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| INTRODUCTION |
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Jamaica has a rich and vibrant history, which inspires us to move
forward as a nation. Our history speaks to experiences of hardships and
prosperity; and the growth and determination of a people. Jamaica’s history has
been poetically composed by Howard Pyle, who states:
Jamaica, like many another of the West Indian Islands, is like a woman with a
history. She has had her experiences and has lived her life rapidly. She has
enjoyed a fever of prosperity founded upon those incalculable treasures poured
into her lap by the old time buccaneer pirates. She has suffered earthquake,
famine, pestilence, fire and death: and she has been the home of cruel merciless
slavery, hardly second to that practised by the Spaniards themselves. Other
countries have taken centuries to grow from their primitive life through the
flower and fruit of prosperity into the seed time of picturesque decrepitude.
Jamaica has lived through it all in a few years.
- Howard Pyle, “Jamaica New and Old” in
Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, January 1890
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| ORIGINAL
INHABITANTS |
The original inhabitants of Jamaica are believed to be the Arawaks, also called
Tainos. They came from South America 2,500 years ago and named the island
Xaymaca, which meant "“land of wood and water”. The Arawaks were a mild and
simple people by nature. Physically, they were light brown in colour, short and
well-shaped with coarse, black hair. Their faces were broad and their noses
flat.
They grew cassava, sweet potatoes, maize (corn), fruits, vegetables, cotton and
tobacco. Tobacco was grown on a large scale as smoking was their most popular
pastime.
They built their villages all over the island but most of them settled on the
coasts and near rivers as they fished to get food. Fish was also a major part of
their diet.
The Arawaks led quiet and peaceful lives until they were destroyed by the Spaniards some years after Christopher Columbus discovered the island in 1494.
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| THE DISCOVERY
OF JAMAICA |
On May 5, 1494 Christopher Columbus, the European explorer, who sailed west to
get to the East Indies and came upon the region now called the West Indies,
landed in Jamaica. This occurred on his second voyage to the West Indies.
Columbus had heard about Jamaica, then called Xaymaca, from the Cubans who
described it as “the land of blessed gold”. Columbus was soon to find out that
there was no gold in Jamaica.
On arrival at St Ann’s Bay, Columbus found the Arawak Indians inhabiting the
island. Initially, Columbus thought these Indians were hostile, as they attacked
his men when they tried to land on the island. As he was determined to annex the
island in the name of the king and queen of Spain, he was not deterred. Columbus
also needed wood and water and a chance to repair his vessels. He sailed down
the coast and docked at Discovery Bay. The Arawaks there were also hostile to
the Spaniards. Their attitudes changed however, when they were attacked by a dog
from one of the Spanish ships and Columbus’ cross-bow men. Some of the Arawaks
were killed and wounded in this attack. Columbus was then able to land and claim
the island.
The
Spaniards, when they came, tortured and killed the Arawaks to get their
land. They were so overworked and ill-treated that within a short time they had
all died. The process was aided by the introduction of European diseases to
which the Arawaks had little or no resistance.
The island remained poor under Spanish rule as few Spaniards settled here.
Jamaica served mainly as a supply base: food, men, arms and horse were shipped
here to help in conquering the American mainland.
Fifteen years later in 1509, after their first visit to the island, the first
Spanish colonists came here under the Spanish governor Juan de Esquivel. They
first settled in the St. Ann’s Bay area. The first town was called New Seville
or Sevilla la Nueva.
Towns were little more than settlements. The only town that was developed was
Spanish Town, the old capital of Jamaica, then called St. Jago de la Vega. It
was the centre of government and trade and had many churches and convents.
The little attention the colony received from Spain soon led to a major reason
for internal strife. This contributed to the weakening of the colony in the last
years of Spanish occupation. The governors were not getting proper support from
home and quarrels with church authorities undermined their control. Frequent
attacks by pirates also contributed to the colony’s woes. |
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| THE ENGLISH
ATTACK |
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On May 10, 1655, Admiral William Penn and General Robert Venables led a
successful attack on Jamaica. The Spaniards surrendered to the English, freed
their slaves and then fled to Cuba. It was this set of freed slaves and their
descendants who became known as the Maroons.
The early period of English settlement in Jamaica, drew much attention to the
buccaneers based at Port Royal. Buccaneering had begun on the islands of Tortuga
and Hispaniola. They were a wild, rough and ruthless set of sea rovers. They
took their loot of gold, silver and jewels to Port Royal.
Port Royal prior to this time was an insignificant town in Jamaica. Under the
buccaneers’ leadership the town, within a decade and a half, grew to become
known as one of the “wealthiest and wickedest city in the world”.
The greatest buccaneer captain of all was Henry Morgan. He started out as a
pirate and later became a privateer. Morgan mercilessly raided Spanish fleet and
colonies. He kept the Spaniards busy defending their coasts that they had little
time to attack Jamaica. Morgan was knighted by king Charles II of England and
was appointed Lieutenant governor of Jamaica in 1673. Morgan died in 1688.
A violent earthquake destroyed Port Royal on June 7, 1692. The survivors of the
earthquake who re-settled in Kingston abandoned the Port. Port Royal became an
important naval base in the eighteenth century. |
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| THE SLAVE
TRADE |
The English settlers concerned themselves with growing crops that could easily
be sold in England. Tobacco, indigo and cocoa soon gave way to sugar which
became the main crop for the island.
