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

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

Dec 15, 2015

Download

Documents

London Woodrow
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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 St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

The island of St John, US Virgin Islands

Page 3: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

St John, US VI map

Page 4: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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 St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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 St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

Annaberg Sugar Plantation Ruins1 of 109 on St John

Page 7: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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

Page 8: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

What does sugar cane look like?

Page 9: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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 St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

The windmill at Annaberg for powering rollers to crush cane

Page 11: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

And when the wind failed, horse power was used

Page 12: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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

Page 13: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

The cane juice is directed into the boiling house

Page 14: US Virgin islands – part of the Sugar Islands St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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 St John and the Annaberg Plantation ruins.

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

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

Beautiful views!