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Wikipedia

Saint Croix

Saint Croix (/krɔɪ/ KROY)[b] is an island in the Caribbean Sea, and a county and constituent district of the United States Virgin Islands (USVI), an unincorporated territory of the United States.

Saint Croix
Nickname: Twin City
Saint Croix
Saint Croix
Saint Croix
Saint Croix
Geography
LocationCaribbean Sea
Coordinates17°44′01″N 64°47′02″W / 17.733509°N 64.783864°W / 17.733509; -64.783864
ArchipelagoVirgin Islands, Leeward Islands
Area84[a] sq mi (220 km2)
Length22 mi (35 km)
Width7 mi (11 km)
Highest elevation1,165 ft (355.1 m)
Highest pointMount Eagle
Administration
TerritoryVirgin Islands
DistrictDistrict of Saint Croix
Demographics
DemonymCrucian
Cruzan
Population41,004 (2020 census[1])
Pop. density488/sq mi (188.4/km2)
Ethnic groupsAfro-Caribbean, Hispanic and Latino, White, Indian, Arab, Asian, Native American
Historical marker commemorating Alexander Hamilton

St. Croix is the largest of the islands in the territory, while the capital Charlotte Amalie is located on St. Thomas. As of the 2020 United States Census, St. Croix's population was 41,004.[2] The island's highest point is Mount Eagle, at 355 meters (1,165 ft). St. Croix's nickname is "Twin City", for its two towns, Frederiksted on the western end and Christiansted on the northeast part of the island.

Name edit

The island's indigenous Taino name is Ay Ay ("the river").[3] Its indigenous Carib name is Cibuquiera ("the stony land").[3] Its modern name, Saint Croix, is derived from the French Sainte-Croix, itself a translation of the Spanish name Isla de la Santa Cruz (meaning "island of the Holy Cross"), given by Columbus in 1493.[4] The French name was partially retained under Danish rule as Sankt Croix, and the island was finally given its current spelling following the US takeover in 1917. The associated demonym for the island is Crucian, derived from the original Spanish name.[4]

History edit

 
A 1754 Danish map of the island
 
Dannebrog being lowered at the Governor's Mansion for the last time (31 March 1917)

Igneri pottery indicates that people's presence on the island from 1 to 700, followed by the Taíno from 700 to 1425, before the encroachment by the Caribs in 1425; however, the island was void of habitation by 1590.[5]

The island was inhabited by various indigenous groups during its prehistory. Christopher Columbus landed on Santa Cruz (Holy Cross), as he called it, on 14 November 1493, and immediately was attacked by the Kalinago, who lived at Salt River on the north shore. This is the first recorded fight between the Spanish and a New World native population, and Columbus gave the battle site the name Cabo de la Flecha (Cape of the Arrow).[6] The Spanish never colonized the Islands, but most or all of the native population was eventually dispersed or killed. By the end of the 16th century, the islands were said to be uninhabited.[7]

Colonial period edit

Dutch and English settlers landed at Saint Croix in 1625, joined by some French refugees from Saint Kitts. However, the English expelled the Dutch and French settlers before they themselves were evicted by a Spanish invasion from Puerto Rico in August 1650.[8] Around 1650, a French force attacked and established a colony of 300. From 1651 until 1664, the Knights of Malta (at the time a vassal state of the Kingdom of Sicily), ruled the island in the name of Louis XIV.[8] The island then passed to the French West India Company. The colony was evacuated to San Domingo in 1695, when France battled the English and Dutch in the War of the Grand Alliance. The island then lay uninhabited and abandoned for another 38 years.[9]

In 1725, St. Thomas Governor Frederik Moth encouraged the Danish West Indies Company's directors to consider purchasing Santa Cruz (Saint Croix). On 15 June 1733, France and Denmark-Norway concluded a treaty by which the Danish West India Company bought Saint Croix for 750,000 Livres.[8] Louis XV ratified the treaty on 28 June, 1733 and received half the payment in French coins, with the remaining half paid in 18 months. On 16 November, 1733 Moth was named the first Danish governor of Saint Croix. The 1742 census lists 120 sugar plantations, 122 cotton plantations, and 1906 slaves, compared to 360 whites on the island. By 1754, the number of slaves had grown to 7,566. That year, King Frederick took direct control of Saint Croix from the company.[10][9]

For nearly 200 years, Saint Croix, St. Thomas and St. John were known as the Danish West Indies. By the mid to late 18th century, the peak of the plantation economy, the enslaved population of Saint Croix numbered between 18,000 and 20,000. During this time the white population ranged between 1,500 and 2,000. [11]

Future Founding Father Alexander Hamilton and his brother lived with their mother, Rachel Faucette, on Saint Croix after she returned to the island in 1765. Their residence was in the upper floor of a house at 34 Company Street, while Rachel used the lower floor as a shop selling food items. Within two years, however, Hamilton lost his father, James Hamilton, by abandonment and his mother to death. Official documents from the island, a 1768 probate court testimony from his uncle, established Alexander's age at 13. By 1769 Hamilton's cousin, aunt, uncle and grandmother had also died. Alexander’s brother James became an apprentice carpenter and Alexander became the ward of Thomas Stevens, a merchant on King Street. Hamilton was soon clerking in the export-import business of Beekman and Cruger at the intersection of King and King's Cross Streets. In 1772 a local businessmen funded Hamilton's further education in New York.[12]

The slave trade was abolished in the Danish colonies in 1792, although the prohibition did not go into effect until the end of 1802. Existing enslaved people were freed in 1848, after the 1848 St. Croix Slave Revolt led by General "Buddhoe" Gottlieb.[13][14]

The British occupation of the Danish West Indies took place at the end of March 1801, with the arrival of a British fleet at St Thomas. Denmark-Norway accepted the Articles of Capitulation and the British occupied the islands without a shot being fired. Their occupation lasted only until April 1802, when Britain returned the islands to Denmark-Norway.

A second British invasion of the Danish West Indies took place in December 1807, when a British fleet captured St Thomas on 22 December, and Saint Croix on 25 December. Denmark-Norway did not resist and the invasion again was bloodless. This occupation lasted until 20 November 1815. Both invasions were due to Denmark's alliance with France during the Napoleonic Wars. On the conclusion of a peace with France, the islands were returned to Denmark.

As a United States territory edit

The island was shaken by the 1878 St. Croix labor riot. In 1916, Denmark sold Saint Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John to the United States, formalizing the transfer in the Treaty of the Danish West Indies, in exchange for a sum of US$25 million in gold. In a national referendum on the issue, 64.2% of Danish voters approved the sale. An unofficial referendum held in the islands resulted in 99.83% vote in favor of the purchase. Formal transfer of the islands to the U.S. took place on 1 April 1917.

The island's inhabitants were granted United States citizenship in 1927. Industrialization of the island and its move away from an agrarian society took place in the 1960s. The 1972 Fountain Valley massacre, a mass shooting during a robbery at a golf club, led to a devastating reduction in tourism that lasted many years. The 2012 shutdown of the Hovensa refinery resulted in the loss of many jobs. Agriculture has seen a slow resurgence, due to an increase in demand for local produce and agricultural products.

In 1989, Hurricane Hugo struck the island with Category 4 winds. The United States Army, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Marshals Service were ordered in to restore order.[15][16]

Category 5 Hurricane Maria's weaker outer eyewall crossed St. Croix in September 2017; sustained winds reached over 150 mph and gusted up to 250 mph in some places on the western end of the island. Maria damaged or destroyed 70% of the buildings on St. Croix, including schools and the island's only hospital.[citation needed]

Geography edit

 
Saint Croix geologic map, where Km is the Cretaceous Mt. Eagle Group, Kd is Cretaceous diorite, Kg is Cretaceous gabbro, Tbf is the Pliocene Blessing Formation, Tmb and Tlr are the Miocene King shall Limestone, Qab is Quaternary alluvium, and Qr is Quaternary reef.

Saint Croix lies at 17°45′N 64°45′W / 17.750°N 64.750°W / 17.750; -64.750. The easternmost point in the United States of America in the western hemisphere is Saint Croix's Point Udall. The island has an area of 214.66 km2 (82.88 sq mi). The terrain is rugged, though not extremely so. The highest point on the island, Mount Eagle, is 1,165 feet (355 m) high. Most of the east end is quite hilly and steep, as is the north side from Christiansted west. From the north-side hills, a fairly even plain slopes down to the south coast; this was cultivated as the prime sugar land on the island.

Climate edit

The trade wind blows more or less along the length of the island. The hills of the western part of the island receive a good deal more rain than the east end; annual rainfall is on the whole extremely variable, averaging perhaps 40 inches (1,000 mm) a year. The east end of the island is a dry desert range with a substantial amount of cactus, while the west end has lush vegetation and palm trees. The island has multiple ecosystems in a small geographic area. Fairly severe and extended drought has always been a problem, particularly considering the lack of fresh ground water and lack of freshwater streams or rivers on the island. The island has a desalination plant, but most residential homes and businesses have built-in cisterns used to collect rainwater.

Demographics edit

Inhabitants are called Crucians /ˈkrʒən/[17] (frequently written as "Cruzans").

