Fortress

Up

Saint Christopher

Brimstone Hill Fortress

 

Brimstone Hill
(The first cannon was mounted on Brimstone Hill in 1690 by the British
 to recapture Fort Charles from French occupation.)

Saint Kitts and Nevis, Federation of, independent state, eastern Caribbean Sea, a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, comprising two of the Leeward Islands, Saint Kitts (or Saint Christopher) and Nevis, in the West Indies. The island of Saint Kitts is traversed by a mountain range, the highest point being Mount Liamuiga at 1,156 m (3,793 ft). The area of the country is 269 sq km (104 sq mi). The climate is tropical; the average annual temperature is 27°C (80°F).

 

the citadel


The population of 43,441 (2000 estimate) consists primarily of descendants of western Africans. Descendants of Europeans and others constitute only a small minority. English is the official language, but a local patois is also spoken. Basseterre (population, 1994 estimate, 12,220) is the country's capital and the chief port on Saint Kitts; Charlestown (population, 1990, 1,200) is the chief port on Nevis and the birthplace of 18th-century statesman Alexander Hamilton.

 

overrun by the French in 1782

Agriculture is the principal economic activity, although tourism is of increasing importance. Sugar and molasses are the chief products; coconuts and fruits and vegetables are also produced. Exports depend heavily on the production of sugar. The unit of currency is the East Caribbean dollar (2.70 E.C. dollars equal U.S.$1; 1998 average).

 

but regained by the British the year later by the
Treaty of Versailles

Under the 1983 constitution, the head of state is the British monarch, represented in Saint Kitts and Nevis by a governor-general. The head of government is the prime minister, who must command a majority of the unicameral national assembly.
Italian Spanish navigator Christopher Columbus landed on the islands in 1493 and named Saint Kitts for his patron, Saint Christopher.

24-pounder cannons pointed out to sea

The English settled Saint Kitts in 1623 and Nevis in 1628. The French seized Saint Kitts several times in the 17th and 18th centuries but finally ceded it to Great Britain by the Treaty of Paris in 1783. Saint Kitts, Nevis, and Anguilla were united as a British dependency in 1871 that became an internally self-governing member of the West Indies Associated States in 1967. Anguilla was placed under direct British rule in 1971 and was officially withdrawn from the dependency in 1980.

 

Now houses the Fort George Museum
established in 1982

Saint Kitts and Nevis jointly attained full independence within the Commonwealth of Nations on September 19, 1983. Kennedy Simmonds, leader of the People's Action Movement (PAM), became the nation's first prime minister and held that position for more than ten years. An early election was called in 1995 after a scandal involving allegations of drug smuggling on the island rocked Simmonds's government. The Labour Party won the election, and Labour leader Denzil Douglas became the nation's new prime minister.

 

dry moat


In 1997 lawmakers in Nevis authorized a referendum on the issue of whether Nevis should pursue independence from Saint Kitts. Pro-independence leaders claimed that the government in Saint Kitts had ignored the needs of residents on the smaller island of Nevis. Saint Kitts had an infrastructure that included paved roads, a state-of-the-art hospital, and a modern port and international airport that cater to tourists. Nevis had a single dirt road and a small, aging port. Pro-independence supporters also cited cultural differences that had developed between the two islands, expressing particular alarm at the perceived growth in drug smuggling and crime on Saint Kitts. The referendum failed to gain the necessary two-thirds majority for ratification.

 

lower bastion


In the 2000 legislative elections, the Labour Party won a majority of the elected seats in the legislature. As the party's leader, Denzil Douglas began a second term as prime minister.

Text from Microsoft Encarta

 

looking up at the citadel

horizontal rule

 

looking down from the fortress on a sugar cane train

 

graves by the church yard

 

Treasury and Custom House on the waterfront, Basseterre, St. Kitts

horizontal rule

Up

Return to Saint Christopher page

Goto Nevis page

Antigua Aruba Bahamas Bonaire British Virgin Islands Cayman Islands Cuba Curacao Dominica Dominican Republic Grenada Grenadines Guadeloupe Haiti Jamaica Martinique Montserrat Nevis Puerto Rico Saba Saint Barthelemy Saint Eustatius Saint Kitts Saint Lucia Saint Maarten Saint Martin Trinidad Saint Vincent Turks and Caicos U. S. Virgin Islands

Return to Caribbean page

World Heritage Mosaics Roman World Africa Antarctica Asia Atlantic Islands Australia Caribbean Central America Europe Indian Ocean Middle East North America Pacific Islands South America The Traveler Recent Adventures Adventure Travel

 

Return to People and Places

horizontal rule