News

Examining the Caribbean Region’s Historical Connections to Latin America

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - July 21, 2011

Above: Jamaican High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Anthony Johnson (standing), delivers a lecture on: ‘Historic Relations between Jamaica and the English-speaking Caribbean and Latin America’, at Canning House, in London, on July 19. Director General of Canning House, Dr Charles Goodson-Wickes is at left. (JIS Photo)

Jamaica and the Caribbean at large have shared historic, cultural and trade links with Latin America stretching back for centuries, according to Anthony Johnson, Jamica’s High Comissioner to the United Kingdom.

Over the past three centuries, relations between the English-speaking Caribbean and Latin America have been integral, both in the areas of employment and industrial growth.

“Significant numbers of Jamaican-descended persons now live in communities dominated by Caribbean persons in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia and Ecuador,” he said at a lecture at London’s Canning House, the home of the Hispanic and Luso Brazilian Council, an organization founded in 1943 on Anglo-Latin American relations.

Latin America’s recent industrial developments could offer more opportunities for economic collaboration between the two regions, he said.

While there has been relatively limited contact between the two areas, the impact of the islands has been a quiet but significant force in history.

During the construction of the Panama Canal railroad between 1800 and 1850, for example, some 5,000 Jamaicans worked on the project, forming a Jamaican community that still remains active in the city of Bocas del Toro. For a similar project in Costa Rica, some 86,000 Jamaicans migrated to that island to build a railroad from San Jose to Limon.

“Only 63,000 [Jamaicans] are recorded as returning,” he said. “The balance of those who survived established another [community].”

According to Johnson, that community in Limon became a bastion of Protestant Christianity, which spread across Latin America. Marcus Garvey, too, visited this area, and called attention to the plight of workers there.

There is perhaps no greater example of the interaction than Jamaican national hero Alexander Bustamanate, whose original name was Alexander Clarke, and worked in Cuba, Colombia and Panama in the early 20th century.

–Jamaica Information Service

Popular Posts cape santa maria

From Anguilla to Aruba, the Best Caribbean Beaches to Visit This Summer

Forget the Hamptons, forget Santorini. And Florida? There’s a reason snowbirds go home in the summer. If you’re looking for a summertime beach getaway, the Caribbean is it. The water is deliciously warm, the trade winds keep you cool and […]


The Winners of the 2024 Caribbean Green Awards 

caribbean green

With almost 20,000 votes, the winners of the Caribbean Green Awards 2024 Presented by E-Finity have been crowned.  From state-of-the-art marine conservation projects to hotels that are redefining sustainability, the Green movement has never been stronger in the Caribbean.  “This […]


Curacao’s Newest All-Inclusive Resort Reinvents the Beach Bungalow

beach bungalow on the sand with reflection of water

Hyatt’s Dreams brand first debuted on the Dutch Caribbean island of Curacao back in 2019, a transformation of what had been the Hilton Curacao. In many ways, Dreams’ debut helped change the game for the island, helping to kick off […]


Related Posts boats in turquoise water in abaco bahamas

The Ultimate Island-Hopping Vacation in The Bahamas

Island-hopping across places like Green Turtle Cay and Great Guana in The Abacos. Taking your dinghy to pristine sandbars and islands with swimming pigs in the Exumas. Journeying through history in Hope Town. The undersea coves of Manjack Cay. A […]


Construction “Accelerating” at Four Seasons’ First Caribbean Private Island

four seasons private island

The first-ever Four Seasons private island in the Americas is now under construction, with momentum continuing to build, Caribbean Journal Invest has learned.  Perhaps most notably, the residential resort will include a collection of 18 different overwater bungalows, developers told […]


From Anguilla to Aruba, the Best Caribbean Beaches to Visit This Summer

cape santa maria

Forget the Hamptons, forget Santorini. And Florida? There’s a reason snowbirds go home in the summer. If you’re looking for a summertime beach getaway, the Caribbean is it. The water is deliciously warm, the trade winds keep you cool and […]


SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for Caribbean Journal's free newsletter for a daily dose of beaches, hotels, rum and the best Caribbean travel information on the net.


No. Thank You