Due to Saint Croix's history of immigration, there is much debate as to what constitutes a native Crucian. The consensus in Crucian society is that if one is bahn ya ("born here" in Crucian dialect) on Saint Croix, they can claim to be Crucian, but not necessarily a native Crucian. Those considered to be the native Crucians (or by the more politically correct term: ancestral native Crucian) of Saint Croix are persons who can trace their ancestry to the era prior to U.S. Virgin Islands acquisition of American citizenship in 1927. Ancestral native Crucians (approximately one-fourth to one-third of Saint Croix's population) largely consist of the descendants of enslaved Africans brought to the island by Europeans during the 18th and 19th centuries, as well as the descendants of paid laborers recruited by the Danes from the British and Dutch West Indies after the Danish emancipation law in 1848. As on other Caribbean islands, many ancestral natives are also descended from European settlers and planters that migrated to the West Indies during the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. Due to a low number of European females in the colonial West Indies, many European males in colonial Saint Croix produced offspring with the majority African population, whose mixed-heritage descendants bear the surnames of their European ancestors. In addition, there are also a handful of ancestral families on the island (traditionally known as bukra) of full European ancestry.

Due to historical economic and political differences, as well as the remnants of a 19th-century caste system based on skin complexion, socioeconomic class differences among ancestral native Crucians can vary widely, even within the same family. Most ancestral native Crucians today are employed by the Government of the Virgin Islands, although there are others who are involved in the tourism industry, as well as the legal and medical professions.

Puerto Rican migration was prevalent in the 1930s, '40s and '50s, when many Puerto Ricans relocated to Saint Croix for work after the collapse of the sugar industry. However, the total population actually declined by 50% in the century preceding 1945.[18]

The United States Navy purchase of two-thirds of the nearby Puerto Rican island of Vieques during World War II resulted in the displacement of thousands of Viequenses, many of whom relocated to Saint Croix because of its similar size and geography. The local holiday, Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands Friendship Day, has been celebrated since the 1960s on the second Monday of October, which is also the same date as Columbus Day. Puerto Ricans in Saint Croix, most of whom have lived on the island for more than a generation, have kept their culture alive while integrating it into the native Crucian culture and society. For example, in informal situations, many Puerto Ricans in Saint Croix speak a unique Spanglish-like combination of Puerto Rican Spanish and the local Crucian Creole English.

Migration from "down-island" (a local colloquial term for islands in the Lesser Antilles located to the east and southeast), occurred mainly throughout the 1960s and 70s. In that period, agriculture declined as the major industry in Saint Croix and was replaced by tourism, alumina production, and oil refining. Jobs were plentiful in these industries and down-islanders came to Saint Croix by the thousands. The demand for imported labor in Saint Croix was exacerbated by the fact that many ancestral native Crucians, having acquired American citizenship several decades earlier, migrated to the mainland United States to pursue educational and career opportunities. Many down-islanders made Saint Croix their permanent home, while others eventually relocated to the mainland United States or returned to their native countries. Most down-islanders came from St. Kitts and Nevis, Antigua, St. Lucia, and Dominica, although people from every Anglophone Caribbean nation can be easily found on St. Croix. Down islanders and their Saint Croix-born offspring form the majority of Saint Croix's middle class, which has dwindled in size since the 2008 global recession.

Although down-island migration to Saint Croix is most commonly thought of as a mid-20th century phenomenon brought upon by American immigration policy, it is important to note that persons of both European and African descent from the nearby islands of Anguilla, St. Martin, Sint Eustatius, Saba, St. Kitts, Nevis, Antigua, and Montserrat have been migrating to Saint Croix since the 1600s. In addition, many ancestral native Crucians also share family ties with Barbados, as Bajans were heavily recruited to Saint Croix to work on sugar plantations throughout the late 19th century.

Continental Americans, although small in number in comparison with Caribbean immigrants, have also been part of the Saint Croix community. Most reside on the East End of Saint Croix and tend to work in the tourism industry, real estate, and legal professions. Many are temporary residents or retirees, as well.

Arab Palestinians have been an influential part of the local economy since the 1960s, when they first started to migrate to St. Croix to set up shops, supermarkets, and gas stations.

In the 21st century, recent waves of migration to Saint Croix have included people from the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, the Philippines, and various South American nations. Saint Croix's history of migration has sometimes caused tensions between immigrants and Crucians whose ancestry on the island dates back for generations. Tensions have subsided to some extent in recent years, mainly due to intermarriage among Crucians and other Caribbean peoples. In the late 1990s, many people supported legislation to define as a "native U.S. Virgin Islander" anyone who could trace their ancestry on the island to 1927, the year in which U.S. Virgin Islanders were granted United States citizenship. This effort by a select group of nationalist senators eventually failed after much public outcry and controversy. It was learned that most native-born U.S. Virgin Islanders would not qualify as "native" under the proposed legislation, as their immigrant ancestors had arrived later than 1927, but thousands of Danish citizens would have qualified.

In 2009, the proposed U.S. Virgin Islands Constitution voted by the Fifth Constitutional Convention established three definitions of U.S. Virgin Islanders: "Ancestral Native Virgin Islander"—those with ancestral ties (and their descendants); "Native Virgin Islander"—those born on the island (and their descendants); and "Virgin Islander"—any U.S. citizen who has resided in the territory for five years. The proposed constitution was rejected by the United States Congress in 2010 for violating the principle of equal rights for all citizens of the territory, "native" or not, and was sent back to the convention for further consideration. The total population of the island as per the 2020 U.S. Census is 41,004.[19]

Subdivisions edit

Saint Croix is divided into the following subdistricts (with population as per the 2020 U.S. Census):[19]

Language edit

English has been the dominant language on St. Croix since the 1700s and has been the official language since 1917, when the Danish West Indies were purchased by the United States. Previously, the official language was Danish, although it was not widely spoken. Other languages spoken throughout St. Croix's colonial history have included Irish, Scots, Spanish, and French, as well as a now-extinct Dutch Creole spoken by St. Thomas and St. John-born people living in St. Croix, as well as the local Creole English, which still exists today.[20]

Known on the island as Crucian, Virgin Islands Creole English is spoken by the majority of the population in informal situations.[21] Spanish is spoken by migrants from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic and their St. Croix-born offspring, and various French Creoles are spoken by St. Lucian, Dominican, and Haitian immigrants. Arabic is common among the Arab Palestinian community on St. Croix. Immigrants from the Anglophone Caribbean that migrated to St. Croix after their formative years tend to speak the English creoles of their respective islands in informal situations, which are, for the most part, mutually intelligible with Virgin Islands Creole English.

Religion edit

 
St. John's Anglican Church, Christiansted

Christianity is the predominant religion of Saint Croix; the island has been called the "Land of Churches"[22] for the approximately 150 churches that serve its 50,000 residents.

Protestant denominations are the most prevalent, but there is also a significant Roman Catholic presence due to Saint Croix's large Hispanic population, as well as Irish influence during the Danish colonial period. Anglican, Methodist, Moravian, Presbyterian, Pentecostal, and Seventh-day Adventists are among the Protestant denominations prevalent on the island. There are also followers of the Jehovah's Witness faith, as well as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

As in most of the Caribbean, various forms of Rastafari are practiced on the island. Islam is prevalent among the local Arab Palestinian community, and there is a Jewish presence as well that adheres to Judaism. Hinduism and Islam are also practiced by the Indian population.

Economy edit

 
HOVENSA oil refinery

Saint Croix was once an agricultural powerhouse in the Caribbean, but this period ended with the rapid industrialization of the island's economy in the 1960s. Like many other Caribbean islands today, Saint Croix has tourism as one of its main sources of revenue. A number of other industries on the island contribute to the economy.

Saint Croix was home to HOVENSA, one of the world's largest oil refineries. HOVENSA is a limited liability company owned and operated by Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp. (HOVIC), a division of U.S.-based Hess Corporation, and Petroleos de Venezuela, SA (PDVSA), the national oil company of Venezuela. Gas prices on the island were slightly higher than average when compared to gas prices in the continental United States.

On January 18, 2012, the company announced that the HOVENSA refinery would be permanently shut down. This had a major adverse effect on the economy of Saint Croix and the entire U.S. Virgin Islands, as the refinery employed 1,200 residents and 950 contractors.[23] The refinery has since reopened under new ownership.

 
Cruzan Rum Distillery

Saint Croix is also home to the Cruzan Rum Distillery,[24] makers of Cruzan Rum, a brand of Beam Suntory, Inc. The Cruzan Rum Distillery was founded in 1760 as Estate Diamond, and for many years used locally grown sugar cane to produce a single "dark"-style rum. The distillery now imports sugar cane molasses from other countries in the region, primarily from the Dominican Republic and South America. In recent years, Cruzan Rum, along with Bacardi from Puerto Rico and Gosling's from Bermuda, has contributed to the resurgence of "single barrel," super-premium rum. The quality and smoothness of the Cruzan Estate Rums has won more than 30 Spirit Awards.[25] Cruzan Estate Diamond Rum (aged five years in American oak barrels) and Cruzan Single Barrel Estate Rum (aged 12 years in American oak barrels) are two examples.

Diageo has completed construction of a new distillery on a 26-acre industrial site next to the Hovensa Refinery. The new distillery produces Captain Morgan Rum.[26] Diageo's entrance into the U.S. Virgin Islands rum industry has been controversial. The cash-strapped U.S. Virgin Islands government secured $250 million in bonds for the plant, about which the Puerto Rican government has bitterly complained.

