American Voyages is dedicated to the exploration of North America, which I have thus far defined as being anything a part of our continental plate and landmass, as well as attachments such as the parts of California not on our plate. Under this definition, I also include Cuba and the Bahamas, which have at least enough common features in fauna, flora, and history to be considered North American. Where do I draw the line elsewhere, however? Do I exclude Guatemala and Belize simply because they have more in common with the rest of Central America than they do with Mexico? Do I refuse to talk about any of the Caribbean, especially when it does have a significant link to our continent? In general, I started up this blog to show people what they have in their backyard (and as a secondary goal, to dispel myths about Mexico), and the thought of getting just a bit more tropical than what Oaxaca or southern Florida has to offer starts to look more like promoting knowledge about what people have in mind for their next vacation.
Ah, but there are people who live and have lived on the many islands beyond the reach of Floridian or Yucatan beaches. The history of the three major North American nations is very much connected to what was going on in the Caribbean. Many of the colonials there set up domestic, semi-representative governments just like the colonials in the North American mainland did. Alexander Hamilton, along with a great many other British colonists living in the "West Indies", either lived in the Thirteen Colonies/United States or had involvement in trade between the various colonies and Britain. Much of this trade involved the movement of rum, sugar, spices, and the "commodity" needed to make it all possible, slaves. In this regard some of those distant islands were not too distant in culture and climate from some of the American South. Barbados, for one, is very keen on reminding people that much of their population was once in the supplicant position in this culture.
Many American ports would also bear a bit of a visible connection with distant islands. New Orleans and Charleston have in many ways seemed more connected with the life of the tropical mariner and chic associations with motherlands back in Europe. Florida, of course, had for the longest time been the meeting place of the Spanish Caribbean with mainland North America, and still largely is, particularly in Miami. In return, Cuba has always seemed like another world from the rest of the Caribbean, even after American cultural connections were shut down once Castro took power. From another angle, Cuba and Mexico have often expressed love and affinity with one another, as if sitting at another table focused on one another and no one else in some grand Latin American ballroom. The Caymans Bahamas, and Turks and Caicos these days find themselves being sent similar love letters from fellow Commonwealth member Canada; the banks and financial concerns on the islands certainly reflect this budding, if unconsummated relationship. The story gets more fascinating further south. So why not shake off the last of the winter blues and visit some of those lands across the Straits of Florida? Our first destination will be St. Thomas of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
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