Canouan Island Information
Information gathered from http://www.answers.com/topic/canouan
Canouan is one of the Grenadines
Islands belonging to St
Vincent. It is a tiny, arid island measuring just 3.5 miles
by 1.25 miles. Its capital village (indeed, its only village) is
Charlestown.
A barrier
reef runs along the Atlantic
side of the dry Canouan Island. It is outlined with
rounded hills beneath the “Maho”, a 900-foot tall Mount
Royal, which is, recorded the highest point on the island. Two
bays, Glossy and Friendship, separate the southern side of the
Canouan Island.
The beautiful Canouan Island is just 25 miles south of St.
Vincent and the Grenadines who in 1871
to 1969
was part of the British
colony of the Windward
Islands. In 1979,
the island became independent with a secure democratic
government based on the British system. History marks more than
200 years before Christ; a cultivated tribe called the Arawaks
arrived on bunker canoes to the island. These new residents
brought fire-burners, plants and animals, basic farming and
fishing skills with them. They lived in peace for 1500 years
until a tribe of fierce fighters called the Caribs,
invaded and killed the Arawak men and took off with their woman.
More than 200 years after Columbus was questioned to have
ever laid eyes on St. Vincent, the Europeans established a kind
of permanent settlement. Its mountainous and heavily forested
geography allowed the Caribs to defend against European
settlement here longer than on almost any other island in the
Caribbean.
After the Caribs were defeated on other islands they joined slaves
who had escaped repression on Barbados
by following the current of trade winds westward to St. Vincent,
as well as those who had survived shipwrecks near St. Vincent
and Bequia.
The mixed descendants of the island warriors and the freed
Africans (who became known as the Black Caribs), with their
common distrust and disgust for the Europeans, proved to be a
fearsome foe.
The Caribs feared complete domination so they allowed the
French to construct a settlement on the island in 1719.
The French brought slaves to work their plantations. By 1748,
St. Vincent a Treaty
of Aix-la-Chapelle officially declared impartial by Britain
and France.
In recent years, the Raffles Resort acquired roughly half of
the island and forbids local residents access to the property
unless they are employed there. The local population generally
earns subsistence wages (approximately $250 per month plus a
housing allowance of around $100) for work at either of the
island's two main resorts.
Canouan is generally a tranquil place, with the exception of
some fairly raucous local holidays (some of which are called at
a moment's notice at the mere whim of local officials).
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