Transportation edit

Cars drive on the left hand side of the road, but nearly all the automobiles on the island have left side steering columns. This has proven difficult for new residents and visitors from right-hand traffic locales such as the mainland United States, the French and Dutch West Indies, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. Roads are with numerous potholes.

There is a public bus service called Virgin Islands Transit, also known as VITRAN, operated by the Virgin Islands Department of Public Works.

In addition to taxis and buses, St. Croix has shared taxis, locally known as "taxi buses" (also found on the other U.S. Virgin Islands). Taxi buses are full-sized vans running a route from Frederiksted to Christiansted. Taxi buses are privately owned and operated; they do not follow a regular schedule, and there are no pre-specified stops. People simply wait by the side of the road until a taxi bus approaches, then flag the driver down by waving. Passengers can get out anywhere along the taxi route. Taxi buses are not metered and are required by law to charge a flat rate of $2.50, regardless of where a rider gets on and off. Taxis to specific locations are much more expensive and are typically used by tourists.

Ferry service to St. Thomas was restarted in April 2017. The QE IV Ferry makes one trip per day departing from Gallows Bay, Christiansted to Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas. The journey takes 2.5 hours and costs $60. The QE IV Ferry does not operate during hazardous weather conditions. Some Ferry companies based in St. Thomas and St. John sometimes operate St. Croix-to-St. Thomas service for special occasions, such as the St. Croix Agricultural Fair in February, Virgin Islands Carnival, Crucian Christmas Carnival, as well as horse races.

The Henry E. Rohlsen International Airport serves St. Croix with regular flights from the U.S. mainland, Puerto Rico, and the Eastern Caribbean. Seaplanes, operated by Seaborne Airlines, make the trip from St. Croix to St. Thomas, departing and arriving in Christiansted Harbor.

Although St. Croix is a U.S. territory, the U.S. Virgin Islands are maintained as a free port in a separate customs zone. Therefore, travelers to and from the contiguous United States and Puerto Rico must clear U.S. customs but do not need to present a passport, and only need proof of U.S. citizenship or nationality. The immigration status of non-U.S. citizens may be verified during this process.

Education edit

The St. Croix School District operates a number of public schools in St. Croix.[27] There also exist multiple private schools, including St. Croix Montessori, Star Apple Montessori School, The Good Hope Country Day School, AZ Academy, St. Mary's Catholic School, Free Will Baptist, St. Croix SDA School, and The Manor School. The only colleges on the island are the University of the Virgin Islands, St. Croix campus and Barry University, which operated a physician assistant training program.

Culture edit

Festivals edit

The island's largest festival, termed "Crucian Christmas Carnival," is celebrated on St. Croix throughout late December and early January. Another significant festival is the Agricultural and Food Fair held in mid-February.

Several times a year, there is a nighttime festival in Christiansted called "Jump-Up" and a monthly event called "Sunset Jazz" in Frederiksted, where local jazz musicians play on Frederiksted Beach. Every year on the Saturday before Mardi Gras, there is a local Mardi Croix parade and a dog parade through the North Shore.

The St. Croix Half Ironman Triathlon is held in the first week of May.[28] The Triathlon includes a 1.2-mile (1.9 km) swim, a 56-mile (90 km) bike ride, and a 13.1-mile (21.1 km) run. Because the bicycle route includes a ride up an extremely steep hill known as "The Beast", this triathlon is often nicknamed "Beauty and the Beast".

Points of interest edit

 
Fort Frederik in Frederiksted

Frederiksted maintains its Victorian era architecture and original seven street by seven street city design and is host to several historic structures. Among them are St. Patrick's Catholic Church built in the 1840s and its primary school, the Customs House, the 19th Century Apothecary, and many other buildings; some of which due to hurricanes past have fallen into very scenic ruins. Frederiksted operates at a more relaxed pace than most of the island, and is more lively during Carnival in January and whenever visiting cruise ships are in port.

Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve contains the only known site where members of a Columbus expedition set foot on what is now United States territory. It also preserves upland watersheds, mangrove forests, and estuarine and marine environments that support threatened and endangered species. The site is marked by Fort Salé, a remaining earthworks fortification from the French period of occupation, about 1617. The park also preserves prehistoric and colonial-era archeological sites including the only existent example of a ball court in the Caribbean. This is one of two sites on the island for bioluminescent bays (the other being Altona Lagoon).

 
Farmers Market St. Croix

Fort Christiansværn built in 1749 and other buildings are maintained by the National Park Service as the Christiansted National Historic Site.

Buck Island Reef National Monument preserves a 176 acres (71 ha) island just north of St. Croix and the surrounding reefs. This is a popular destination for snorkelers. Buck Island maintains a U.S. Coast Guard weather station and is also home to a student monitored lemon shark breeding ground. Green Cay (pronounced green key) is a small island located southwest of Buck Island; it is managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. It hosts a nearby reef popular among scuba divers and snorkelists—Tamarind Reef.

The farmer's market (1 Estate, Kingshill, 00850, St. Croix) offers local fruit and vegetables, as well as plants, local food, and delicious juices. The outdoor vendors open every Saturday from 6 a.m. to 12 p.m., sometimes longer. You can visit the farmer's market all-year round to taste the fresh fruit and vegetables and enjoy a typical Cruzan breakfast.

The St. Croix National Heritage Area was established in the National Heritage Area Act in 2022.[29] The National Heritage Area will help preserve and promote historic and cultural sites across the island.[30][31]

Scuba diving, snorkeling, and watersports edit

 
Scuba diving in St. Croix
 
Seahorse at the pier in Frederiksted

The waters surrounding St. Croix are warm year-round, with temperatures ranging from 25 °C (77 °F) – 30 °C (86 °F), making it a popular destination for watersports including scuba diving, snorkeling, kayaking, paddleboarding, surfing, kite surfing, parasailing, jet skiing, fishing, and sailing. Two of the island's most popular underwater sites for scuba divers are the Frederiksted Pier and the drop-off into deep water at Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve.

Frederiksted is known for reef diving and access to wreck diving. The western side of the island has calm waters that allow snorkeling with access from the beach. Paddleboarding is popular near Frederiksted for the same reason. The Frederiksted Pier attracts scuba divers and snorkelers, as well as those who simply jump off it.[32][33] The shallow water and sandy bottom around the pier are ideal for recreational diving by novice scuba divers in PADI Discover Scuba Diving programs (also called resort diving), for extended shore diving, night diving, and for underwater photography,[34] especially of its abundant seahorse population.[35][36]

A few hundred meters off the northern coast of the island, from Salt River to Cane Bay, the bottom drops suddenly into a deep trench, where coral reefs, abundant tropical fish, and migrant sea turtles may be observed. Kayaking is popular in the Salt River area as well.

The town of Christiansted, a short distance from Buck Island and Green Cay, is a former capital of the Danish West Indies. It lies just east of the northern underwater drop-off and is protected by a reef.

Bioluminescent bays edit

There are two bioluminescent bays or bio bays on St. Croix. The most widely known and visited is located at Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve. A second bio bay can be found at Altona Lagoon. Bio bays are extremely rare with "only seven-year-round lagoons known to exist in the Caribbean".[37]

A combination of factors creates the necessary conditions for bioluminescence: red mangrove trees surround the water (the organisms have been related to mangrove forest,[38] although mangrove is not necessarily associated with this species).[39] A study at the bio bay located at Salt River is being conducted as of 2013 by faculty and students from the University of South Carolina, the University of North Carolina-Wilmington and the University of the Virgin Islands. Their research is focused on analyzing quality and nutrient composition of the water, the distribution of a micro-organism, the dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense, which glows whenever the water is disturbed, and the abundance of "cysts", dormant dinoflagellates embedded in the sea floor.

A concurrent complementary study is being undertaken by the St. Croix Environmental Association in conjunction with Scripps Institution of Oceanography which focuses on counting the photon density of the phenomenon over time and through various conditions of weather and other impacts. Water quality and taxonomic analysis from both studies will be shared and correlated to create one of the most thorough investigations of year-round bioluminescent bays to date.

The two bio bays on St Croix have very different characteristics. The one at Altona Lagoon is large in size but is very shallow allowing one to see the various marine life swimming and agitating the water, lighting it up. The bio bay at Salt River is smaller in size but is deeper than Altona Lagoon. Because of its depth this bay is also home to a second form of bioluminescence called Ctenophora or comb-jellies, which are not found at Altona Lagoon.

A third bioluminescent organism is also found in Salt River. A species of marine Odontosyllis fireworm performs its brilliant green mating ritual within 57 hours after the full moon, females rising to the surface and leaving a luminescent green puddle for the males to race through, fertilizing the eggs.

