St.
Kitts-Nevis
The twin-island nation
of St. Kitts & Nevis is located in the northern
section of the Easter Caribbean, approximately 1,300 miles southeast of Miami,
FL.
The St. Kitts
is a shortened form of its official name, St. Christopher, given to it
by Columbus when he first landed there in 1493. There is some
controversy about whether it was named for himself or St. Christopher.
In any event, it is commonly referred to as St. Kitts and the inhabitants
call
themselves Kittitians. Nevis is named after the Spanish word for snow—not
because there is any!—but because of a white cloud surrounding the
island’s single peak.
St. Kitts became
Britain’s first colony in the West Indies with the
founding of a settlement in 1623. In 1983, the Federation of St. Kitts & Nevis
gained independence as a two-island nation within the British Commonwealth.
Today, St. Kitts & Nevis is developing a distinct style and culture,
although, not surprisingly, British influence is still strongly evidenced
in many traditions.
The islands’ history
is long and bloody. The French and English settled here early in the 1600s
and subsequently fought with, and then annihilated,
the local Carib people. For the following 200 years the islands and
their vastly valuable sugar trade were an important pawn in the European
struggle
for supremacy of the seas and the new world. England ultimately won
out over France (and then Spain). These islands play important parts in
the new world
events during that period: at the height of their power, Nevis was
considered “the
richest jewel” of the Caribbean and St. Kitts was known as the
Mother Colony and “cradle” of the Caribbean. Today’s
population of 45,000 is mostly descended from African slaves brought
to the island to
work sugar and tobacco crops, and indentured servants and small farmers
who stayed on after the world drop in sugar prices in the mid-1800s
which made
plantation farming less than lucrative.