US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

16
US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins

description

US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands. St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins. The island of St John, US Virgin Islands. St John, US VI map. Some details about the VI. 9 islands – 6 are British and 3 American Carib Indians were indigenous - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Page 1: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins

Page 2: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

The island of St John, US Virgin Islands

Page 3: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

St John, US VI map

Page 4: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Some details about the VI

• 9 islands – 6 are British and 3 American

• Carib Indians were indigenous

• Columbus sailed by 1493 but did not settle

• Denmark acquired St John, St Croix and St Thomas in 1718 (Danish West Indies)

• Sold to USA in 1917 for $25 million

• Territory – own governor – citizens but cannot vote in US presidential elections

Page 5: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Economy of the US VI

• Today tourism provides employment and income – shopping, hiking, snorkeling, camping, sailing

• Back in C18th and c19th it was a SUGAR ISLAND

• Population exploded with importing of slaves from Africa to work plantations owned by Danes

Page 6: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Annaberg Sugar Plantation Ruins1 of 109 on St John

Page 7: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Wattle and daub huts for slaves are same as medieval peasants lived in

Page 8: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

What does sugar cane look like?

Page 9: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Sugar cane has to be processed

• Slaves cut it down from the terraces after it grew for a year to mature

• They stripped the cane stalk from the leaves and took it to the mill to be crushed

• There were wooden skids on the slopes to let the cane slide down to mule carts

• Slaves fed the cane stalks into the crushing machinery run by the windmill

Page 10: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

The windmill at Annaberg for powering rollers to crush cane

Page 11: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

And when the wind failed, horse power was used

Page 12: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Holes in the walls to bring cane juice to the boiler room

Page 13: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

The cane juice is directed into the boiling house

Page 14: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

The boiler house was the hottest place to work

• The cane juice came through holes in the wall

• It was boiled in the large kettles first and skimmed for impurities

• As it was reduced and thickened it was ladled into smaller, hotter kettles

• The elite slaves were the ‘sugar cookers’ who knew when to ladle the thick juice into cooling pans for crystals to form

Page 15: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

The rum still: hot work but very lucrative for owners and merchants

Page 16: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands

Beautiful views!