Protected areas edit

Notable people edit

 
William Leidesdorff, 1845
 
Roy Innis, ca.1970
 
Dezarie, 2010

Sport edit

 
Sugar Ray Seales, 1973

Visitors edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This is the figure reported by the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands on the St. Croix page of usvi.net. Other reliable sources report different figures. The article at the on-line edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica reports the area as 84 square miles. The Virgin Islands (United States) page at the United Nations Environment Programme's Island Directory gives the area as 214.4 square kilometers, equivalent to 82.8 square miles. And although the U.S. Census Bureau does not report the areas of geographic entities, it does report their population densities (equal to the total population divided by the area). In the 2010 census, the population was reported as 50,601 (Table P1, "Total Population") and the population density was reported as 607.3 per square mile (Table P40, "Population Density"). Together, these figures imply an area of 83.3 square miles.
  2. ^ Spanish: Santa Cruz; Dutch: Sint-Kruis; French: Sainte-Croix; Danish and Norwegian: Sankt Croix; Taino: Ay Ay.

References edit

  1. ^ "2020 Island Areas Censuses: U.S. Virgin Islands". US Census Bureau. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
  2. ^ "2020 Island Areas Censuses: U.S. Virgin Islands". US Census Bureau. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
  3. ^ a b Lands, United States Congress House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs Subcommittee on National Parks and Public (1992). St. Croix, Virgin Islands, Historical Park and Ecological Preserve. Hearing Before the Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, House of Representatives, September 24, 1991, Washington DC. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-16-039761-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ a b Allsopp, Richard; Allsopp, Jeannette (2003). Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage. University of the West Indies Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-976-640-145-0.
  5. ^ U.S. Virgin Islands: a guide to national parklands in the United States Virgin Islands. Washington, D.C.: Division of Publications, National Park Service, U.S. Dept. of the Interior. 1999. pp. 81–99. ISBN 0912627689.
  6. ^ Morison, Samuel (1942). Admiral of the Ocean Sea. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. pp. 414–418. ISBN 0316584789.
  7. ^ Hubbard, Vincent (2002). A History of St. Kitts. Macmillan Caribbean. p. 14. ISBN 9780333747605.
  8. ^ a b c "St. Croix: island, United States Virgin Islands – Britannica". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  9. ^ a b Westergaard, Waldemar (1917). The Danish West Indies Under Company Rule (1671–1754). New York: The Macmillan Company. pp. 206–209, 222–225, 235, 243.
  10. ^ "Saint Croix, Virgin Islands: Facts & History". Vinow.com. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  11. ^ Loftsdóttir, Kristin, and Gísli Pálsson, "Black on White: Danish Colonialism, Iceland and the Caribbean", in Magdalena Naum and Jonas M. Nordin (eds), Scandinavian Colonialism and the Rise of Modernity: Small Time Agents in a Global Arena, Contributions To Global Historical Archaeology Volume, 37 (New York: Springer, 2013), pp. 37–52 (pp. 41–42). doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-6202-6_3.
  12. ^ Chernow, Ron (2004). Alexander Hamilton. New York: The Penguin Press. pp. 16–17, 22–40. ISBN 1594200092.
  13. ^ "The slave rebellion on St. Croix and Emancipation". The Danish West-Indies - Sources of history. from the original on December 16, 2018.
  14. ^ "Danish West Indies - The Abolition of Slavery". National Museum of Denmark. from the original on September 24, 2019.
  15. ^ Schmalz, Jeffrey; Times, Special To the New York (September 22, 1989). "Troops Find Looting and Devastation on St. Croix" – via NYTimes.com.
  16. ^ "Hurricane Hugo Haunts Virgin Islands". The Washington Post. October 31, 1989.
  17. ^ "Crucian Dictionary". cruciandictionary.com.
  18. ^ Williams, Eric (January 1, 1945). "Race Relations in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands". Foreign Affairs. Vol. 23, no. 2. ISSN 0015-7120.
  19. ^ a b (PDF) (Report). U.S. Census Bureau. October 28, 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 14, 2023.
  20. ^ "Virgin Islands Language". Vinow. VI Now. 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2016. St. Croix was owned by the French until 1733 when the Danes bought it. By 1741 there were five times as many English on the island as Danes. English Creole emerged on St. Croix more so than Dutch Creole, which was more popular on St. Thomas and St. John. A dialect of English Creole called Crucian is heard on St. Croix today.
  21. ^ "Virgin Islands Language". Virgin Islands.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 16, 2015.
  23. ^ AP (January 18, 2012). "Refinery closing in huge blow to USVI economy" (Press release). Associated Press. Retrieved May 12, 2012.
  24. ^ Lynne M. Sullivan (2006). Adventure Guide Virgin Islands (6th ed.). Hunter Publishing. p. 186. ISBN 978-1588435811.
  25. ^ . Thatsthespirit.com. Archived from the original on December 13, 2004. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  26. ^ "Virgin Islands governor John de Jongh announces initiative with Diageo for Captain Morgan rum distillery on Saint Croix". Diageo. June 24, 2008.
  27. ^ St. Croix School District May 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.Virgin Islands Department of Education. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on February 29, 2008.
  29. ^ "National Heritage Area Act". Congress.gov. December 22, 2022.
  30. ^ "U.S. Senate Subcommittee Hears St. Croix National Heritage Bill". St. Thomas Source. September 22, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  31. ^ Staff, IYANLA IRBY Daily News. "Plaskett: St. Croix closer to being designated a National Heritage Area". The Virgin Islands Daily News. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  32. ^ Bennett, Steve (September 2, 2011). "Uncommon Caribbean – On-Site St. Croix: Re-living the Joy of Jumping Off Frederiksted Pier". Uncommon Caribbean.
  33. ^ "Blog, Jump Off the Frederiksted Pier, St. Croix, USVI - GoToStCroix.com". www.gotostcroix.com.
  34. ^ Larsen, Larry; M. Timothy O'Keefe (June 1, 1991). Fish & Dive the Caribbean: A Candid Destination Guide to the Bahamas, Bermuda, Jamaica, British Virgin Islands, Cancun, Cozumel, Cayman Islands, U.S. Virgin Islands and Others. Larsen's Outdoor Publishing. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-936513-17-1.
  35. ^ Sport Diver. June 2005. p. 84. ISSN 1077-985X.
  36. ^ "U.S. Virgin Islands - Top 10 Dives". Scuba Diving.
  37. ^ . stcroixsource.com. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
  38. ^ Usup, G., and R. V. Azanza (1998), "Physiology and dynamics of the tropical dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense". In: Anderson D. M., A. D. Cembella and G. M. Hallegraeff (eds), The physiological ecology of harmful algal blooms. NATO ASI Series, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, pp. 81–94.
  39. ^ Phlips, E. J., S. Badylak, E. Bledsoe, & M. Cichra. 2006.
  40. ^ . United States Virgin Islands Superior Court. Archived from the original on June 5, 2016.
  41. ^ "At Home With Walt Frazier". The New York Times. Retrieved February 24, 2014.
  42. ^ "Quentin Coryatt". Football-Reference.Com. Retrieved November 15, 2015.
  43. ^ "Andre Wadsworth". Football-Reference.Com. Retrieved November 15, 2015.
  44. ^ "Raja Bell". Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  45. ^ . Basketball-Reference.Com. Archived from the original on October 8, 2012. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  46. ^ "Linval Joseph". Football-Reference.Com. Retrieved November 15, 2015.

External links edit

  • "St Croix" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XXI (9th ed.). 1886.
  • "St Croix" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 1019.
  • – United States Virgin Islands Department of Tourism
  • – Office of the Lieutenant Governor Gregory R. Francis
  • St. Croix USVI Google Map – Satellite Map of St. Croix, USVI

