Cinnamon Bay Plantation
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Cinnamon Bay Plantation.
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Nearest city: | Cruz Bay, Virgin Islands |
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Area: | 13 acres (5.3 ha) |
Governing body: | National Park Service |
MPS: | Virgin Islands National Park MRA (AD) |
NRHP Reference#: | 78000269[1] |
Added to NRHP: | July 11, 1978 |
Cinnamon Bay Plantation is an approximately 300-acre (1.2 km2) property situated on the north central coast of Saint John in the United States Virgin Islands adjacent to Cinnamon Bay.[2] The land, part of Virgin Islands National Park, was added to the United States National Register of Historic Places on July 11, 1978.[1] Archaeological excavations of the land document ceremonial activity of the Taínos, as well as historic remains of plantation ruins.[3]
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Archaeological evidence shows that the first inhabitants of the Virgin Islands were Ortoiroid people. The Arawaks migrated to the area over a period of many centuries and engaged in the first agriculture on the land.[2][4] Archaeological excavations confirm a Classic Taino culture at Cinnamon Bay.[5]
Starting in the 1680s, prior to any formal colonization, the land along the shoreline of the north central coast of Saint John was occupied for decades by settlers with diverse nationalities. The property was used for maritime activities and cotton production.[6] The Danish claimed Saint John on March 25, 1718 and the area along the north central coast from Caneel Bay to Cinnamon Bay was occupied by nine private land owner. The Danish established large plantations worked by slaves brought from African.[2]
Daniel Jansen and his wife Adriana Delicat were the first land owners to acquire a formal Danish deed for property at Cinnamon Bay. Approximate to Jenson's purchase in 1718, a coastal parcel of land was purchased by William Gandy in 1722, and was later bought by Peter Durloo in 1728. Durloo was the husband of Daniel Jansen's daughter, Elizabeth. Durloo's newly acquired coastal land abutted Jensen's property to the north. In 1719, Pieter de Buyck purchased property along the north central coast of the island, east of the Gandy-Durloo land. After de Buyck's death in 1728, the land became the property of Abraham Beaudewyn. The 1936 tax records show that Jasper Jansen, Daniel and Adriana Jansen's eldest son, owned the de Buyck-Beaudewyn land. Despite the short tenure of de Buyck, this locale still carries his name, Peter Bay. These three parcels of land; the Jansen, Gandy-Durloo, and de Buyck-Beaudewyn properties, became the consolidated estate later known as Cinnamon Bay Plantation.[7]
List of new owners of the consolidated property:
During the 1733 slave insurrection on St. John, slaves loyal to the Jensen family held off the rebel slaves long enough for the Jansen's to escape, but could not prevent "the property's dwelling house, storage building, and boiling house from being looted and burned, nor could they prevent the Jansen cane fields from being set ablaze",[7]
In 1913, Cinnamon Bay was bought by a Danish company and the land was used for breeding and raising of cattle.
In 1955, Cinnamon Bay was sold to Jackson Hole Preserve, Incorporated and in 1956 donated to Virgin Islands National Park.
The 1805 tax rolls show that Cinnamon Bay plantation had 105 acres (0.42 km2) planted in sugarcane, 48 acres (190,000 m2) in provision crops, and 147 acres (0.59 km2) unused or in bush.[8]
The land was donated to the United States National Park Service in 1956 by Laurence Rockefeller.
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