Located about 65 kilometers off the Northern Coast of
Honduras, the Bay Islands group consists of 3 main Islands (Roatán,
Guanaja, and Utila), 3 smaller islands (Barbareta, Morat, and Helene),
and 65 smaller cays. Between these islands and the mainland are the
Cayos Cocinos (Hog Islands). This is a very brief history of Roatan
Honduras.
During the Maya reign in Central America (between the
4th and 10th centuries), the Paya Indians populated the Bay Islands. The
Payas were a smaller and less advanced group than the Mayans. Their
civilization was characterized by simpler housing and tools. Payan
artifacts (pottery, jade, and shells) are often found in Island burial
and ceremonial sites and are referred to by the locals as "yaba ding
dings."
The island Indians mined jade which they took in
small boats to the mainland to trade for tools, and other items. The
islands provided an abundant variety of foodstuffs such as manioc, fish,
corn, turtles, iguanas, agouti (island "rabbits"), native fruits, land
crabs, and deer.
During the 13th and 14th centuries, Europeans
discovered these islands. For almost 200 years Spanish conquistadores
and British pirates battled for control of these islands, ignoring the
Indians for the most part. During this period, the Islands were used for
food and wood supplies, safe harbor, and slave trading. Remains of old
British forts and towns named after famous pirates remain as their
legacy. One group of slaves was "parked" here during this time during
the heat of a battle. When the winners came to collect them, the slaves
refused to go. These are the Garifunas who populate much of the Bay
Islands to this date, still maintaining their own cultural identity and
language. Punta Gorda on Roatán is one of many villages where they still
make their homes.
A Longer Piece of more recent history by David
Evans
The first records indicating permanent English
settlements in the Bay Islands (other than the intermittent occupations
by the logwood cutters and buccaneers, and the abortive attempt by the
Puritan sponsored Providence Company) show that Port Royal, on the
island of Roatán, was again occupied in the year 1742. In this year the
British made an attempt to gain possession of most of the Caribbean
coast of Central America, and in doing so, rebuilt the old fort on
Roatán (Squier 1858:615-616).
The archives at Belize record a Major Caulfield in command of Roatán as
early as 1745. On August 2nd of that year, the Major wrote a letter to a
Mr. Trelawry, Govenor of Jamaica, describing Spanish harassment of
English settlements (Archives, vol. I: 15). These settlements appear to
have been well established on the island of Roatán by 1775. A map of
that year, drawn by Thomas Jefferys, Geographer to His Majesty, Clearly
shows essentially all of the present older settlements, bearing their
current names, with the exception of Calkett's Hole (now Coxen's Hole)
and Falmouth Harbout (now Oak Ridge).
The Spanish, as soon as the early dawn provided enough light, directed a
well-coordinated attack against the English at Port Royal on the early
morning of March, 2nd 1782. "After a heavy cannonade, detachments of the
troops landed and opened regular trenches against the forts, which were
so closely invested and hotly pressed that on the 16th of the month they
surrendered at discretion. The lives of the defenders were spared, but
all their dwellings, to the number of 500, were destroyed" ( quoted by
Squier in 1858: 616-617).
Six years later, in 1788, England completely evacuated all of her
settlements in the Bay Islands as well as on the Miskito Shore. The
islands then lay deserted of Europeans for almost fifteen years until
1797, when the English removed by force some 5,000 "Black Caribs" (a
mixture of African Negro and Carib and Arawak Indians) from the Windward
Island of St. Vincent, and marooned them on the then empty beaches of
Port Royal on Roatán (Squier 1858:172 and Taylor 1951: 36). Conzemius
tells us that these unhappy people were first taken from St. Vincent to
the small island of Balliceaux, then to that of Bequia, both in the
Grenadines. At Bequia they were loaded aboard H.M.S. EXPERIMENT under
the command of Captain Barrett, and then shipped to Roatán. They were
landed on Roatán on a stormy day of February 25, 1797 (Conzemius 1928:
189). According to the Honduran historian, Durón, the British employed
two men-of-war and a brigantine, landing the deportees in April, not
February, in 1797 (Durón 1927:99). My own (DKE) personal research both
in Belize and in Berkeley indicates that this landing was indeed in the
winter months, and most likely February. The History of the Garifuna, as
well as the history of their most famous dance, "La Punta", seems to
spiral outward from this day, whatever month it was in.
Except for these "Black Carib" now known as the Garifuna, and a few
Spanish attempts to settle colonists from Spain and exiles native to the
Canary Islands, the Bay Islands remained unoccupied for almost thirty
more years (Parsons 1956: 9), until in 1821, the newly-founded Central
American Federation claimed the Bay Islands, and declared the
independent of Spain. No serious attempts were made to settle them,
however, or to protect them from encroachment by other powers.
