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mount+healthy+windmill Latitude and Longitude:

18°26′43″N 64°38′26″W / 18.44516°N 64.64064°W / 18.44516; -64.64064
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mount Healthy windmill

Mount Healthy windmill is a ruined windmill on the north side of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. It was formerly used during the plantation era of the Territory to crush sugar cane. After the collapse of the sugar economy in the early nineteenth century the windmill fell into disuse and became a ruin. It crushed cane for the sugar mill and rum distillery in nearby Brewer's Bay. There are other ruins like the Boiling House, remnants of the Animal Mill Round, distillery, hospital, storage, shed, and housing. The 18th century windmill belonged to the area's wealthiest planter. Slaves harvested and processed sugar cane into sugar at this extensive sugarcane plantation.

One of the owners of the mill was Balziel Hodge, son of the notorious Arthur William Hodge.

Today it is a national park.

Gallery

Sources

  • Isaac Dookhan, History of the British Virgin Islands, ISBN  0-85935-027-4
  • Vernon Pickering, A Concise History of the British Virgin Islands, ISBN  0-934139-05-9

See also

18°26′43″N 64°38′26″W / 18.44516°N 64.64064°W / 18.44516; -64.64064



mount+healthy+windmill Latitude and Longitude:

18°26′43″N 64°38′26″W / 18.44516°N 64.64064°W / 18.44516; -64.64064
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mount Healthy windmill

Mount Healthy windmill is a ruined windmill on the north side of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. It was formerly used during the plantation era of the Territory to crush sugar cane. After the collapse of the sugar economy in the early nineteenth century the windmill fell into disuse and became a ruin. It crushed cane for the sugar mill and rum distillery in nearby Brewer's Bay. There are other ruins like the Boiling House, remnants of the Animal Mill Round, distillery, hospital, storage, shed, and housing. The 18th century windmill belonged to the area's wealthiest planter. Slaves harvested and processed sugar cane into sugar at this extensive sugarcane plantation.

One of the owners of the mill was Balziel Hodge, son of the notorious Arthur William Hodge.

Today it is a national park.

Gallery

Sources

  • Isaac Dookhan, History of the British Virgin Islands, ISBN  0-85935-027-4
  • Vernon Pickering, A Concise History of the British Virgin Islands, ISBN  0-934139-05-9

See also

18°26′43″N 64°38′26″W / 18.44516°N 64.64064°W / 18.44516; -64.64064



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