saint, croix, this, article, about, island, virgin, islands, other, uses, croix, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challen. This article is about the island of Saint Croix in the Virgin Islands For other uses see St Croix disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Saint Croix news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Saint Croix k r ɔɪ KROY b is an island in the Caribbean Sea and a county and constituent district of the United States Virgin Islands USVI an unincorporated territory of the United States Saint CroixNickname Twin CitySaint CroixShow map of Saint Croix U S Virgin IslandsSaint CroixShow map of the U S Virgin IslandsSaint CroixShow map of Lesser AntillesSaint CroixShow map of CaribbeanGeographyLocationCaribbean SeaCoordinates17 44 01 N 64 47 02 W 17 733509 N 64 783864 W 17 733509 64 783864ArchipelagoVirgin Islands Leeward IslandsArea84 a sq mi 220 km2 Length22 mi 35 km Width7 mi 11 km Highest elevation1 165 ft 355 1 m Highest pointMount EagleAdministration United States Virgin IslandsTerritoryVirgin IslandsDistrictDistrict of Saint CroixDemographicsDemonymCrucianCruzanPopulation41 004 2020 census 1 Pop density488 sq mi 188 4 km2 Ethnic groupsAfro Caribbean Hispanic and Latino White Indian Arab Asian Native AmericanHistorical marker commemorating Alexander HamiltonSt Croix is the largest of the islands in the territory while the capital Charlotte Amalie is located on St Thomas As of the 2020 United States Census St Croix s population was 41 004 2 The island s highest point is Mount Eagle at 355 meters 1 165 ft St Croix s nickname is Twin City for its two towns Frederiksted on the western end and Christiansted on the northeast part of the island Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Colonial period 2 2 As a United States territory 3 Geography 4 Climate 5 Demographics 6 Subdivisions 7 Language 8 Religion 9 Economy 10 Transportation 11 Education 12 Culture 12 1 Festivals 13 Points of interest 13 1 Scuba diving snorkeling and watersports 13 2 Bioluminescent bays 13 3 Protected areas 14 Notable people 14 1 Sport 14 2 Visitors 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksName editThe island s indigenous Taino name is Ay Ay the river 3 Its indigenous Carib name is Cibuquiera the stony land 3 Its modern name Saint Croix is derived from the French Sainte Croix itself a translation of the Spanish name Isla de la Santa Cruz meaning island of the Holy Cross given by Columbus in 1493 4 The French name was partially retained under Danish rule as Sankt Croix and the island was finally given its current spelling following the US takeover in 1917 The associated demonym for the island is Crucian derived from the original Spanish name 4 History edit nbsp A 1754 Danish map of the island nbsp Dannebrog being lowered at the Governor s Mansion for the last time 31 March 1917 Igneri pottery indicates that people s presence on the island from 1 to 700 followed by the Taino from 700 to 1425 before the encroachment by the Caribs in 1425 however the island was void of habitation by 1590 5 The island was inhabited by various indigenous groups during its prehistory Christopher Columbus landed on Santa Cruz Holy Cross as he called it on 14 November 1493 and immediately was attacked by the Kalinago who lived at Salt River on the north shore This is the first recorded fight between the Spanish and a New World native population and Columbus gave the battle site the name Cabo de la Flecha Cape of the Arrow 6 The Spanish never colonized the Islands but most or all of the native population was eventually dispersed or killed By the end of the 16th century the islands were said to be uninhabited 7 Colonial period edit Main articles Dutch Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands Captaincy General of Puerto Rico Hospitaller colonization of the Americas French West India Company and Danish West Indies Dutch and English settlers landed at Saint Croix in 1625 joined by some French refugees from Saint Kitts However the English expelled the Dutch and French settlers before they themselves were evicted by a Spanish invasion from Puerto Rico in August 1650 8 Around 1650 a French force attacked and established a colony of 300 From 1651 until 1664 the Knights of Malta at the time a vassal state of the Kingdom of Sicily ruled the island in the name of Louis XIV 8 The island then passed to the French West India Company The colony was evacuated to San Domingo in 1695 when France battled the English and Dutch in the War of the Grand Alliance The island then lay uninhabited and abandoned for another 38 years 9 In 1725 St Thomas Governor Frederik Moth encouraged the Danish West Indies Company s directors to consider purchasing Santa Cruz Saint Croix On 15 June 1733 France and Denmark Norway concluded a treaty by which the Danish West India Company bought Saint Croix for 750 000 Livres 8 Louis XV ratified the treaty on 28 June 1733 and received half the payment in French coins with the remaining half paid in 18 months On 16 November 1733 Moth was named the first Danish governor of Saint Croix The 1742 census lists 120 sugar plantations 122 cotton plantations and 1906 slaves compared to 360 whites on the island By 1754 the number of slaves had grown to 7 566 That year King Frederick took direct control of Saint Croix from the company 10 9 For nearly 200 years Saint Croix St Thomas and St John were known as the Danish West Indies By the mid to late 18th century the peak of the plantation economy the enslaved population of Saint Croix numbered between 18 000 and 20 000 During this time the white population ranged between 1 500 and 2 000 11 Future Founding Father Alexander Hamilton and his brother lived with their mother Rachel Faucette on Saint Croix after she returned to the island in 1765 Their residence was in the upper floor of a house at 34 Company Street while Rachel used the lower floor as a shop selling food items Within two years however Hamilton lost his father James Hamilton by abandonment and his mother to death Official documents from the island a 1768 probate court testimony from his uncle established Alexander s age at 13 By 1769 Hamilton s cousin aunt uncle and grandmother had also died Alexander s brother James became an apprentice carpenter and Alexander became the ward of Thomas Stevens a merchant on King Street Hamilton was soon clerking in the export import business of Beekman and Cruger at the intersection of King and King s Cross Streets In 1772 a local businessmen funded Hamilton s further education in New York 12 The slave trade was abolished in the Danish colonies in 1792 although the prohibition did not go into effect until the end of 1802 Existing enslaved people were freed in 1848 after the 1848 St Croix Slave Revolt led by General Buddhoe Gottlieb 13 14 The British occupation of the Danish West Indies took place at the end of March 1801 with the arrival of a British fleet at St Thomas Denmark Norway accepted the Articles of Capitulation and the British occupied the islands without a shot being fired Their occupation lasted only until April 1802 when Britain returned the islands to Denmark Norway A second British invasion of the Danish West Indies took place in December 1807 when a British fleet captured St Thomas on 22 December and Saint Croix on 25 December Denmark Norway did not resist and the invasion again was bloodless This occupation lasted until 20 November 1815 Both invasions were due to Denmark s alliance with France during the Napoleonic Wars On the conclusion of a peace with France the islands were returned to Denmark As a United States territory edit The island was shaken by the 1878 St Croix labor riot In 1916 Denmark sold Saint Croix St Thomas and St John to the United States formalizing the transfer in the Treaty of the Danish West Indies in exchange for a sum of US 25 million in gold In a national referendum on the issue 64 2 of Danish voters approved the sale An unofficial referendum held in the islands resulted in 99 83 vote in favor of the purchase Formal transfer of the islands to the U S took place on 1 April 1917 The island s inhabitants were granted United States citizenship in 1927 Industrialization of the island and its move away from an agrarian society took place in the 1960s The 1972 Fountain Valley massacre a mass shooting during a robbery at a golf club led to a devastating reduction in tourism that lasted many years The 2012 shutdown of the Hovensa refinery resulted in the loss of many jobs Agriculture has seen a slow resurgence due to an increase in demand for local produce and agricultural products In 1989 Hurricane Hugo struck the island with Category 4 winds The United States Army the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Marshals Service were ordered in to restore order 15 16 Category 5 Hurricane Maria s weaker outer eyewall crossed St Croix in September 2017 sustained winds reached over 150 mph and gusted up to 250 mph in some places on the western end of the island Maria damaged or destroyed 70 of the buildings on St Croix including schools and the island s only hospital citation needed Geography edit nbsp Saint Croix geologic map where Km is the Cretaceous Mt Eagle Group Kd is Cretaceous diorite Kg is Cretaceous gabbro Tbf is the Pliocene Blessing Formation Tmb and Tlr are the Miocene King shall Limestone Qab is Quaternary alluvium and Qr is Quaternary reef Saint Croix lies at 17 45 N 64 45 W 17 750 N 64 750 W 17 750 64 750 The easternmost point in the United States of America in the western hemisphere is Saint Croix s Point Udall The island has an area of 214 66 km2 82 88 sq mi The terrain is rugged though not extremely so The highest point on the island Mount Eagle is 1 165 feet 355 m high Most of the east end is quite hilly and steep as is the north side from Christiansted west From the north side hills a fairly even plain slopes down to the south coast this was cultivated as the prime sugar land on the island Climate editThe trade wind blows more or less along the length of the island The hills of the western part of the island receive a good deal more rain than the east end annual rainfall is on the whole extremely variable averaging perhaps 40 inches 1 000 mm a year The east end of the island is a dry desert range with a substantial amount of cactus while the west end has lush vegetation and palm trees The island has multiple ecosystems in a small geographic area Fairly severe and extended drought has always been a problem particularly considering the lack of fresh ground water and lack of freshwater streams or rivers on the island The island has a desalination plant but most residential homes and businesses have built in cisterns used to collect rainwater Demographics editInhabitants are called Crucians ˈ k r uː ʒ en 17 frequently written as Cruzans Due to Saint Croix s history of immigration there is much debate as to what constitutes a native Crucian The consensus in Crucian society is that if one is bahn ya born here in Crucian dialect on Saint Croix they can claim to be Crucian but not necessarily a native Crucian Those considered to be the native Crucians or by the more politically correct term ancestral native Crucian of Saint Croix are persons who can trace their ancestry to the era prior to U S Virgin Islands acquisition of American citizenship in 1927 Ancestral native Crucians approximately one fourth to one third of Saint Croix s population largely consist