Sherbro Island

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[edit] Geographical Information

Sherbro Island, also known as Bonthe Island, is an island in the Atlantic Ocean off the southwestern coast of Sierra Leone.

The island is separated from the African mainland by the Sherbro River in the north and the Sherbro Strait in the east.

It is 32 miles long and up to 15 miles wide, covering an area of approximately 230 square miles.

The western extremity is Cape St. Ann.

Bonthe, on the eastern end, is the chief port and commercial centre.

The island has over 65 miles of tropical beaches and has been earmarked by the Ministry for Tourism and Development of Sierra Leone for tourism development [1].

[edit] Economic Activities

Swamp-rice cultivation, tourism and fishing are the main economic activities.

[edit] History

Sherbro Island is the site of an early 19th-century British post against the slave trade.

The island was acquired from the Sherbro people by the colony at Freetown in 1861.

In 1815 Paul Cuffe settled a group of 88 freed slaves on Sherbro Island.

The island was also surveyed by Samuel J. Mills and Ebenezer Burgess at the behest of the American Colonization Society. This survey led to the passing of an act by the U.S. Congress on March 3, 1819, authorizing the return of freed blacks slaves to their "motherland".

The ACS group of freed slaves arrived at Sherbro Island in 1821 before being driven by circumstance to Providence Island at Cape Mesurado in present day Liberia in April 1822.

[edit] Environment

Sherbro Island is believed to be a breeding ground for green turtles as well as leatherback sea turtles[2].

[edit] Population

In 1974 population stood at 18,991.

[edit] See also

Sierra Leone

Coordinates: 7°33′N 12°42′W

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