Saint Vincent Island Information
Information gathered from http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107935.html
St. Vincent, chief island of the chain, is 18 mi (29 km) long
and 11 mi (18 km) wide and is located 100 mi (161 km) west of
Barbados. The island is mountainous and well forested. St.
Vincent is dominated by the volcano Mount Soufrière, which
rises to 4,048 ft (1,234 m). The Grenadines, a chain of nearly
600 islets with a total area of only 17 sq mi (27 sq km), extend
for 60 mi (96 km) between St. Vincent and Grenada. The main
islands in the Grenadines are Bequia, Balliceau, Canouan,
Mayreau, Mustique, Isle D'Quatre, Petit Saint Vincent, and Union
Island.
The Carib Indians inhabited St. Vincent before the Europeans
arrived, and the island still sports a sizable number of Carib
artifacts. Explored by Columbus in 1498, and alternately claimed
by Britain and France, St. Vincent became a British colony by
the Treaty of Paris in 1763. In 1773, the island was divided
between the Caribs and the British, but conflicts between the
groups persisted. In 1776, the Caribs revolted and were subdued.
Thereafter the British deported most of them to islands in the
Gulf of Honduras. Sugarcane cultivation brought thousands of
African slaves and, later, Portuguese and East Indian laborers.
The islands belonged to the West Indies Federation from 1958
until its dissolution in 1962, won home rule in 1969 as part of
the West Indies Associated States, and achieved full
independence Oct. 27, 1979. Prime Minister Milton Cato's
government quelled a brief rebellion on Dec. 8, 1979, attributed
to economic problems following the eruption of Mount Soufrière
in April 1979 (which had caused the evacuation of the northern
two-thirds of the island). The eruption, followed by Hurricane
Allen in 1980, seriously damaged the nation's economy,
particularly the important banana crop, in the 1980s. But by the
1990s the economy had begun to rebound. With the 1999 decision
by the European Union to end its preferential treatment of
bananas imported from former colonies, St. Vincent sought to
diversify its economy, primarily through expanding tourism.
In 2001 elections, the Unity Labour Party (ULP) won a
landslide upset, and Ralph Gonsalves, a lawyer, became the new
prime minister. In 2005, he was reelected.
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