| Cayman Islands History |
| About Cayman - Island Information |
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A Brief History of the Although the Cayman Islands celebrated its 500th birthday – its Quincentennial Year – in 2003, marking the first sighting of Cayman Brac and Little Cayman by Christopher Columbus, it was only about three hundred years ago that people began to settle permanently on these islands. With no archeological evidence that Amerindians ever inhabited the Cayman Islands, it is believed that the first people to actually land here were sailors from Sir Francis Drake’s 1585-6 expedition to the Over the next several hundred years, despite the treacherous fringing reefs surrounding the islands and the presence of large salt water crocodiles – the Caimans, for which the islands were eventually named – they became a popular stop for sailors, including the Caribbean’s infamous buccaneers, who came to stock up on the abundant supply of fresh turtle meat and to careen their vessels. Around 1700, the first settlers came to live on In an inhospitable land, the Cayman people were enterprising, hardworking and skillful. They became well known as expert mariners and boat builders, and on all three islands men crafted shallow-drafted sloops and two-mastered schooners that could carry cargo to and from the Until the 1900s, the small craft used were dugout canoes, but in 1904, Captain Daniel Jervis on Cayman Brac designed and built the first catboat, a small, highly maneuverable double-ended boat that proved ideal for catching turtles. Thereafter, it became the ubiquitous mode of transport in the days before good roads and motor vehicles, transporting goods and people from place to place along the coastlines. When the English captured In 1831, the first elected legislature was set up, though only free men were eligible to vote. (Indeed, legislation granting women the right to vote and to stand for election was not passed until 1958.) In 1863, the From the mid 1830s, people of Grand Cayman started to settle in the Sister Islands, while others looked for an easier life in central America, and later, as the 18th century drew to a close, Caymanians also began migrating to the US, particularly Tampa, Mobile and Port Arthur, and there remains a strong family connections between the Cayman Islands and these areas of exodus. Progress came slowly to the Cayman Islands, and when the devastating hurricane of 1932 struck first the south coast of Grand Cayman and then the But from this low point in Cayman history, a remarkably successful small island economy grew. After the Second World War and up to the early 1980s, the majority of Caymanian men, renowned for their seamanship, found work in the shipping industry, working on the large cargo ships and tankers criss-crossing the world. Though they were often gone for long periods of time, leaving the women to cope at home, the men sent home the money they earned to their families, thereby fueling the economy and also bringing home with them new ideas and technology. In 1950, an Englishman, Benson Greenall, was the first to realize the tourism possibilities of When In 2004, Hurricane Ivan unleashed storm category 4 winds and subsequent floods on From humble beginnings, the Cayman Islands now boasts telecommunications services, financial expertise and infrastructure to rival large industrial nations and a notably high standard of living. Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac and
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| Last Updated on Friday, 03 October 2008 21:29 |