West Bay VillageA Collection of Fine Beach Homes on Roatan's West Bay
Beach.
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The Island of Roatan:One of the Bay Islands of Honduras |
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![]() Length: 40 Miles Flat Land: 2.2% Annual Average Rainfall: 85” Climate: 80’s F year-round Population: 75,000 Mixed Ethnic Groups Languages: English, Spanish, Garifuna Dominant Religion: Catholic Administrative Capital: Coxen Hole Main Incomes: Fishing & Tourism |
In fact, Roatan's position in the Caribbean has
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Pirates: With its many secret cays and bights for hiding in, and with Indian farmers supplying the food, the pirates favoured Roatan’s south coast. Free from any country’s Naval Law, the pirates were bold and creative in their attacks. They would set up a line of tiny “fishing boats” stretching to the mainland. When a new fleet set out from Trujillo for it’s crossing back to Spain, lanterns would be lit on these little boats, a signal to Roatan that it was time to get to work. Some pirate captains would keep their masts on large hinges. They could quietly hide behind a low island with their masts laid flat against their decks. As a Spanish ship sailed past a little island or cay, it could suddenly sprout a full set of masts and sails, and from behind it would spring a pirate ship, cannons at the ready. The heavy Spanish cargo ships, with holds full of gold and silver, stood little chance. Not content to pick off ships one by one, Englishman William Jackson gathered up 1500 men in 16 ships, and sailed right into Trujillo and leveled it. He freed many Paya slaves and brought them back to Roatan. Now on the pirates’ side, the Paya even joined in raids. Trying to cut the pirates off from their supply-base on Roatan, the Spanish attacked the Island and destroyed every house and burned every field they found, taking most of the Islanders away as slaves again. After 1650 Roatan became completely deserted. Farms that had fed entire colonies for over a century were quickly reclaimed by the jungle. In the 1660’s, as war continued between England and Spain, a new breed of privateers emerged. Dominated by Englishmen such as Captain Henry Morgan, they used Roatan as a base for refitting and repairs. The pickings were so good, they often had to break off from the fighting to bury their plunder on Roatan, and then race back to the slow Spanish fleets for more. From Roatan, they even sacked Spanish cities as far afield as Panama and Havana. They had their pick of the wealth of the Spanish colonies and they would keep the best of whatever they wanted, dressing in the finest, most colourful clothes and silks, boasting the best weapons pillaged from Governors and noblemen. And of course they had hoarded more gold and silver than they could ever spend on the Islands. At their height, it’s believed that about 5000 of them were operating out of Roatan. You can still dig up rum bottles today, some pirates’ celebration of a good day of raiding. Royal English Navy: The Garifuna: British Crown Colony: Then in the 1830’s, starting with the Coopers, about 25 Cayman Island families immigrated to Roatan. They were white, English speaking subjects of the Crown, seeking it’s protection. They mainly settled to the east of the island, prefering to build on the cays. They set up trade with the mainland which continues today. Slavery was abolished in 1834. At this time the Crown was alloting one acre plots to the freed families, many of them on Roatan. Other freed slaves from the Caymans followed their old masters, looking for work. These groups all worked well together, and Roatan, soon became the only post-slavery Crown Colony to be self-sufficient, even selling and exporting extra food and products. Roatan was officially handed over to the Honduran authorities in 1858, although no one living on the island spoke Spanish. Hundreds of white settlers, not wanting anything to do with the Spanish rule, left the island. In the years to follow groups of Spanish mainlanders came to Roatan to try their hand at cultivating bananas for the new American market. This was prosperous for a few years, until a Septmeber hurricane in 1877 destroyed the crops which the industry never recovered from. Today, if anything remains of the "New Orleans and Bay Island Fruit Company" it has been reclaimed by the jungle over a century ago never to be tried again. As history holds, the Garifuna continued to build their canoes, the Cayman Islanders continued to go to sea in them. All was quiet and peaceful. Today: |
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