Seven Flags : The History of St. Croix
PRE-COLUMBUS
Prior to, and less than a century after
Columbus' discovery, St. Croix was inhabited by two tribes of Indians:
the Caribs and the Arawaks. The Arawaks were generally considered
to be a peaceful tribe while the Caribs were warring cannibals. The word "cannibal" is
in tribute to their fierce nature for it is derived from the Spanish
word for Carib or "carribales." Washington Irving described the Caribs:
"The
hair of these savages was long and coarse, their eyes were encircled
with paint, so as to give them hideous expression. Bands of cotton
were bound firmly above and below the muscular parts of the arms
and legs, so as to cause them to swell to a disproportionate size."
With such
fearsome neighbors, the Arawaks were often forced to live on larger
islands where they could retreat into the hills when attacked.
SPANISH
On November 14,
1493, Columbus made his first visit to "Ayay" (as the Indians called St. Croix) and renamed
it Santa Cruz. His reception by the Caribs gives testament to their
violent character. Upon anchoring at Salt River, a small boatload
of Spaniards approached the shore and encountered a small canoe carrying
four men and two women. A battle ensued, which resulted from the
Spaniards attempting to capture the natives. One Carib and one Spaniard
were killed. The remaining Caribs were taken prisoner. This was the
early beginning of what would soon be widely employed; slavery. In response
to such conflict, Charles V of Spain declared that all Indians in the islands
were enemies and should be eliminated.
A constant state of war existed between the Caribs and the
Spaniards for nearly a century. By 1596, the islands were described as being
wholly uninhabited. St. Croix was not a major port for the Spanish --
San Juan, Puerto Rico was far more important. Due to Indian attacks,
bad weather, and general poor luck, the Virgin Islands were unfortunately described
as "the useless islands."
DUTCH AND ENGLISH
The Dutch and English are grouped together
for they settled the Virgin Islands almost simultaneously -- sometime
in the early 1600's. Each country settled a separate side of the
island: the Dutch settled the east end and the English the west. Inevitably,
conflict erupted, but the manner in which it did is interesting. According
to the English: the English Governor Brainsby was murdered by the
Dutch Governor Capoen, while visiting Capoen in his house. A newly
appointed Dutch Governor tried to arbitrate with the English and was
granted protection to travel to their side of the island. Immediately
upon arrival, he was seized and shot. After numerous battles, the
Dutch ended up abandoning the islands. The English controlled St.
Croix until 1650. In that year the Spanish sent a fleet of 5 ships
and 1,200 men to St. Croix from Puerto Rico and slaughtered everyone! After
only 15 years of domination, the English were ousted. The Dutch
made one foolhardy attempt to recapture St. Croix. Assuming it
to be abandoned, they sent two ships from St. Eustatius island. The
two vessels dropped anchor right in front of Fort Frederik and proceeded
to land. Unknown to the Dutch, the Spanish had left 60 men to guard the
fort. The moment the landing boats reached shore, Spanish muskets
killed all but ten men.
FRENCH
Later the same year, the French sent
two vessels to capture St. Croix and succeeded. The Spanish rule
of St. Croix was over almost as soon as it had begun. The French
fared poorly during their first colonization attempt in 1651. Of
300 colonists, two thirds and two governors died of illness during the
first year. Burning the local forest during the dry season was
a common practice, supposedly to destroy what they suspected was the
home of disease.
KNIGHTS OF MALTA
Ten years later the Governor of St.
Kitts, De Poincy, bought St. Croix as his private estate and later deeded
it to the Knights of Malta. The Knight of Malta were not true knights
in the medieval sense but were a religious group also known as the Order
of St. John of Jerusalem. The Order fared poorly and in general
were considered to be rich young aristocrats who knew little about colonization. In
1665, the French West Indian company bought the island from the Knights. At
last, St. Croix had proper management under its new Governor DuBois and
flourished. In short time the island had 90 plantations. Crops
included tobacco, cotton, sugar cane and indigo. After DuBois?
death, bad administration, drought and sickness ended what advances had
been made. From 1695 to 1733, St. Croix was considered abandoned.
DENMARK
In 1733, the French
Government sold St. Croix to the Danish West India & Guinea Co. for approximately $150,000. Shortly
after this transaction, the Danes made a clever move by allowing immigrants
of other nationalities to move in. The result was rapid development
as everyone from the Spanish Sephardic Jews to the Huguenots purchased
the available plantations. The English soon dominated the populations
and English became the language spoken on the streets. It was under
Danish rule that the sugar plantations flourished. On St. Croix,
for over two centuries, sugar was king! To this day, the sugar plantations
scattered around the island are visible. Sugar was destined
to success -- the markets in Europe were huge, and sugar cane could only
be grown in tropical zones.
One invention, however, made the sale of cane sugar in Europe
an impossibility. Between 1820 and 1840, the sugar beet became a feasible
source of manufacturing sugar throughout Europe. Since the sugar beet
could be grown in Europe, it made no sense to send ships across the Atlantic
for a product that could cheaply be produced in Europe's native soil. The
impact of this new source of sugar was catastrophic to the local economy. It's
result can be seen in the history of the slaves on the island. Though
the slaves were freed in 1848, the economic condition on the island was
so bad that the former slaves rioted, resulting in the Fireburn of 1878
(In which the slaves rioted and burned much of Frederiksted and many plantations
around the island.)
The last sugar harvest took place in 1966. St. Croix's economy
then turned to the newly built oil refinery (Amerada Hess) and the alumina
plant (VIALCO). Since then, the economy has become more and more
dependent upon tourism as a revenue source.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Denmark sold the Virgin Islands to the
United States of America in 1917 for $25 million. St. Croix is
now a U.S. Territory, along with the other U.S. Virgin Islands, St. Thomas
and St. John. The island?s residents are U.S. citizens.
History
page compiled by Frans Lawaetz. |