Discover: Montego Bay | Ocho Rios | Negril | Port Antonio | Mandeville

Aerial View Of Kingston


Very much the Island's capital, the city of Kingston dominates Jamaica politically, commercially and culturally. Its estimated 700,000 inhabitants represent almost a third of the entire population. Relentless expansion has long since outstripped the government capacity to supply employment, housing or adequate public utilities and still it grows: a noisy, sprawling, polluted and vigorous metropolis. From steamy plain to balmy hills, from gospel tent to cathedral, hovel to high-rise it is, like all cities, a place of stark contrasts: goats browse along the concrete pavements, pushcarts jostle crissers (late model cars) along the traffic choked streets and sidewalk vendors sprout beside ostentatious shopping plazas.

Repeatedly devastated by fire, flood, earthquake and hurricane, not to mention real estate developers and urban planners, Kingston is a city with very little visible history but its long and colourful past has been well documented. It began in 1692 as a refuge for the survivors of the earthquake that devastated Port Royal, killing 2,000 persons and plunging two thirds of the city beneath the sea. The initial refugee camp was on the seafront at a place shown on the map as colonel Barry's hog craw. Barry's. Within 7 weeks of the earthquake the government had purchased 200 acres from an absentee proprietor, Sir William Beeston, and was casting lots for the sale of building sites. Among the first regulations of the settlement was a ruling that each man could purchase only one lot on the seafront and no more land than he had owned in Port Royal. In addition there was an order prohibiting exorbitant ferry charges between the sunken city and the mainland.

Sir William Beeston returned to the island soon afterwards as governor and fortuitously discovered that the sale of this land to the government had not been legal, so the lots had to be purchased individually from him. He also acquired by dubious means the shoal water fronting Harbour Street thus greatly increasing the value of his holding there. When the governor's wheeling and dealing came to light there was a public outcry, and Kingston was born amidst a government scandal, the first many through the years.