The
Happy Island
Scuba or snorkel to experience the brilliant undersea
sights of St. Croix, a happy island brimming with lush foliage.
The average temperature is 79°F, and the average rainfall
is 40 inches per year with September and May being the wettest. The
annual humidity is between 70%-80%, with constant easterly trade winds.
The average temperature is 79°F, and the average
rainfall is 40 inches per year with September and May being the wettest.
The annual humidity is between 70%-80%, with constant easterly trade
winds.
The Virgin Islands of the United States (2000 pop.
108,612), 133 sq mi (344 sq km), are a U.S. territory. They were
purchased from Denmark in 1917 for $25 million because of their
strategic position alongside the approach to the Panama Canal. Under a
law passed in 1954, the islands are administered by the U.S. Dept. of
the Interior; a governor and senate are locally elected. Charles Turnbul
2d was elected governor in 1998 and reelected in 2002. Since 1927,
residents have enjoyed U.S. citizenship, and since 1973 they have been
represented in the U.S. House of Representatives by a nonvoting
delegate. The capital is
Charlotte
Amalie on St. Thomas; other cities are Christiansted and
Frederiksted, both on St. Croix.
Although 68 islands comprise the group, only the three largest—St.
Croix (80 sq mi/207 sq km), St. Thomas (32 sq mi/83 sq km), and St. John
(20 sq mi/52 sq km)—are of importance. St. Thomas is mountainous and
encloses many snug harbors and bays; Charlotte Amalie, the chief port,
has one of the finest harbors in the Caribbean. Tourism, especially the
cruise-ship trade, is the main source of income on St. Thomas. St.
Croix, with less mountainous terrain, has an economy that depends in
large part on tourism, but manufacturing and agriculture are also
important. Food crops are raised; sugarcane is no longer grown, but rum
is still distilled. Cattle are raised on all three islands. The
Virgin
Islands National Park covers much of St. John.
Settlement of St. Thomas was begun by the Danish West India Company
in 1672; St. John was claimed by Denmark in 1683, and St. Croix was
purchased from France in 1733. The islands became a Danish royal colony
in 1754. In 1801, and again from 1807 to 1815, the islands were in
British hands. |