- San Juan de Nicaragua
San Juan de Nicaragua, formerly known as San Juan del Norte and known in English as Greytown, is a town and
municipality in the Río San Juan department ofNicaragua .Geography
Greytown lies on Nicaragua's Caribbean coast just to the south of the
Mosquito Coast near the border withCosta Rica . It is located at the mouth of the San Juan River which flows east fromLake Nicaragua and is along the route of various proposals for aNicaragua Canal to thePacific Ocean .The town's geography is influenced by the San Juan River delta with volcanic sediment deposits from Costa Rican volcanoes interacting with ocean currents and winds. This action fills the town's harbor with shifting sandbars and spits.
History
San Juan del Norte was founded by the Spanish and was a small fort and
customs station. Spanish explorers first reached the bay at the mouth of the San Juan River on24 June (feast day of SaintJohn the Baptist ) 1539 and named it San Juan del Norte (St. John of the North). Agarrison was first established in 1541 as San Juan de la Cruz by Nicaraguan governor Rodrigo Contreras.In 1707 and again in 1762, the area was captured by an alliance of
Miskito s,Zambo s (Afro-Indians), and English. After 1762, settlement of the area began and a 1778 commercial treaty permited residency of Spaniards. The eastern coast of Nicaragua had long fallen under British influence with the Mosquito Coast being a protectorate from 1740 but the Spanish asserted control over San Juan del Norte. In 1796, the town is declared afree port by the Spanish but the Spanish were ousted in 1821 with the independence of Central America.In 1841, the town was occupied by the Miskitos with British assistance and, in 1848, the town was occupied directly by the British. It was rechristened Greytown after the then
Jamaica n GovernorCharles Edward Grey and nominally ceded to theMiskito Kingdom , a Britishprotectorate to the north..A year later, the town began rapid growth as the eastern terminus of a transport operation owned by American
Cornelius Vanderbilt 'sAccessory Transit Company that carried thousands of travelers each month from the Atlantic to the Pacific side ofCentral America on their way to San Francisco during theCalifornia Gold Rush . Sail and steam-ships traveled from New York and New Orleans in theUnited States to Greytown. From there, small boats transported passengers up the San Juan River and across Lake Nicaragua. Then, mules, horses, orstagecoach es carried them over the smallisthmus between the lake andSan Juan del Sur , Rivas on the Pacific where they would embark on ships traveling the coast betweenPanama and Nicaragua andCalifornia .However, the town's prosperity was cut short when, on
13 July 1854, theUnited States Navy sloop USS "Cyane" bombarded and totally burned the town supposedly in retaliation for local actions against American citizens. The action was a culmination of a confrontation between Americans and the townspeople over tariffs and control of transit routes. The destruction was reported around the world, including an illustration in the "Illustrated London News ". [http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/warmup/greytown/greytown_f.html] Soon after, the San Juan River changed course and the town was again destroyed.Greytown was rebuilt after its destruction and, in 1855, the American filibuster William Walker installed himself as
President of Nicaragua and took control of the Accessory Transit Company's assets and revoked its charter. He himself was ousted in 1857 by elements backed by Vanderbilt. Walker and his followers attempted to retake Nicaragua in November 1857, when they entered Greytown harbor and camped at nearby Puntas Arenas. However, U.S. Marines soon surrounded the forces and captured Walker.Vanderbilt then ceased operation of the transit service in exchange for a stipend from the rival
Pacific Mail Steamship Company and theUnited States Mail Steamship Company , which operated similar routes across Panama. As a result, Greytown reverted to backwater status and remained a small settlement into the 20th century.The town was legally placed under the sovereignty of Nicaragua and removed from Miskito control in 1860 but remained "de facto" under British protection through much of the remainder of the century. In 1894, Nicaraguan President
José Santos Zelaya fully incorporated the region into the state at which time Greytown had 1482 inhabitants.In 1984, Greytown was bombarded and destroyed again in a Sandinista-Contra conflict in which the United States, while supporting the Contras, attacked the town on
9 April 1984.cite web |title = International Court of Justice, CASE CONCERNING THE MILITARY AND PARAMILITARY ACTIVITIES IN AND AGAINST NICARAGUA (NICARAGUA v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA) |url = http://www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/icases/inus/inus_isummaries/inus_isummary_19860627.htm ]A new town was built a few kilometers to the northwest and is called both New Greytown and Nuevo San Juan del Norte.
In 2002, the municipality of San Juan del Norte was officially renamed San Juan de Nicaragua and its capital renamed Graytown ["sic"] by the
National Assembly of Nicaragua . [" [http://www.elnuevodiario.com.ni/2006/03/03/nacionales/13989 Alcalde de San Juan del Norte: 'Nos dieron el Gacetazo'] ." "El Nuevo Diario".3 March 2006. es icon]Population
As with the
Mosquito Coast to the north, Greytown has a large population of speakers of English-basedMosquito Coast Creole who are ofAfrica n descent.Notes
References
*Peter H. Dana and Shannon Crum. [http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/warmup/greytown/greytown_f.html 3D Modeling of Greytown, Nicaragua] . The Geographer's Craft Project, Department of Geography, The University of Colorado at Boulder. 1995.
* [http://www.rioindiolodge.com/lodge_eng/sanjuanhistory.htm History of the San Juan River] at Rio Indio Lodge websiteExternal links
* [http://www.colorado.edu/geography/gcraft/warmup/greytown/images.html Plan map and Panoramic Views of Greytown] from the 19th century including the burning of Greytown in 1854
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