St. Lucia
Saint Lucia is an island nation in the eastern Caribbean Sea on the
boundary with the Atlantic Ocean. Part of the Lesser
Antilles, it is located north of the islands of Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines, northwest of Barbados and south of Martinique.
It is also known as the "Helen of the West Indies"
because it switched between British and French control so often it was likened
to the mythical Helen of Troy.
Saint Lucia is one of the Windward Islands, named for Saint Lucy of Syracuse. It was first
visited by Europeans in about the year 1500 and first colonized successfully by
France who signed a treaty with the native Carib
peoples in 1660. Great Britain
took control of the island from 1663 to 1667 then went to war with France
over it fourteen times, and finally took complete control in 1814.
Representative government came about in 1924 (with universal adult suffrage
from 1953) and from 1958 to 1962 the island was a member of the Federation of
the West Indies. Finally, on February 22, 1979,
Saint Lucia became an
independent state of the Commonwealth of Nations.