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On or about AD 750 the first inhabitants
arrived on the shores of the Turks & Caicos Islands. These were the
Lucayans or, in their Arawak language, the Lukkunu cairi which has the
translation of "Island Men". Their arrival in the Turks & Caicos
Islands was the final stage of their long migration taking several
thousand years from their original home on the banks of the Orinoco
River long before the first Europeans discovered the New World or
Venezuela. For those of us interested in history a visit to the Turks
& Caicos Museum on the capital island of Grand Turk is essential.
There among many interesting artifacts on display you will see a circa
900 year old canoe paddle in testimony to the prowess of the Lucayans
as a seafaring people. One has to remember that it was to be another
700 years before Christopher Columbus arrived in the Turks and Caicos
Islands to lay his claim of discovery whereas the Lucayans had traveled
great distances many centuries before from South America.
The
Lucyans settled in many of the Turks & Caicos Islands, most notably
Middle Caicos and the capital island of Grand Turk. There is also
evidence of smaller settlements on the island of South Caicos. The
Lucayans were a peaceful people and also skilled farmers and there
still remains evidence 1000 years later of the gardens they tended and
areas for their animals. The people had a meat protein diet of hutia
(now extinct on the islands), iguanas and crabs. They also cultivated
over 50 types of plants. Some of these plants can still be found on the
islands today and some still used although likely in many different
ways.
The Lucayans loved to fish. They loved shellfish,
particular the conch which thrives today on a commercial basis in the
only commercial conch farm in the world.
The Lucayans also
left us some of their language as their legacy. Words such as canoe and
even Caribbean are Arawak works we use today. Unlike in many previous
or subsequent societies, Arawak women were highly respected inside as
well as outside the household. They chiefs were venerable and they also
believed in life after death (though little evidence remains to show
how they dealt with their dead).
By the 1520`s not one Lucayan
remained alive and their unique civilization was lost to the world. The
European discovery of the islands was fatal to these islands as it
later proved to be in Polynesia when Capt. Cook discovered those
islands several centuries later. Newly introduced diseases,
enslavement and hard work in the mines of Hispaniola (now known as
Haiti and the Dominican Republic) led to their extinction within just
one generation.
The man who many now attribute blame to the
demise of the Lucayan, Christopher Columbus, set foot on Guanahani
Beach on the capital island of Grand Turk on his first voyage of the
discovery of the New World in 1492. A number of notable history
scholars claim Guanahani Beach was the actual site of the first landing
in the New World and there is even a plaque on the beach today to
commemorate the event. It was there Columbus had his first encounter
with the Lucayans who had a settlement close to the landing site. There
is considerable evidence to establish this claim of first landfall on
examination of the charts drawn by Columbus and his topographical
description of the island of Providenciales that he encountered shortly
on leaving Grand Turk. We even know that Columbus anchored off the
west end of Providenciales close to an area now known as Malcolm Roads
or often referred to now as Northwest Point.
Between the years
1492 until 1706 the Turks & Caicos Islands were sparsely populated.
The Bermudians came to rake the salt and then take back to Bermuda and
over the years more than 1,000 ships were wrecked in the waters
surrounding the Turks & Caicos Islands. Today a number of those
wrecks are freely explored by scuba divers who suggest the waters of
the Turks & Caicos Islands are one of the best dive locations in
the entire world.
Of course salt was an extremely important
commodity two or three hundred years ago and in the shallow waters of
the Turks & Caicos Islands salt could be "raked" in abundance. In
those days salt was not only used for adding flavour but to preserve
food. The Bermudians came to the islands on a regular basis and indeed
salt was produced commercially in the islands until the 1960`s. A visit
to Salt Cay is certainly worthwhile for the tourist or historian who
can still see evidence of the salt industry very much as it was.
In
1706 the Turks & Caicos Islands were captured from the Bermudians
by the French and the Spanish. Bermuda was a colony of Great Britain
and in 1710 the British recaptured the islands on behalf of Bermuda. In
subsequent years the islands were often used as a pirate haven for
pirates such as Anne Bonny and Francoise L`Olonnois who used French Cay
as his pirate base for raiding passing ships.
During the
American War of Independence from Great Britain the islands supplied
salt to General Washington`s army. In defiance of a Royal Navy blockade
in 1776 Bermudian sloops ignore the blockade in order to supply the
"enemy".
In 1783 the French seize Grand Turk during its wars
with Great Britain. The Royal Navy sent Horatio Nelson to recapture
Grand Turk and even the Admiral glorious in British history for
defeating the enemy fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar was unsuccessful
in taking Grand Turk back for the Crown. However, the islands are later
restored to Britain by the Treaty of Versailles.