of the descendants of enslaved Africans brought to the island by Europeans during the 18th and 19th centuries as well as the descendants of paid laborers recruited by the Danes from the British and Dutch West Indies after the Danish emancipation law in 1848 As on other Caribbean islands many ancestral natives are also descended from European settlers and planters that migrated to the West Indies during the 17th 18th and 19th centuries Due to a low number of European females in the colonial West Indies many European males in colonial Saint Croix produced offspring with the majority African population whose mixed heritage descendants bear the surnames of their European ancestors In addition there are also a handful of ancestral families on the island traditionally known as bukra of full European ancestry Due to historical economic and political differences as well as the remnants of a 19th century caste system based on skin complexion socioeconomic class differences among ancestral native Crucians can vary widely even within the same family Most ancestral native Crucians today are employed by the Government of the Virgin Islands although there are others who are involved in the tourism industry as well as the legal and medical professions Puerto Rican migration was prevalent in the 1930s 40s and 50s when many Puerto Ricans relocated to Saint Croix for work after the collapse of the sugar industry However the total population actually declined by 50 in the century preceding 1945 18 The United States Navy purchase of two thirds of the nearby Puerto Rican island of Vieques during World War II resulted in the displacement of thousands of Viequenses many of whom relocated to Saint Croix because of its similar size and geography The local holiday Puerto Rico U S Virgin Islands Friendship Day has been celebrated since the 1960s on the second Monday of October which is also the same date as Columbus Day Puerto Ricans in Saint Croix most of whom have lived on the island for more than a generation have kept their culture alive while integrating it into the native Crucian culture and society For example in informal situations many Puerto Ricans in Saint Croix speak a unique Spanglish like combination of Puerto Rican Spanish and the local Crucian Creole English Migration from down island a local colloquial term for islands in the Lesser Antilles located to the east and southeast occurred mainly throughout the 1960s and 70s In that period agriculture declined as the major industry in Saint Croix and was replaced by tourism alumina production and oil refining Jobs were plentiful in these industries and down islanders came to Saint Croix by the thousands The demand for imported labor in Saint Croix was exacerbated by the fact that many ancestral native Crucians having acquired American citizenship several decades earlier migrated to the mainland United States to pursue educational and career opportunities Many down islanders made Saint Croix their permanent home while others eventually relocated to the mainland United States or returned to their native countries Most down islanders came from St Kitts and Nevis Antigua St Lucia and Dominica although people from every Anglophone Caribbean nation can be easily found on St Croix Down islanders and their Saint Croix born offspring form the majority of Saint Croix s middle class which has dwindled in size since the 2008 global recession Although down island migration to Saint Croix is most commonly thought of as a mid 20th century phenomenon brought upon by American immigration policy it is important to note that persons of both European and African descent from the nearby islands of Anguilla St Martin Sint Eustatius Saba St Kitts Nevis Antigua and Montserrat have been migrating to Saint Croix since the 1600s In addition many ancestral native Crucians also share family ties with Barbados as Bajans were heavily recruited to Saint Croix to work on sugar plantations throughout the late 19th century Continental Americans although small in number in comparison with Caribbean immigrants have also been part of the Saint Croix community Most reside on the East End of Saint Croix and tend to work in the tourism industry real estate and legal professions Many are temporary residents or retirees as well Arab Palestinians have been an influential part of the local economy since the 1960s when they first started to migrate to St Croix to set up shops supermarkets and gas stations In the 21st century recent waves of migration to Saint Croix have included people from the Dominican Republic Haiti Jamaica the Philippines and various South American nations Saint Croix s history of migration has sometimes caused tensions between immigrants and Crucians whose ancestry on the island dates back for generations Tensions have subsided to some extent in recent years mainly due to intermarriage among Crucians and other Caribbean peoples In the late 1990s many people supported legislation to define as a native U S Virgin Islander anyone who could trace their ancestry on the island to 1927 the year in which U S Virgin Islanders were granted United States citizenship This effort by a select group of nationalist senators eventually failed after much public outcry and controversy It was learned that most native born U S Virgin Islanders would not qualify as native under the proposed legislation as their immigrant ancestors had arrived later than 1927 but thousands of Danish citizens would have qualified In 2009 the proposed U S Virgin Islands Constitution voted by the Fifth Constitutional Convention established three definitions of U S Virgin Islanders Ancestral Native Virgin Islander those with ancestral ties and their descendants Native Virgin Islander those born on the island and their descendants and Virgin Islander any U S citizen who has resided in the territory for five years The proposed constitution was rejected by the United States Congress in 2010 for violating the principle of equal rights for all citizens of the territory native or not and was sent back to the convention for further consideration The total population of the island as per the 2020 U S Census is 41 004 19 Subdivisions editSaint Croix is divided into the following subdistricts with population as per the 2020 U S Census 19 Anna s Hope Village pop 3 282 Christiansted pop 1 866 East End pop 2 336 Frederiksted pop 2 303 Northcentral pop 4 197 Northwest pop 3 431 Sion Farm pop 10 332 Southcentral pop 7 415 Southwest pop 5 842 Language editEnglish has been the dominant language on St Croix since the 1700s and has been the official language since 1917 when the Danish West Indies were purchased by the United States Previously the official language was Danish although it was not widely spoken Other languages spoken throughout St Croix s colonial history have included Irish Scots Spanish and French as well as a now extinct Dutch Creole spoken by St Thomas and St John born people living in St Croix as well as the local Creole English which still exists today 20 Known on the island as Crucian Virgin Islands Creole English is spoken by the majority of the population in informal situations 21 Spanish is spoken by migrants from Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic and their St Croix born offspring and various French Creoles are spoken by St Lucian Dominican and Haitian immigrants Arabic is common among the Arab Palestinian community on St Croix Immigrants from the Anglophone Caribbean that migrated to St Croix after their formative years tend to speak the English creoles of their respective islands in informal situations which are for the most part mutually intelligible with Virgin Islands Creole English Religion edit nbsp St John s Anglican Church ChristianstedChristianity is the predominant religion of Saint Croix the island has been called the Land of Churches 22 for the approximately 150 churches that serve its 50 000 residents Protestant denominations are the most prevalent but there is also a significant Roman Catholic presence due to Saint Croix s large Hispanic population as well as Irish influence during the Danish colonial period Anglican Methodist Moravian Presbyterian Pentecostal and Seventh day Adventists are among the Protestant denominations prevalent on the island There are also followers of the Jehovah s Witness faith as well as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints As in most of the Caribbean various forms of Rastafari are practiced on the island Islam is prevalent among the local Arab Palestinian community and there is a Jewish presence as well that adheres to Judaism Hinduism and Islam are also practiced by the Indian population Economy edit nbsp HOVENSA oil refinerySaint Croix was once an agricultural powerhouse in the Caribbean but this period ended with the rapid industrialization of the island s economy in the 1960s Like many other Caribbean islands today Saint Croix has tourism as one of its main sources of revenue A number of other industries on the island contribute to the economy Saint Croix was home to HOVENSA one of the world s largest oil refineries HOVENSA is a limited liability company owned and operated by Hess Oil Virgin Islands Corp HOVIC a division of U S based Hess Corporation and Petroleos de Venezuela SA PDVSA the national oil company of Venezuela Gas prices on the island were slightly higher than average when compared to gas prices in the continental United States On January 18 2012 the company announced that the HOVENSA refinery would be permanently shut down This had a major adverse effect on the economy of Saint Croix and the entire U S Virgin Islands as the refinery employed 1 200 residents and 950 contractors 23 The refinery has since reopened under new ownership nbsp Cruzan Rum DistillerySaint Croix is also home to the Cruzan Rum Distillery 24 makers of Cruzan Rum a brand of Beam Suntory Inc The Cruzan Rum Distillery was founded in 1760 as Estate Diamond and for many years used locally grown sugar cane to produce a single dark style rum The distillery now imports sugar cane molasses from other countries in the region primarily from the Dominican Republic and South America In recent years Cruzan Rum along with Bacardi from Puerto Rico and Gosling s from Bermuda has contributed to the resurgence of single barrel super premium rum The quality and smoothness of the Cruzan Estate Rums has won more than 30 Spirit Awards 25 Cruzan Estate Diamond Rum aged five years in American oak barrels and Cruzan Single Barrel Estate Rum aged 12 years in American oak barrels are two examples Diageo has completed construction of a new distillery on a 26 acre industrial site next to the Hovensa Refinery The new distillery produces Captain Morgan Rum 26 Diageo s entrance into the U S Virgin Islands rum industry has been controversial The cash strapped U S Virgin Islands government secured 250 million in bonds for the plant about which the Puerto Rican government has bitterly complained Transportation editSee also List of United States Virgin Islands highways Highways on St Croix Cars drive on the left hand side of the road but nearly all the automobiles on the island have left side steering columns This has proven difficult for new residents and visitors from right hand traffic locales such as the mainland United States the French and Dutch West Indies the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico Roads are with numerous potholes There is a public bus service