Parishes of Jamaica

The parishes of Jamaica are the main units of local government in Jamaica. They were created following the English Invasion of Jamaica in 1655. This administrative structure for the Colony of Jamaica developed slowly. However, since 1 May 1867, Jamaica has been divided into the current fourteen parishes. These were retained after independence in 1962. They are grouped into three historic counties, which no longer have any administrative relevance. Every parish has a coast; none are landlocked.

Parish
CategoryUnitary state
Location Jamaica
Found inCounties of Jamaica
Created
Number14 parishes (since 1866)
Populations69,533 (Hanover) – 573,369 (Saint Andrew)
Areas25 km2 (9.7 sq mi) (Kingston) – 1,213 km2 (468 sq mi) (Saint Ann)
Government
  • Parish government
Subdivisions
  • Cities, Towns, Villages

List

Parish Capital Area
km2
Population
Census 2011[1]
Cornwall County
1Hanover Lucea 450.4 69,533
2Saint Elizabeth Black River 1,212.4 150,205
3Saint James Montego Bay 594.9 183,811
4Trelawny Falmouth 874.6 75,164
5Westmoreland Savanna-la-Mar 807.0 144,103
Middlesex County
6Clarendon May Pen 1,169.3 245,103
7Manchester Mandeville 830.1 189,797
8Saint Ann Saint Ann's Bay 1,212.6 172,362
9Saint Catherine Spanish Town 1,192.4 516,218
10Saint Mary Port Maria 610.5 113,615
Surrey County
11Kingston Parish[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] Kingston 21.8 89,057
12Portland Port Antonio 814.0 81,744
13Saint Andrew[lower-alpha 1] Half Way Tree 430.7 573,369
14Saint Thomas Morant Bay 742.8 93,902
Total 10,991.0 2,697,983
  1. The parishes of Kingston and Saint Andrew together form the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation.
  2. The parish of Kingston does not encompass all of the city of Kingston. Most of the city is in the parish of St. Andrew.
Map of the parishes of Jamaica.

History

Early history

Following the English conquest of Jamaica the first phase of colonisation was carried out by the Army, with a system of Regimental plantations. These were drawn up on the southern flat lands, with the Regimental commanders charged with ordering their men to plant provisions.[2]:135

Certain key figures such as and Luke Stokes (1656)[3] and Thomas Modyford (1664)[4] brought substantial numbers of colonists from other English colonies. In 1662 the first census was carried out. There were no parishes and the division of the island into ten districts.[5][6]

District Men Women Children Blacks Arms Acres
in cultivation
1In the precinct of Port Moranto 168 60 37 126 120 446
2In the precinct of Morant 122 14 17 53 75 129
3In the precinct of Yealoth (Yallahs) 207 36 25 54 72 355
4In the precinct of Legene 553 149 125 54 300 549
5The town of Angelo Delvega (St Jago de la Vega) 207 52 42 53 100 100
6Between Black River, Bower Savanna and thereabouts 178 22 12 27 120 200
7In the Angles Quarters 100 20 14 46 56 170
8In the Seven Plantations, Macaria, Quathabeca (Guatibacoa) 275 50 20 50 150 250
9In the quarters Quanaboa (Guanaboa Vale) and Quardalena 390 42 26 39 330 700
10Upon Point Caugway (Cageway, i.e. Port Royal[2]:153) 400 200 90 50 300 ...
Total 2,600 645 408 552 1,523 2,917

Creation of the parishes

1671 map by Richard Bloome, completed on the instructions of Modyford

Under Governor Modyford the island was divided into precincts and parishes and he commissioned a map of the island featuring these. The first parishes were:[7]

  • Saint Catherine
  • Clarendon
  • Liguanea (St Andrew)
  • Saint Thomas
  • Port Royal
  • Saint John
  • Saint David

By 1675, the following parishes had been added:[7]

  • Vere (separated from Clarendon in 1673)
  • Saint George
  • Saint Thomas in the Vale
  • Saint Dorothy
  • Saint Ann
  • Saint Elizabeth
  • Saint James
  • Saint Mary

In 1677, An Act for Regulating the Parishes fixed the boundaries of each parish.[7]

The Grant reforms

The parishes of Jamaica in 1893

The crisis highlighted by the Morant Bay rebellion led to the dissolution of the House of Assembly of Jamaica, and the colonial administration being turned into a crown colony. John Peter Grant was appointed Governor arriving in August 1866, and he set about instituting a number of reforms, including the administrative framework of the parishes. He introduced the by which the 22 existing parishes to 14 through the A Law to Reduce the Number of Parishes (1867/No. 20). Parishes have been a feature of local administration in Jamaica since the island was captured by the English in 1655.[8] The number has varied over time and some no longer exist having either been absorbed into or divided between neighbouring parishes.[8] At the peak, 1841–1865, there were 22 (the current 14 plus those listed below).[8]

The current set of parishes was established in 1866 with the elimination of the 8 listed below (roughly by county):[8]

Surrey:

Middlesex:

  • Metcalfe (now part of Saint Mary)
  • Saint Dorothy (now part of Saint Catherine)
  • Saint John (now part of Saint Catherine)
  • Saint Thomas in the Vale (now part of Saint Catherine)  note that the current Saint Thomas used to be named "Saint Thomas in the East" to differentiate between the two parishes at the time.
  • Vere (now part of Clarendon)

Counties of Jamaica

Map of the counties: 1) Cornwall County, 2) Middlesex County, 3) Surrey County.

Jamaica is divided into three historic counties, though they have no administrative function today. They were established in 1758 to facilitate the holding of courts along the lines of the British county court system.[9]

The three counties are named for the English historic counties of Cornwall, Middlesex, and Surrey. Cornwall County was named for being the westernmost county, just like its namesake. Middlesex County was named for its location on the middle third of Jamaica. Surrey County was named for the English county in which Kingston upon Thames is found, because Kingston was its county town.[9]

CountyPopulation
(Census 2011)
Area in km2County town
Cornwall County600,5813,939.3Savanna-la-Mar
Middlesex County1,183,3615,041.9Spanish Town
Surrey County823,6892,009.3Kingston
Jamaica2,607,63110,990.5Kingston

See also

References

  1. "Population Usually Resident in Jamaica, by Parish: 2011". Statistical Institute of Jamaica. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  2. Otremba, Eric (2012). "Enlightened Institutions: Science, Plantations, and Slavery in the English Atlantic, 1626-1700". University Digital Conservancy. University of Minnesota.
  3. Mosley, Dr Raul A. (30 March 2015). "Stokes Hall Great House". A Tour of Jamaica's Great Houses, Plantations, & Pens. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  4. Jamaica Gleaner "Jamaica and the Atlantic Slave Trade (Part II)" Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 26 March 2006
  5. Cundall, Frank (1897). Jamaica cartography; chronological list of the maps of Jamaica in the Library . Kingston: Institute of Jamaica.
  6. Bridges, George Wilson (1828). The annals of Jamaica. London: J. Murray.
  7. National Archives of Jamaica. lancaster.ac.uk Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  8. Prestwidge, Bill. "Jamaican Parish Reference". Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 24 October 2009.
  9. Higman, B. W.; Hudson, B. J. (2009). Jamaican Place Names. Mona, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-976-640-306-5.
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