We next hear of British interest in 1825, when a Mr. Marshall Bennett,
on a visit from Honduras to England, wrote a letter to the Colonial
Office. He stressed the great strategic importance of possible
British settlements on Roatán, at that time being claimed by Guatemala.
Bennett felt the latter, not being a maritime nation, presumably did not
regard the islands of any great importance. No immediate action followed
this letter, and we know the Bay Islands were still unoccupied by
Europeans when visited by Roberts in 1827 (Roberts 1827: 276).
At some time between 1827 and 1834, English settlers began arriving on
the island of Roatán. A memorandum, drafted in Belize, dated November
24th, 1834, noted that at this time the islands of Roatán and Bonacca (Guanaja)
were inhabited by 50 people only, mostly English (Archivesm, Vol. II:
361).
At a convention held in Guatemala on April 30th, 1859, England, under a
great deal of pressure from the United States, agreed to surrender the
Bay Islands and the Miskito Coast of both Honduras and
Nicaragua, if allowed complete freedom of action in the territory known
at that time and until recently as British Honduras, now independent
since 1974 and known as Belize. On July 9, 1860, in a message to the
Superintendent at Belize, the British Consul at Comayagua (Honduras),
acknowledged receipt of a dispatch informing him that the Colony of the
Bay Islands were to be ceded to the Republic of Honduras. In this same
letter, however, he asks that this be delayed on the request of the
Honduran government, because General William Walker, the American
Filibuster, intended to take possession of the islands and use them for
operations against the mainland. [ The islanders were alarmed about
this, and one can read a copy of the letter they themselves wrote to
Queen Victoria at the Museum at Anthony's Key in the IMS building,
Roatán. Many of the names of families still on the island were attached
to this letter. Its worth your while to drop into the museum and read
it]. {see Roatan Activities for details}
On July 14th, 1860, the Government Gazette of Belize ran a notice that
the Colony of the Bay Islands had been ceded to the Republic of
Honduras, and noted that an offer was included to island inhabitants of
free grants of Crown Land, as well as transport of any movable property
to any of Her Majesty's Colonies in the British West Indies. There is no
evidence that any Bay Islanders took up the Queen's offer.
The Government of the Republic of Honduras took little notice, however,
being heavily embroiled in troubles on the mainland, and had little
interest in her newly won possessions some 10 to 50 miles off her
northern shore. Honduras took no action at all until April 12th, 1861,
when her Minister of Foreign Affairs sent a brief note to a Mr. Hall,
then British Consul to Honduras. This note informed Hall that Honduras
was not yet prepared to take possession of the Bay Islands, and
requested that England remain patient a little longer (Archives vol.
III: 239).
On May 23rd of 1861, however, British patience ran out. Belize demanded
that the Commandant of Trujillo visit Roatán in the near future to take
over the sovereignty of the colony, and on June 1st, 1861, after having
been a British Colony for less than nine short years, the Bay Islands
became the "Departemente de las Isles de la Bahía", under the struggling
Republic of Honduras.
As most visitors to the islands know, English is still spoken by the
majority of the old islanders over thirty years of age, and is at least
a second language for the majority of the somewhat heterogeneous
population, even though Spanish became the official language in the year
1872. It was not until 1902, a year after the death of their beloved
Queen Victoria, that many of the islands' English population realized
that their assumed British nationality and claims to British protection
were no longer valid (Strong 1935:16, from Rose 1904 : 15). Jane Houlson
wrote in 1934 that many islanders were still denying Honduranian
nationality (p.68); and Peter Keenagh, an Englishman visiting the
islands in 1938, wrote:
"Since the ratification of the Treaty of Comayagua there has been a
continual struggle between Islanders and Mainlanders. The island
families, for many reasons, consider that their British stock is
superior to the confusion of Spanish, Indian, and Negro blood which
populates the mainland, and there has never been the slightest feeling
of subjection" (1938: 57).
Adams briefly visited the island of Utila in 1957, and noted that there
were some residents there who still claimed British nationality, even
though both Honduras and England agree that any person born in the
islands subsequent to the treaty of 1861 are Honduran citizens (Adams
1957: 640). And as late as 1961, when my wife and I first set foot on
Roatán off the heaving deck of the little freight boat "Edith Mc", there
was a sign hanging in the tiny post office in French Harbour. It was
hand-printed in red ink, the work of the local postmaster of that day.
It read:
"COUNT YOUR MONEY IN LEMPIRA {in lieu of U.S. currency, then called by
all islanders "gold"} REMEMBER, WE LIVE IN HONDURAS ".
When I asked why the sign didn't read ... Remember, we are Honduran"...,
the postmaster only smiled at me, shook his head, and said as he handed
me my change...."You'll find out, when ya stays here awhile."