called Virgin Islands Transit also known as VITRAN operated by the Virgin Islands Department of Public Works In addition to taxis and buses St Croix has shared taxis locally known as taxi buses also found on the other U S Virgin Islands Taxi buses are full sized vans running a route from Frederiksted to Christiansted Taxi buses are privately owned and operated they do not follow a regular schedule and there are no pre specified stops People simply wait by the side of the road until a taxi bus approaches then flag the driver down by waving Passengers can get out anywhere along the taxi route Taxi buses are not metered and are required by law to charge a flat rate of 2 50 regardless of where a rider gets on and off Taxis to specific locations are much more expensive and are typically used by tourists Ferry service to St Thomas was restarted in April 2017 The QE IV Ferry makes one trip per day departing from Gallows Bay Christiansted to Charlotte Amalie St Thomas The journey takes 2 5 hours and costs 60 The QE IV Ferry does not operate during hazardous weather conditions Some Ferry companies based in St Thomas and St John sometimes operate St Croix to St Thomas service for special occasions such as the St Croix Agricultural Fair in February Virgin Islands Carnival Crucian Christmas Carnival as well as horse races The Henry E Rohlsen International Airport serves St Croix with regular flights from the U S mainland Puerto Rico and the Eastern Caribbean Seaplanes operated by Seaborne Airlines make the trip from St Croix to St Thomas departing and arriving in Christiansted Harbor Although St Croix is a U S territory the U S Virgin Islands are maintained as a free port in a separate customs zone Therefore travelers to and from the contiguous United States and Puerto Rico must clear U S customs but do not need to present a passport and only need proof of U S citizenship or nationality The immigration status of non U S citizens may be verified during this process Education editThe St Croix School District operates a number of public schools in St Croix 27 There also exist multiple private schools including St Croix Montessori Star Apple Montessori School The Good Hope Country Day School AZ Academy St Mary s Catholic School Free Will Baptist St Croix SDA School and The Manor School The only colleges on the island are the University of the Virgin Islands St Croix campus and Barry University which operated a physician assistant training program Culture editMain article Culture of the Virgin Islands Festivals edit The island s largest festival termed Crucian Christmas Carnival is celebrated on St Croix throughout late December and early January Another significant festival is the Agricultural and Food Fair held in mid February Several times a year there is a nighttime festival in Christiansted called Jump Up and a monthly event called Sunset Jazz in Frederiksted where local jazz musicians play on Frederiksted Beach Every year on the Saturday before Mardi Gras there is a local Mardi Croix parade and a dog parade through the North Shore The St Croix Half Ironman Triathlon is held in the first week of May 28 The Triathlon includes a 1 2 mile 1 9 km swim a 56 mile 90 km bike ride and a 13 1 mile 21 1 km run Because the bicycle route includes a ride up an extremely steep hill known as The Beast this triathlon is often nicknamed Beauty and the Beast nbsp A costumed carnival dancer nbsp Parade of costumed carnival dancers nbsp A costumed carnival dancer nbsp A costumed carnival dancer nbsp A Moko jumbiePoints of interest edit nbsp Fort Frederik in FrederikstedFrederiksted maintains its Victorian era architecture and original seven street by seven street city design and is host to several historic structures Among them are St Patrick s Catholic Church built in the 1840s and its primary school the Customs House the 19th Century Apothecary and many other buildings some of which due to hurricanes past have fallen into very scenic ruins Frederiksted operates at a more relaxed pace than most of the island and is more lively during Carnival in January and whenever visiting cruise ships are in port Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve contains the only known site where members of a Columbus expedition set foot on what is now United States territory It also preserves upland watersheds mangrove forests and estuarine and marine environments that support threatened and endangered species The site is marked by Fort Sale a remaining earthworks fortification from the French period of occupation about 1617 The park also preserves prehistoric and colonial era archeological sites including the only existent example of a ball court in the Caribbean This is one of two sites on the island for bioluminescent bays the other being Altona Lagoon nbsp Farmers Market St CroixFort Christiansvaern built in 1749 and other buildings are maintained by the National Park Service as the Christiansted National Historic Site Buck Island Reef National Monument preserves a 176 acres 71 ha island just north of St Croix and the surrounding reefs This is a popular destination for snorkelers Buck Island maintains a U S Coast Guard weather station and is also home to a student monitored lemon shark breeding ground Green Cay pronounced green key is a small island located southwest of Buck Island it is managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service It hosts a nearby reef popular among scuba divers and snorkelists Tamarind Reef The farmer s market 1 Estate Kingshill 00850 St Croix offers local fruit and vegetables as well as plants local food and delicious juices The outdoor vendors open every Saturday from 6 a m to 12 p m sometimes longer You can visit the farmer s market all year round to taste the fresh fruit and vegetables and enjoy a typical Cruzan breakfast The St Croix National Heritage Area was established in the National Heritage Area Act in 2022 29 The National Heritage Area will help preserve and promote historic and cultural sites across the island 30 31 Scuba diving snorkeling and watersports edit nbsp Scuba diving in St Croix nbsp Seahorse at the pier in FrederikstedThe waters surrounding St Croix are warm year round with temperatures ranging from 25 C 77 F 30 C 86 F making it a popular destination for watersports including scuba diving snorkeling kayaking paddleboarding surfing kite surfing parasailing jet skiing fishing and sailing Two of the island s most popular underwater sites for scuba divers are the Frederiksted Pier and the drop off into deep water at Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve Frederiksted is known for reef diving and access to wreck diving The western side of the island has calm waters that allow snorkeling with access from the beach Paddleboarding is popular near Frederiksted for the same reason The Frederiksted Pier attracts scuba divers and snorkelers as well as those who simply jump off it 32 33 The shallow water and sandy bottom around the pier are ideal for recreational diving by novice scuba divers in PADI Discover Scuba Diving programs also called resort diving for extended shore diving night diving and for underwater photography 34 especially of its abundant seahorse population 35 36 A few hundred meters off the northern coast of the island from Salt River to Cane Bay the bottom drops suddenly into a deep trench where coral reefs abundant tropical fish and migrant sea turtles may be observed Kayaking is popular in the Salt River area as well The town of Christiansted a short distance from Buck Island and Green Cay is a former capital of the Danish West Indies It lies just east of the northern underwater drop off and is protected by a reef Bioluminescent bays edit There are two bioluminescent bays or bio bays on St Croix The most widely known and visited is located at Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve A second bio bay can be found at Altona Lagoon Bio bays are extremely rare with only seven year round lagoons known to exist in the Caribbean 37 A combination of factors creates the necessary conditions for bioluminescence red mangrove trees surround the water the organisms have been related to mangrove forest 38 although mangrove is not necessarily associated with this species 39 A study at the bio bay located at Salt River is being conducted as of 2013 update by faculty and students from the University of South Carolina the University of North Carolina Wilmington and the University of the Virgin Islands Their research is focused on analyzing quality and nutrient composition of the water the distribution of a micro organism the dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense which glows whenever the water is disturbed and the abundance of cysts dormant dinoflagellates embedded in the sea floor A concurrent complementary study is being undertaken by the St Croix Environmental Association in conjunction with Scripps Institution of Oceanography which focuses on counting the photon density of the phenomenon over time and through various conditions of weather and other impacts Water quality and taxonomic analysis from both studies will be shared and correlated to create one of the most thorough investigations of year round bioluminescent bays to date The two bio bays on St Croix have very different characteristics The one at Altona Lagoon is large in size but is very shallow allowing one to see the various marine life swimming and agitating the water lighting it up The bio bay at Salt River is smaller in size but is deeper than Altona Lagoon Because of its depth this bay is also home to a second form of bioluminescence called Ctenophora or comb jellies which are not found at Altona Lagoon A third bioluminescent organism is also found in Salt River A species of marine Odontosyllis fireworm performs its brilliant green mating ritual within 57 hours after the full moon females rising to the surface and leaving a luminescent green puddle for the males to race through fertilizing the eggs Protected areas edit Buck Island Reef National Monument managed by the National Park Service a federal agency Christiansted National Historic Site managed by the National Park Service a federal agency Green Cay National Wildlife Refuge managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service a federal agency Salt River Bay National Historical Park and Ecological Preserve co managed by the Territory of the Virgin Islands and the National Park Service a federal agency Sandy Point National Wildlife Refuge managed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service a federal agency Point Udall St Croix East End Marine Park managed by the Government of the Virgin Islands through the Department of Planning and Natural Resources Division of Coastal Zone Management nbsp Christiansted looking north nbsp Downtown Christiansted and harbor nbsp Old Danish Customs House Christiansted nbsp East End nbsp East End nbsp Teague Bay Beach nbsp Canegarden Bay Beach nbsp St George Village Botanical Gardens nbsp Scuba diver and sponges Cane Bay wall nbsp Scuba diver and sponges Cane Bay wallNotable people edit nbsp William Leidesdorff 1845 nbsp Roy Innis ca 1970 nbsp Dezarie 2010Abraham Markoe 1727 1806 businessman landowner and planter later an American revolutionary figure Edmund Bourke 1761 1821 Danish diplomat Margaret Hartman Markoe Bache 1770 1836 an American printer and editor Hans Jonatan 1784 1827 possibly the first person of color to live in Iceland