
SITES
OF MEMORY
Independence
Square
Originally
called Pall Mall Square. It was renamed on the
occasion of St. Kitts & Nevis achieving political
independence on September 19th, 1983. The Government
first acquired Pall Mall Square in 1750 and it
rapidly became the administrative, commercial
and social center of Basseterre. The Square was
the site of the slave market. Slaves arriving
from Africa were temporarily quartered in the
basement of a building on the south side of the
Square.
Carib
Petroglyphs
The
Carib Petroglyphs can be found towards the entrance
to the Wingfield Manor Estate. The drawing shows
two of the original carvings drawn by the Caribs,
depicting perhaps images of their Zemi or gods.
Bloody Point
By 1626 both the British and the French settlements
were expanding at such a rate that the Carib community
began to perceive a threat to its very existence
on the island. Joining forces with Caribs from
a number of other islands, Chief Tegremare prepared
to attack the European settlements. In the meanwhile,
despite growing animosity between the French and
the British, the two communities put aside their
differences in order to mount a combined, pre-emptive
attack on the Carib. As a result, over 2,000 Carib
Indians were massacred here at Bloody Point.
Berkely
Memorial
This
memorial to the former president of the General
Legislative Council, Thomas Berkeley, stands at
the center of the Circus.
Half Way Tree Village
Early in 1625, Thomas Warner's small colony greeted
the unexpected arrival of a French ship, probably
in the shallow bay on which Basseterre now sits.
The French had suffered an unfortunate encounter
with a Spanish warship, and they limped into St.
Kitts in order to make much-needed repairs. The
ship's captain, Pierre Belain d'Esnambue, must
have been favorably impressed with what he found,
as he returned shortly afterward with a small
group of colonists. Warner and the English, like
the Caribs before them, at first accepted the
newcomers in friendship--or at least toleration.
In order to avoid later disputes, the two groups
of European colonists chose the great tamarind
tree of Half Way Tree Village to mark the border
between the French and British territories on
St. Kitts. As the colonies grew and became increasingly
prosperous, this border was sorely tested. War
was narrowly averted during the first decade of
the 18th century, for example, when it was discovered
that the tamarind had thrown out new roots--and
in theory extended to the British authority over
many of the village's French houses.
Old Road Bay
It was here at Old Road Bay that Sir Thomas Warner,
along with his family and 14 others began the
first permanent European settlement in the Leeward
Islands. The settlers were at first on good terms
with the island's Carib inhabitants, though such
friendship lasted only a very few years. Rather
than cultivating sugar, it was tobacco that had
drawn Warner to the island, and it was the island's
tobacco crop that first supported the settlement.
The Warner family estate served as the capital
of St. Kitts until 1727, when it was moved to
Basseterre. Outside of Old Road bay are found
a number of interesting Carib petroglyphs.
| Information
compiled by the St.Christopher Heritage Society.
For information on many more Historical Sites,
you may visit them at www.stkittsheritage.org
or give them a call at tel: 869-465-5584 |
|