Page 25 - Florida and the US Caribbean Isles
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The British, in order to maintain hospitable relations with Denmark,      and economy in the islands declined. The islands and its residents fell
eventually ceased their opposition. After the Danes settled St. John      on rough times in the late 1800s due to the poor economy and numer-
plantation agriculture developed rapidly. The Danish West Indian          ous natural disasters.
Company purchased St. Croix from the French in 1733 bringing St.          The islands remained under Danish rule until 1917, when the United
Thomas, St. Croix and St. John together as the Danish West Indies.        States purchased them for $25 million in gold in an effort to improve
In 1685, the Danish government signed a treaty with the Dutch of          military positioning during critical times of World War I. St. Croix, St.
Brandenburg. This treaty allowed the Brandenburg American Com-            Thomas and St. John became the US Virgin Islands. While conditions
pany to establish a slave-trading post on St. Thomas. Early governors     improved, change came slowly and frustrations brewed. Residents felt
also approved of St. Thomas becoming a pirates’ safe haven. The gover-    deceived when they were not granted American citizenship immedi-
nors realized an influx of pirates would benefit local merchants. While   ately following the transfer and disappointment also existed in that the
piracy ceased to be a factor in the island’s economy in the early 1800s,  islands were run by Naval administrators and appointed officials. The
the slave trade continued. In the Danish West Indies slaves labored       Military and the Interior Departments managed the territory until the
mainly on sugar plantations. Cotton, indigo and other crops were also     passage of the Organic Act in 1936. Today the USVI is a U.S. territory,
grown. Sugar mills and plantations dotted the islands hilly landscapes.   run by an elected governor. The territory is under the jurisdiction of
Each islands economy prospered through sugar plantations and slave        the president of the United States of America and residents are Ameri-
trading. While St. John and St. Croix maintained a plantation econ-       can citizens.
omy, St. Thomas developed into a prosperous center of trade. Slave        Virgin Islands National Park - In 1956 Laurance Rockefeller gave the
rebellion on St. John and St. Croix are well documented. Legitimate       National Park Service a generous gift of 5,000 acres of land on St. John.
trade and business on St. Thomas influenced a different society where     This gift along with subsequent additions have increased the holdings.
many more slaves were given freedom and an opportunity outside of         Today almost two thirds of St. John’s beautiful forest, shorelines and
plantation life.                                                          underwater lands are protected by the Park. Historical and marine
A July 2, 1848 rebellion on St. Croix, where some 5,000 blacks were       treasures on St. Croix including Buck Island are also protected by the
free while another 17,000 remained enslaved, prompted liberal gov-        Park Service, as are portions of Hassell Island. In 1996 Water Island,
ernor Peter von Scholten to declare what he had long pressed for, that    located in St. Thomas’ Charlotte Amalie harbor, was officially returned
all unfree in the Danish West Indies were from that day free. While       to the USVI from the Department of the Interior.
his proclamation was in direct contradiction of the King’s orders and
while plantation owners refused to accept the proclamation, slavery
was abolished on July 3rd, 1848. Strict labor laws were implemented
several times after emancipation and the populous reacted in tense
labor riots. Planters began to abandon their estates and the population
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