William Leidesdorff 1810 1848 entrepreneur one of the founders of San Francisco Judah P Benjamin 1811 1884 American and Confederate politician Casper Holstein 1876 1944 New York mobster during the Harlem Renaissance Prince Monolulu 1881 1965 real name Peter Carl Mackay a horse racing tipster Rea Irvin 1881 1972 American illustrator art director on The New Yorker magazine died in Saint Croix Henry S Whitehead 1882 1932 American author of horror fiction and fantasy Archdeacon in St Croix from 1921 to 1929 Hubert Harrison 1883 1927 Harlem activist and intellectual known as The Father of Harlem Radicalism D Hamilton Jackson 1884 1946 a labour rights advocate and he lobbied leaders in Denmark Frank Crosswaith 1892 1965 socialist politician and trade union organizer in New York City Elizabeth Hawes 1903 1971 clothing designer author and social critic who wrote about her life in St Croix titled But Say It Politely Bennie Benjamin 1907 1989 musician songwriter Annie de Chabert 1908 1976 political figure entrepreneur Jimmy Hamilton 1917 1994 American jazz musician died in Saint Croix Audre Lorde 1934 1992 American poet and feminist died in Saint Croix Roy Innis 1934 2017 civil rights advocate chairman Congress of Racial Equality CORE Warren Mosler born 1949 American hedge fund manager entrepreneur and economist moved to St Croix in 2010 Erika J Waters born ca 1950 academic and critic moved to St Croix in early 1970 s Jack Gantos born 1951 author mentioned in Hole in My Life Francis J D Eramo born 1959 Judge at the United States Virgin Islands Superior Court of St Croix 40 Hannibal Ware born ca 1970 Inspector General of the U S Small Business Administration Mike Yard born ca 1970 contributor on The Nightly Show Jasmin St Claire born 1972 an American former pornographic actress and wrestler De Apostle born ca 1978 reggae singer songwriter Dezarie born ca 1980 reggae singer Midnite active 1989 2015 roots reggae bandSport edit nbsp Sugar Ray Seales 1973Peter Jackson 1861 1901 19th century Australian boxing champion Elmo Plaskett 1938 1998 baseball player Horace Clarke 1939 2020 professional baseball player New York Yankees and San Diego Padres Walt Frazier born 1945 former professional NBA basketball player 41 Sugar Ray Seales born 1952 boxer gold medallist at the 1972 Summer Olympics Livingstone Bramble born 1960 boxer born in Montserrat raised on St Croix Quentin Coryatt born 1970 professional NFL American football player Indianapolis Colts 42 Midre Cummings born 1971 Major League Baseball player Joe Aska born 1972 former professional American football running back Andre Wadsworth born 1974 professional NFL American football player Arizona Cardinals 43 Raja Bell born 1976 professional basketball player Utah Jazz 44 Tim Duncan born 1976 former professional NBA basketball player 45 Hanik Milligan born 1979 former professional American football player Muhammad Halim born 1986 Olympic triple jumper Linval Joseph born 1988 professional NFL American football player Minnesota Vikings 46 Cory Bishop born ca 1990 U S Virgin Islands soccer playerVisitors edit Alexander Hamilton ca 1756 1804 American statesman first United States Secretary of the Treasury born on Nevis Georg Carstensen 1812 1857 Danish engineer founder of Tivoli Gardens Regine Olsen 1822 1904 former fiancee of Soren Kierkeegard her husband Johan Frederik Schlegel was the island s governor from 1855 to 1860 Victor Borge 1909 2000 Danish pianist and comedian Maureen O Hara 1920 2015 actress Richard Cooper Newick 1926 2013 boat builder and designer Jim Simpson 1927 2016 Hall of Fame sportscaster retired to St Croix Allen Stanford born 1950 financier convicted of fraudSee also edit1878 St Croix Labor Riots Culture of the Virgin Islands Music of the Virgin Islands St George Village Botanical Garden Virgin Islands patch reefs WSVI ABC TV station WTJX TV Virgin Island Public TelevisionNotes edit This is the figure reported by the government of the U S Virgin Islands on the St Croix page of usvi net Other reliable sources report different figures The article at the on line edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica reports the area as 84 square miles The Virgin Islands United States page at the United Nations Environment Programme s Island Directory gives the area as 214 4 square kilometers equivalent to 82 8 square miles And although the U S Census Bureau does not report the areas of geographic entities it does report their population densities equal to the total population divided by the area In the 2010 census the population was reported as 50 601 Table P1 Total Population and the population density was reported as 607 3 per square mile Table P40 Population Density Together these figures imply an area of 83 3 square miles Spanish Santa Cruz Dutch Sint Kruis French Sainte Croix Danish and Norwegian Sankt Croix Taino Ay Ay References edit 2020 Island Areas Censuses U S Virgin Islands US Census Bureau Retrieved December 1 2022 2020 Island Areas Censuses U S Virgin Islands US Census Bureau Retrieved December 1 2022 a b Lands United States Congress House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs Subcommittee on National Parks and Public 1992 St Croix Virgin Islands Historical Park and Ecological Preserve Hearing Before the Subcommittee on National Parks and Public Lands of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs House of Representatives September 24 1991 Washington DC p 103 ISBN 978 0 16 039761 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Allsopp Richard Allsopp Jeannette 2003 Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage University of the West Indies Press p 180 ISBN 978 976 640 145 0 U S Virgin Islands a guide to national parklands in the United States Virgin Islands Washington D C Division of Publications National Park Service U S Dept of the Interior 1999 pp 81 99 ISBN 0912627689 Morison Samuel 1942 Admiral of the Ocean Sea Boston Little Brown and Company pp 414 418 ISBN 0316584789 Hubbard Vincent 2002 A History of St Kitts Macmillan Caribbean p 14 ISBN 9780333747605 a b c St Croix island United States Virgin Islands Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved April 20 2021 a b Westergaard Waldemar 1917 The Danish West Indies Under Company Rule 1671 1754 New York The Macmillan Company pp 206 209 222 225 235 243 Saint Croix Virgin Islands Facts amp History Vinow com Retrieved July 27 2017 Loftsdottir Kristin and Gisli Palsson Black on White Danish Colonialism Iceland and the Caribbean in Magdalena Naum and Jonas M Nordin eds Scandinavian Colonialism and the Rise of Modernity Small Time Agents in a Global Arena Contributions To Global Historical Archaeology Volume 37 New York Springer 2013 pp 37 52 pp 41 42 doi 10 1007 978 1 4614 6202 6 3 Chernow Ron 2004 Alexander Hamilton New York The Penguin Press pp 16 17 22 40 ISBN 1594200092 The slave rebellion on St Croix and Emancipation The Danish West Indies Sources of history Archived from the original on December 16 2018 Danish West Indies The Abolition of Slavery National Museum of Denmark Archived from the original on September 24 2019 Schmalz Jeffrey Times Special To the New York September 22 1989 Troops Find Looting and Devastation on St Croix via NYTimes com Hurricane Hugo Haunts Virgin Islands The Washington Post October 31 1989 Crucian Dictionary cruciandictionary com Williams Eric January 1 1945 Race Relations in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands Foreign Affairs Vol 23 no 2 ISSN 0015 7120 a b Table 1 Population of the United States Virgin Islands 2010 and 2020 PDF Report U S Census Bureau October 28 2021 Archived from the original PDF on March 14 2023 Virgin Islands Language Vinow VI Now 2016 Retrieved July 6 2016 St Croix was owned by the French until 1733 when the Danes bought it By 1741 there were five times as many English on the island as Danes English Creole emerged on St Croix more so than Dutch Creole which was more popular on St Thomas and St John A dialect of English Creole called Crucian is heard on St Croix today Virgin Islands Language Virgin Islands Religion on St Croix Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved May 16 2015 AP January 18 2012 Refinery closing in huge blow to USVI economy Press release Associated Press Retrieved May 12 2012 Lynne M Sullivan 2006 Adventure Guide Virgin Islands 6th ed Hunter Publishing p 186 ISBN 978 1588435811 that s the SPIRIT Mixology gt Cruzan Rum Thatsthespirit com Archived from the original on December 13 2004 Retrieved December 13 2012 Virgin Islands governor John de Jongh announces initiative with Diageo for Captain Morgan rum distillery on Saint Croix Diageo June 24 2008 St Croix School District Archived May 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine Virgin Islands Department of Education Retrieved March 19 2008 The Caribbean Classic Triathlon Archived from the original on February 29 2008 National Heritage Area Act Congress gov December 22 2022 U S Senate Subcommittee Hears St Croix National Heritage Bill St Thomas Source September 22 2022 Retrieved December 26 2022 Staff IYANLA IRBY Daily News Plaskett St Croix closer to being designated a National Heritage Area The Virgin Islands Daily News Retrieved December 26 2022 Bennett Steve September 2 2011 Uncommon Caribbean On Site St Croix Re living the Joy of Jumping Off Frederiksted Pier Uncommon Caribbean Blog Jump Off the Frederiksted Pier St Croix USVI GoToStCroix com www gotostcroix com Larsen Larry M Timothy O Keefe June 1 1991 Fish amp Dive the Caribbean A Candid Destination Guide to the Bahamas Bermuda Jamaica British Virgin Islands Cancun Cozumel Cayman Islands U S Virgin Islands and Others Larsen s Outdoor Publishing p 160 ISBN 978 0 936513 17 1 Sport Diver June 2005 p 84 ISSN 1077 985X U S Virgin Islands Top 10 Dives Scuba Diving SEA Launching Second Study on Bioluminescence stcroixsource com Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved June 13 2013 Usup G and R V Azanza 1998 Physiology and dynamics of the tropical dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense In Anderson D M A D Cembella and G M Hallegraeff eds The physiological ecology of harmful algal blooms NATO ASI Series Berlin Springer Verlag pp 81 94 Phlips E J S Badylak E Bledsoe amp M Cichra 2006 Honor Roll of Judges United States Virgin Islands Superior Court Archived from the original on June 5 2016 At Home With Walt Frazier The New York Times Retrieved February 24 2014 Quentin Coryatt Football Reference Com Retrieved November 15 2015 Andre Wadsworth Football Reference Com Retrieved November 15 2015 Raja Bell Basketball Reference Com Retrieved November 15 2012 Tim Duncan Basketball Reference Com Archived from the original on October 8 2012 Retrieved November 15 2012 Linval Joseph Football Reference Com Retrieved November 15 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Saint Croix nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Croix St Croix Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XXI 9th ed 1886 St Croix Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed 1911 p 1019 St Croix United States Virgin Islands Department of Tourism Office of the Lieutenant Governor Office of the Lieutenant Governor Gregory R Francis St Croix USVI Google Map Satellite Map of St Croix USVI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saint Croix amp oldid 1186368116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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