Many Americans
loyal to the Crown (known as Loyalists) fled the American colonies
during the war of independence. Many went north to Canada but others
came to islands like the Turks & Caicos Islands. It was in 1789
when the Loyalist refugees first started arriving in the islands and
then in 1790 the Crown granted land to the British loyalists on
Providenciales, Middle Caicos, North Caicos and Parrot Cay. If you look
carefully you can still see a living tribute to those Loyalist pioneers
in the form of cotton trees that they brought to the islands in hope of
cultivating a commercial crop. Unfortunately their efforts were
unsuccessful in this regard.
In 1792 Grand Turk becomes the
official Port of Entry to the Turks & Caicos Islands and Customs
are set up rather than in Nassau in the Bahamas. But in 1799 Britain
decides in favour of Bahamian rule for the Turks & Caicos Islands
which does not go down well at all with the Bermudians. Most of the
inhabitants in the Turks & Caicos Islands in those days were
Bermudian and start to resist rule from the Bahamas.
In the war
of 1812 between the United States and Great Britain settlers in the
islands set up cannons at Fort George Cay (a small cay located between
the island of Providenciales and North Caicos) in anticipation of
attack by pirate and American ships. The war between the United States
and Great Britain led to the suspension of trade and subsequently
famine throughout the islands.
In 1813 a large hurricane forced
many of the Loyalists to leave the islands for safer havens on other
British islands or in Canada. Some Loyalists moved to Grand Turk and
took their slaves with them. Then in 1821 hundreds of slaves fled from
the islands and escaped to freedom in Haiti. By 1834 all British Colony
slaves were granted their freedom, many years before the American Civil
War that resulted in freedom for the American slaves. In 1842 Bambarra
on Middle Caicos was settled by survivors of a Spanish slave shipwreck
called the "Gambia".
In 1873 Queen Victoria grants a royal
charter whereby the Turks & Caicos Islands become an independent
colony and are no longer part of the Bahamas. In 1874, however, the
islands were annexed to Jamaica that provided medical and technical
assistance as well as substantial grants following "The Great Bahamas
Hurricane" that devastated the Turks & Caicos Islands and the
entire Bahamian chain.
In 1898, almost 1200 hundred years since
the Arawak first settled the islands, technology arrives with the first
telegraph cable linking Bermuda, Grand Turk and Jamaica.
In WWII
the US Coast Guard installs a submarine tracking base on the island of
South Caicos and in 1950 a US missile tracking station was established
on Grand Turk and then subsequently closed in 1980. It was only in 1948
when the first commercial flight arrived to the islands!
Many
tourists arriving now to the islands comment on the lack of
agriculture. In 1960 Hurricane Donna devastated all agriculture and no
subsequent effort was made by the British government of the time to
restore the islands ability to grow food for itself. Apart from a small
hydroponics farm of the islands that produces a few tomatoes at the
cooler times of the year as well as some lettuces, nothing apart from
fish and conch is produced on the island. Everything has to be imported
from either neighbouring islands such as the Dominican Republic but
most of the food supplies are imported from the Florida and the United
States.
In 1962 when Jamaica gained its independence from
Britain the Turks & Caicos Islands decided to remain a British
Crown Colony. It remains as such even today with no real agenda for
independence in the future.
Also in 1962 Astronaut John Glenn
first touched land on Grand Turk after his epic space flight, perhaps
heralding his historic achievement out of respect for the man who set
foot on the same island centuries before, Christopher Columbus.
Centuries
after Christopher Columbus charted the coastal waters of the island
Providenciales, in 1966 Provident Ltd in exchange for 4000 acres began
development on the island that later became the first real tourist
destination in the Turks & Caicos Islands. Although not suitable
for today`s modern jets, Provident Ltd constructed the first airstrip
which Johnston`s Ltd upgraded 15 years later and which has now
developed in to a modern, International airport. Provident also
constructed roads on Providenciales to link the three local settlements
and built a 10 room hotel called The Third Turtle Inn. In 1968 the
airport opened.
It was not until the early Eighties when the
Club Med Turkoise resort was open that Providenciales became a serious
tourist destination. The ensuing years saw the start of development
along Grace Bay from Club Med to Turtle Cove, a distance of seven miles
or more. Grace Bay now hosts some of the world`s top resorts and
condominium developments (including the Trade Winds Condotel which is
located at the very heart of Grace Bay) In 1997 the Provo Golf Club
opened, reputed to be one of the best courses in the Caribbean.
Today
after almost 1200 years of recorded history, the Turks & Caicos
Islands stand on the threshold of an exciting future boasting the
fastest growing economy in the Caribbean basin coupled with strictly
controlled development to protect the islands heritage as a pristine
sanctuary for both the local people and tourists to enjoy for the next
Millennium. The Turks & Caicos Islands are indeed Beautiful by
Nature.
Part or or all of this text stems from the original article at: http://www.TradeWindsCondotel.com
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