic importance, and thus in the 1860s the United States government considered buying the island and its neighbors from Denmark for $7.5 million, but failed to find domestic legislative support for the bid.
American acquisition

"Beautiful Harbor of St. Thomas, West Indies",
stereoptical view, c. 1900
After being poorly managed by the Danish, a local islander,
David Hamilton Jackson was instrumental in persuading the Danish to allow the USA to purchase the islands of St. Thomas, St. John and St. Croix. In 1915, he traveled to Denmark and convinced the King of Denmark firstly to allow freedom of the press in the islands. He began the first newspaper in the islands known as The Herald Newspaper. After this he organized labor unions among the islanders for better working conditions. The islands now have an
annual celebration to honor the legacy of labor leader, newspaper publisher and judge David Hamilton Jackson.
In
1917 St. Thomas was purchased (along with
Saint John and
Saint Croix) by the
United States for $25 million, as part of a defensive strategy to maintain control over the Caribbean and the
Panama Canal during the
First World War.
P.W. Sparks, a U.S. Naval officer, designed the flag that now represents the United States Virgin Islands. Sparks married a local Virgin Island woman, Grace Joseph Sparks; when Sparks' superior, Rear Adm. Kitelle, commissioned the design for the flag, P.W. Sparks asked his wife and her sister, Blanche Joseph (later Sasso) to sew the first flag. That flag was used until such time as a factory produced flag could be acquired. The flag's inspiration came from the U.S. Presidential seal. Sparks decided to have the eagle facing the olive branches (which represented peace) rather than the arrows (which represented the three islands: St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John). (At the request of the Sparks family, this piece of history was entered into the Congressional Record in Washington, D.C., on April 30th, 1986, vol.132, No.56, by the congressional delegate, Ron de Lugo.) Every year
Transfer Day is recognized as a holiday which celebrates the acquisition of the islands by the United States in 1917.
U.S. citizenship was granted to the residents in
1927. The
U.S. Department of the Interior took over administrative duties in
1931. American forces were based on the island during the
Second World War. In
1954, passage of the U.S. Virgin Islands
Organic Act officially granted territorial status to the three islands, and allowed for the formation of a local senate with politics dominated by the American
Republican and
Democratic parties. Full
home rule was achieved in
1970.
The post-war era also saw the rise of tourism on the island. With relatively cheap air travel and the American
embargo on
Cuba, the numbers of visitors greatly increased. Despite natural disasters such as
Hurricane Hugo (
1989) and Hurricanes
Luis and
Marilyn (
1995), the island's infrastructure continues to improve as the flow of visitors continues.
Transportation
The island is serviced by the
Cyril E. King Airport.
The USVI is the only place under United States jurisdiction where the rule of the road is to
drive on the left. This was inherited from what was then-current Danish practice at the time of annexation, to limit losses of livestock. However, because St. Thomas is a U.S. territory, most cars are imported from the mainland United States and as a result, the steering column is located on the left side of the vehicle.
''See also
Transportation in the United States Virgin Islands''
Notable people from St. Thomas
★ World champion boxer
Julian Jackson was born on St. Thomas
★ Actor / Director / Producer
Kelsey Grammer was born on St. Thomas
★
Camille Pissarro (1830-1903) born July 10th on the Caribbean island of St. Thomas, Danish West Indies; to Abraham Gabriel Pissarro, of
Sephardic Jewish ancestry, and Rachel Manzano-Pomié, a Dominican of Spanish descent. Pissarro was a key member of the French Impressionist group of painters. The Pissarro family, French and Jewish in origin, had settled in the Danish colony of St. Thomas.
★
Emile Griffith is a former boxer who won world championships in both the Welterweight and Middleweight divisions.
★ Claude A. ("Bennie") Benjamin was a songwriter, often teaming with George David Weiss. Most famous for writing Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood.
★
Alton Augustus Adams, first African American band master for the United States Navy.
★
Judah Benjamin, was an American politician and lawyer, who served as a representative in the Louisiana state legislature.
★
Denmark Vesey – leader of planned slave uprising in Charleston, South Carolina
★
Elrod Hendricks – professional
baseball player,
Baltimore Orioles
★
Edward Wilmot Blyden (1832-1912), an Igbo in Diaspora, is credited in some history books as having laid the foundation of West African nationalism and Pan-Africanism.
★
Midre Cummings, baseball player
★
David Levy Yulee (June 12, 1810–October 10, 1886) was an American politician and the first member of the United States Senate to have been, at one time, a practicing Jew.
★
Edward Blyden, ambassador
★
Frank Rudolph Crosswaith, union leader
★
Rothschild Francis, union leader
★
Elizabeth Anna Hendrickson, civil rights leader
★
Roy Innis, civil rights leader
★
J. Raymond Jones, political activist
★
William Alexander Leidesdorff, entrepreneur
★
Terence Todman, ambassador
★
Ashley Graham, union leader
★
Kitwana Rhymer, basketball player in China who also played at
UMass
★
Adam T. Siska, bassist for
The Academy Is...
''See also ''
Points of interest
★
Fort Christian
★
Magens Bay
★
Magens Bay Arboretum
★
Blackbeard's Castle
External links
Official sites
★
United States Virgin Islands - Official Website for the United States Virgin Islands Department of Tourism
★
Districts of the United States Virgin Islands, United States Census Bureau
Map
★
St. Thomas USVI Google Map - Satellite Map of St. Thomas, USVI
Media and news
★
St. Thomas Source - Online news source
★
The Virgin Island Daily News - Daily newspaper