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| St. John US Virgin Islands | ||
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| St. John USVI On Foot And By Car | ||
| St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI) tourist activities and attractions identified in St. John On Foot And By Car, a Virgin Islands guidebook, featuring walking and motor tours of the history and natural beauty of St. John in the Caribbean. | ||
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The dazzling-clear waters and soft white sandy beaches of St. John US Virgin Islands (USVI) offer superb swimming and sun-bathing activities. Popular beaches include Trunk Bay, Cinnamon Bay and Salt Pond. A few feet off the shores of St. John, scuba divers enjoy the activity of exploring miles of coral reefs teeming with colorful sea life. St. John On Foot And By Car contains easy-to follow identification guides to the fish, coral and other marine inhabitants of St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI). Other popular visitor activities on Saint John (USVI) include kayaking, hiking, fishing, sailing, horseback riding and ecological tours. |
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Fauna and Flora - St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI)
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Indian Artifacts - St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI) Artifacts of Pre-Columbian Indians have been discovered on St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI). Most notable are the Taino Indian “petroglyphs” (rock carvings), which are described in the Reef Bay Trail Hike of St. John On Foot And By Car. Viewing the many Taino pottery images that have been unearthed at St. John's Cinnamon Bay is an exciting activity. |
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Historic Sites - St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI) The architecture on St. John, US Virgin Islands (USVI) reflect the colonial Danish influence. The habit of driving on the left in the US Virgin Islands (USVI) is also a Danish remnant. Old plantation names on St. John such as Carolina, Enighed and Adrian are used to identify various areas of the island. For a firsthand sense of the past, St. John On Foot And By Car leads visitors on a tour of several old Danish sugar plantations, including the ruins at Annaberg, Cinnamon Bay and Reef Bay. The ghost-like images of these abandoned structures are to tourists haunting reminders of the history of slavery in the USVI. Annaberg is one of the most visited historic attractions on St. John, US Virgin Islands
(USVI). The sugar mill was probably built shortly before 1780. One of Annaberg’s first recorded owners was Benjamin Lind, a very wealthy man from St. Thomas
(USVI). Down through the years most of Annaberg’s owners have been "absentee owners". In 1816, Annaberg was sold to Thomas and Mary Sheen, and in 1827, it was auctioned off to Hans Henrik Berg, another wealthy St. Thomas resident. Following Berg, there was a succession of
There is a marked walking trail that guides tourists through the Annaberg ruins. St. John On Foot And By Car takes visitors from one marker to the next, explaining the significance and history of the many fascinating aspects of the Annaberg sugar factory and outbuildings. It is often difficult for tourists to comprehend how hard life must have been for a slave on St. John. The misery began from the moment a slave was sold into bondage. Conditions were so bad on some slave ships that passengers were lucky to survive the crossing. Those slaves that managed to make it, had next to face the denigration of the auction block. The following excerpt is incorporated into the guidebook from Virgin Islands historian Antonio Jarvis’ book, Brief History of the Virgin Islands. “At the time,” writes Jarvis, “slave auctions were the most exciting event of any month. When the slaver entered the port, the white inhabitants rushed to the water’s edge and took to boats in order to get a preview of the living cargo…Despite the unholy stench and the ravages of filth from the voyage, the partly washed freight tried to put on a look of complacence, save where some untamed chieftain in lofty tones demanded his release, or a hysterical woman alternately screamed or sobbed. “When the slaves were finally put ashore and marched to the auction block,” continues Jarvis, “a huge crowd of prospective buyers, sailors, prostitutes and free blacks, with earrings and store clothes, gathered to see the sale....Women had to suffer the degradation of being minutely examined in public.” |
| Editor’s Note: These are just a few of the many hundreds of activities and attractions that are cited in St. John On Foot And By Car. |
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US Virgin Islands - St. John Activities and Attractions