The sugar industry grew so rapidly that the 57 sugar estates in the island in
1673 grew to nearly 430 by 1739.
Enslaved Africans filled the large labour force required for the industry. The
colonists were impressed with the performance and endurance of the Africans, as
well as the fact that African labour was cheaper and more promising. They
continued to ship Africans to the West Indies to be sold to planters who forced
them to work on sugar plantations.
The slave trade became a popular and profitable venture for the colonists. In
fact the transportation of slaves became such a regular affair that the journey
from Africa to the West Indies became known as the ‘Middle Passage’. The voyage
was so named because the journey of a British slaver was 3-sided, starting from
England with trade goods, to Africa where these were exchanged for slaves.
Afterwards, the journey continued to the West Indies where the slaves were
landed and sugar, rum and molasses taken aboard for the final leg of the journey
back to England.
The slaves, however, were unhappy with their status, so they rebelled whenever
they could. Many of them were successful in running away from the plantations
and joining the Maroons in the almost inaccessible mountains.
Several slave rebellions stand out in Jamaica’s history for example, the Easter
Rebellion of 1760 led by Tacky; and the Christmas Rebellion of 1831 which began
on the Kensington Estate in St. James, led by
Sam Sharpe. He has since been
named a National Hero.
The Maroons also had several wars against the English. In 1739 and 1740 after
two major Maroon Wars, treaties were signed with the British. In the treaty of
1740, they were given land and rights as free men. In return they were to stop
fighting and help to recapture run-away slaves. This treaty resulted in a rift
among the Maroons as they did not all agree that they should return run-away
slaves to the plantations.
The frequent slave rebellions in the Caribbean was one factor that led to the
abolition of the slave trade and slavery. Other factors included the work of
humanitarians who were concerned about the slaves’ well-being. Humanitarian
groups such as the Quakers publicly protested against slavery and the slave
trade. They formed an anti slavery committee which was joined by supporters such
as Granville Sharp, James Ramsay, Thomas Clarkson and later on, William
Wilberforce.
On January 1, 1808 the Abolition Bill was passed. Trading in African slaves was
declared to be “utterly abolished, prohibited and declared to be unlawful”.
Emancipation and apprenticeship came into effect in 1834 and full freedom was
granted in 1838.
The immediate post slavery days were very difficult for the poorer classes.
Though most of the English planters had left the islands and new owners were
running the plantations, the old oligarchic system still remained. The will of
the masses was not deemed important and hence ignored. To add fuel to the
already burning flame, the American Civil War resulted in supplies being cut off
from the island. A severe drought was also in progress and most crops were
ruined.
In October 1865, an uprising in St. Thomas, called the Morant Bay Rebellion, was
led by Paul Bogle. Bogle and his men stormed the Morant Bay Courthouse while it
was in session. A number of white people was killed including the custos of the
parish. The rebellion was put down by the Governor, Edward John Eyre. More than
430 people were executed or shot, hundreds more flogged and 1,000 dwellings
destroyed.
Paul Bogle and George William Gordon, now National Heroes, were hanged. George
Gordon was a prominent coloured legislator who was sympathetic to the problems
of the poor people and was blamed for the trouble caused by the masses.
Eyre was subsequently recalled to England but not before exchanging the ancient
Constitution for the Crown Colony system. The succeeding years saw the island’s
recovery and development – social, constitutional and economic, and its
evolution into a sovereign state.
Education, health, and social services were greatly improved. A proper
island-wide savings back system was organised. Roads, bridges and railways
(railways became government owned in 1845) were built and cable communication
with Europe established (1859). The island’s capital was moved from Spanish Town
to Kingston (1872).
The 1930s saw Jamaica heading towards another crisis. The contributing factors
were discontent at the slow pace of political advance. For example, the distress
caused by a world-wide economic depression, the ruin of the banana industry by
the Panama industry Disease, falling sugar prices, growing unemployment
aggravated by the curtailment of migration opportunities and a steeply rising
population growth rate. In 1938 things came to a head with widespread violence
and rioting.
Out of these disturbances came the formation of the first labour unions and the
formation of the two major political parties.
These were the Bustamante industrial Trade Union (BITU) named after the founder,
Sir Alexander Bustamante. He was also the founder and leader of the Jamaica
Labour Party (JLP), the political party affiliated with the BITU.
Norman Manley
was the founder of the National Workers’ union and the political party the
People’s National Party (PNP).
Both Sir Alexander Bustamante and Norman Manley were instrumental in Jamaica’s
move towards self-government. The first general elections under Universal Adult
Suffrage was held in December 1944.
In 1958, Jamaica and ten (10) other Caribbean countries formed the Federation of
the West Indies. The concept of Caribbean unity was soon abandoned in 1961 when
Jamaicans voted against the Federation of the >
West Indies.
On August 6, 1962, Jamaica was granted its independence from England. Jamaica
now has its own constitution which sets out the laws by which the people are
governed. The constitution provides for the freedom, equality and justice for
all who dwell in the country.
From
http://www.jis.gov.jm |
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