Georgetown, Ascension Island
Georgetown | |
St Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha | |
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Georgetown (2011) | |
Location | |
Island: | Ascension Island |
Location: | 7°55’43"S, 14°24’42"W |
Data | |
Population: | 450 (2008 est.) |
Local Government |
Georgetown is the chief settlement and administrative capital of Ascension Island, the northern inhabited island of St Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha. Georgetown stands on the west coast of the island.
The town is centred on St Mary's Church, part of the Anglican Diocese of St Helena and the former Exiles Club, built as a Royal Marines barracks at the time of Napoleon's exile to St Helena in the early 19th century. The town is named after King George III, who reigned at the time the island was claimed for Britain and garrisoned by the Admiralty in 1815.
As well as the church, there is a pier, an athletics track, a small supermarket, Royal Mail post office, snackbar, hotel, police station, hospital, dental surgery and a library. There is no school however and pupils travel to Two Boats village, 3 miles inland.
A naval base was established at Georgetown in 1816 due to British concerns that the French might make use of the island to attempt a rescue of their exiled former Emperor. Following Napoleon's death in 1821, the settlement found a new role as a supply, maintenance and victualling base for the West Africa Squadron, which suppressed the Atlantic slave trade along the West African coast.
Local tufa was used for building, but everything else had to be imported (including seeds, vegetables and fruit trees, all of which were cultivated on Green Mountain to supplement the locally-available diet of turtle meat). By 1829 a small jetty had been constructed as well as several buildings on what is now the Regent Square area, close to the sea (including a hospital - the West Africa Squadron was notoriously prone to tropical sicknesses).[1]
In June 1829 a Lieutenant of the Royal Engineers, Henry Brandreth, arrived on Ascension with a remit to survey the facilities there and make recommendations for their improvement. He condemned what he found as, for the most part, 'miserable tenements ... inhabited by vermin'.[2] Together with the local commandant, he recommended re-establishing the settlement a little way back from the sea on the elevated plateau which Georgetown occupies today. Having returned to England to oversee the supply and manufacture of certain items for the island, he returned in 1830 to begin work on this project. A key innovation was the construction of St George's Water Tank, which can still be seen today: water was channelled to it from the mountain top, as well as from every roof in Georgetown, and from here it was fed by a windpump into a header tank for distribution to local buildings (and, via a pipeline, to the pierhead for transfer to ships). The Marine Barracks building also dates from this period, as do several other buildings including Georgetown's hospital, which continues to fulfil the purpose for which it was built.[2]
The site of the old settlement, closer to the sea, was then used for storage and maintenance (the surviving Main Storehouse of 1848 was once claimed to be the largest building in the southern hemisphere).[2] Before long, to meet the demands of an increasingly steam-powered navy, coaling facilities were built, and in 1862 a 'steam factory' housing metalworkers, a machine shop and smelting works, was established.[1] Georgetown continued to serve as a strategic base for the Navy through the 20th century, though after 1899 the site was increasingly administered by the Eastern Telegraph Company. When in 1922 the Board of the Admiralty ceded Ascension Island to the Colonial Office, an exchange of correspondence indicates that one thing its officials wished to preserve was their annual gift of turtle soup from Georgetown (an annual perquisite apparently enjoyed since 1816).[1]
Forts
On 22 October 1815 HMS Peruvian and HMS Zenobia anchored in the roadstead off Georgetown in order to claim the island for the British Crown. Once ashore, one of the first tasks undertaken by the sailors was to set up a pair of cannons on the promontory in the harbour in order to provide some defence. This battery became known as Fort Cockburn (renamed in the middle of the century Fort Thornton).[2]
A second fort was established on a site called Goat Hill further to the west in around 1860 (Fort Hayes) and a third, Fort Bedford, on the hill overlooking the town called Cross Hill. Fort Bedford, which dates from 1903, still has some Victorian cannons, as well as a pair of BL 5.5 inch Mark I naval guns that were originally fitted to HMS Hood. These guns were used to repel a German attack by U-124 on 9 December 1941 during World War II with surprisingly great success as the Germans did not approach the island again. Fort Hayes until recently housed the museum of the Ascension Island Heritage Society.[3]
Present-day Georgetown
The town is a centre of culture on Ascension. It usually hosts local athletics events as well as being the start of the annual dew pond race from sea level to the highest point on the island on Green Mountain. Ascension Day activities (to celebrate the discovery of Ascension) are either hosted here or in nearby Two Boats village. As of 2008 the population was about 450.
Nearby Long Beach is an important nesting ground for the giant green turtle.
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Georgetown in the distance, from atop Green Mountain.
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St Mary's Church
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The Old Barracks, Georgetown.
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The island's post office in Georgetown.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Georgetown, Ascension Island) |
- Diocese of St Helena: Parish of St Mary the Virgin
- BBC Weather Georgetown climate figures
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Coad, Jonathan (2013). Support for the Fleet: architecture and engineering of the Royal Navy's bases, 1700-1914. Swindon, UK: English Heritage.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "www.ascension-island.gov.ac". http://www.ascension-island.gov.ac/heritage-amble/.
- ↑ Ascension Island Information, Obsidian Group Ltd, http://www.obsidian.co.ac/ascension.html, retrieved 2013-03-28