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Exploring Westmoreland

Excerpted from the book, Tour Jamaica, by Margaret Morris


From Negril

The journey from Negril to Savanna-la-Mar takes less than half an hour - easy driving through a lush alluvial basin cultivated in cane. Nowhere else is it more obvious that the island's history, its present and its destiny are inextricably linked with sugar - an industry that employs at least 50,000 persons.

The exit road past the Shell Gas Station and Police Station is normally crowded with an assortment of traffic and littered higgedlly piggedly with mechanic yards, tyre shops, cafes, bars, shacks and other enterprises including R Country Western Riding stables and L Paradise Yard restaurant, creators of Rasta Pasta and other indigenous specialties like Paradise johnnycakes.

The neat village of Sheffield is becoming a suburb of Negril. Here you will find L Negril Hills Golf Club with a gaudy clubhouse overlooking the Great Morass, Royal Palm forest and the abortive Nature Park built by government and now leased to the operators of Negril Cabins. The Nature Park has boardwalks and birdwatching towers in the swamp. Check Negril Cabins to arrange access.

Negril Spots, is a cattle and coconut estate belonging to the Jackson family, owners of Tree House and Golden Nugget in Negril. At the junction, a detour R leads to the villages of Revival, Homers Cove and Little Bay where there is accommodation, Run by the Sun for the adventurous. Canefields border the road and the view L is towards a tiny church in a sea of cane. Salabie's Lumber Yard specializes in a local housing solutions: readymade board houses, small enough to be transported by truck or even mule cart.

Little London, a dormitory village for workers in Negril and Frome is heavily populated with East Indians. Their forbears were brought to Jamaica as indentured labourers shortly after the abolition of slavery when many of the ex-slaves migrated away from the sugar estates creating a shortage of labour. Living and working conditions for the Indians were very bad and many died. A number of Commissions of Enquiry did little to improve things and in 1914 the Indian government finally prohibited further migration of labourers to the West Indies. An early champion of the East Indians was an Anglican minister Rev. Henry Clarke whose protest about the conditions of the working classes and outspoken criticisms of the establishment made him extremely unpopular with the hierarchy. (A relative of his, Robert Clarke, was the father of Bustamante who used to warn "My name is Clarke but don't call me so"). The Indian labourers were the first to introduce seeds of ganja (marijuana) into Jamaica. The descendants of the East Indian labourers (called "Coolies") are still concentrated in the sugar belts. Much of their Hindu heritage has been maintained and aspects of it have been assimilated into local "grass-roots" culture. More recently a small group of higher caste "Bombay merchants" arrived in Jamaica and control the lucrative in-bond trade.