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Exploring St. Thomas

Excerpted from the book, Tour Jamaica, by Margaret Morris


Harbour View, east of Palisadoes is a large dormitory suburb with schools, churches, a drive-in cinema and an energetic Community Environment Resource Centre led by Public Health officer Selvin Masters. They have been trying for a long time to take over the non-functioning government sewage plant and turn it into a model facility capable of recycling water.

The Donald Quarrie school here is named after one of Jamaica's Olympic champions. As you proceed east, the dry Hope River gully and scarred foothills on your left dramatically illustrate the peril of deforestation. Presently you may glimpse L the Yallahs pipeline which supplies water to the Mona Reservoir.

From the high road above COW BAY, you can get a fine view of the city and harbour. In defiance of a No-dumping sign the slope below the road is littered with years of garbage. L of the road there is a monument and plaque commemorating Jack Mansong, better known as Three Fingered Jack, a bandit who patrolled the nearby hills and valleys and fought, often singlehandedly, a war of terror against the English soldiers and planters who held the slave colony. A chivalrous outlaw who never harmed a woman or child, he was finally ambushed and killed by a Maroon bounty hunter who pickled his head and three fingered hand in rum and took them to Spanish Town to claim his reward. In his lifetime he was the subject of many songs, stories and even a London play.

In dry weather, the YALLAHS RIVER is little more than a haphazard trickle in a wide, boulder strewn gully. In rainy seasons it becomes a raging torrent and when this makes the main road fording impassable motorists must detour L up towards a bridge below the village of Easington. Three miles above here, at Mount Sinai, a plaque tells the story of JUDGEMENT CLIFF where a huge landslip occurred in 1692 during an earthquake. The mountain fell into the river burying an entire plantation and the owner who, legend insists, was extraordinarily evil. The face of Judgement Cliff, 1,000 feet high is visible across the river, but covered now in vegetation.

You can return to the coast road at POOR MANS CORNER by crossing the river below Easington where two stone towers beside the iron bridge are all that is left of the suspension bridge erected in 1826.

The fertile Yallahs river valley stretches 22 miles up into the Blue Mountains. Above LLANDEWEY the Yallahs Pipeline taps the Yallahs and Negro rivers to supply water to Kingston. Deforestation, causing unpredictable river flows and flooding have made the multi-million project less productive than anticipated and small farmers in the valley complain that the scheme impacts their water supply.