
St. Kitts Destination Guide
Although most people come to St. Kitts for it's natural splendour, you shouldn't miss the opportunity to experience some of the other things of interest. With such a storied history, its no surprise that St. Kitts offers a chance to relive some of it's past by wandering through its buildings and memorials. Below is a list of some of the places of interest to visitors of St. Kitts.
Feel the history of St. Kitts come alive!
Below we've given information about Basseterre, the capital of St. Kitts. Look at the St. Kitts Country Guide to find general information about the country, while this St. Kitts Destination Guide and our St. Kitts Tours page give more details about what to see and do while in St. Kitts. Use the St. Kitts Hotels page to book your perfect night's sleep.
- Georgian House
- Old Treasury Building
- Springfield Cemetery and Chapel
- Immaculate Conception Cathedral & Formation House
- St. Georges Anglican Church
- Independence Square
- Berkeley Memorial
- La Guerite Reservoir
- Romney Manor
- The Circus
- St. Thomas Church
- CSR/DDL (Local Rum)
- Catholic Church
- Brimstone Hill Fortress
- Carib Brewery
- Charles Fort
- Government House
- Industrial Architecture
- Independence Square
- Carib Petroglyphs
- Bloody Point
- Waterworks
- Basseterre
- Mount Liamuiga
- Half Way Tree Cistern
- Wingfield River and Waterworks
- Plantations/Estates
- St. Kitts Sugar Manufacturing Corporation
- Tomb of Sir Thomas Warner
- Volcano Hike
- Black Rock
- Beaches
Georgian House
Old Treasury Building
Springfield Cemetery and Chapel
Immaculate Conception Cathedral & Formation House
St. Georges Anglican Church
Independence Square
Berkeley Memorial
La Guerite Reservoir
Romney Manor
The Circus
Built in the English Style of London's famous Picadilly circus, it is the town center and also where all the hustle and bustle goes on. This monument is called the Berkeley memorial in honor of Sir Thomas Berkeley, former president of the General Legislative Council.
St. Thomas Church
In the Cemetery surrounding this ancient church, you may see the tomb of Thomas Warner, who died in 1648.
CSR/DDL (Local Rum)
Catholic Church
Brimstone Hill Fortress
The war story
Under Marquis de Bouille's command, eight thousand French troops mounted an attack on less than 1,000 British troops guarding the fortress. The British were forced to surrender after a month, but not before their brave resistance impressed their French opponents. As a mark of respect for this determination, the French allowed the defeated British army to leave with their flag flying and in uniform. The island was returned to the British under the Treaty of Versailles just after a year, when the French were offered the same privilege.
Carib Brewery
Admission: Free
Opening Hours: 10 am to 2 pm, Monday to Friday.
Charles Fort
Charles Fort remained a military station from 1670 until 1854 when it was abandoned. In 1890, it was used as a Hansen home. The home closed as recently as 1996.
For more information please visit the site: St. Christopher Heritage Society or contact them at 869 465 5584.
Government House
The newly established Archdeaconry of St. Kitts felt that the Rector of St. George should live in a style that befitted his position. The first Archdeacon, Francis Robert Braithwaite, set about this task by purchasing Springfield around the year 1848.
In 1855, Springfield House was assigned to general public use by the Assembly, Council and Governor. In 1856, the Rector Archdeacon Jermyn used it as his residence. From then it was used by all Rectors until 1874.
Industrial Architecture
St. Kitts Sugar Factory and Compound - The St. Kitts Sugar Factory is a national treasure and a major heritage site for the St. Kitts island. Sugar production dropped dramatically in the 19th century, after the boom in the late 18th century. The sugar industry was revived in 1912 when the central sugar factory opened on the island, replacing individual boiling houses and mills on different estates, thus enabling the entire crop to be used for making sugar.
The St. Kitts Sugar Factory Ltd. was initiated on 15th December 1910. An order was confirmed on 24th March 1911 to the Mirrlees Watson Company. The factory finally started on 20th February 1912, and sugar production began on 9th March. The Government took over the sugar factory in 1974, 3 years after nationalization of all sugar estates.
Drop in sugar production
Various social and political pressures led to a drop of sugar production in the 1900s. Europe started growing beet sugar, slavery slowly started getting abolished leading to shortage of resources, and general competition offered by other countries producing sugar.
Spooner's Ginnery - Located to the east of Cayon, Spooner's Estate offers charming country views, and has witnessed the agricultural and industrial history of the island related to both sugar and cotton. The sole surviving cotton ginnery also stands here.
A 1753 map shows that originally the sugar mill here was animal driven. It was in the 1870s that Benjamin Buck Greene switched to steam-powered milling. The ginnery was changed from sugar to cotton in the 1900s by Sendall and Wade who now owned the place. This was a first in the history of the Caribbean. Established in 1901, this ginnery functioned till the late 1970s, when it was taken over by the Government of Nevis and St. Kitts. You can still see ruins of structures built in the 18th, 19th and 20th century.
Independence Square
Carib Petroglyphs
Bloody Point
Waterworks
Basseterre
Mount Liamuiga
Half Way Tree Cistern
The Half Way Tree cistern is particularly beautiful and, structurally, is typical of most cisterns found on this island.
Wingfield River and Waterworks
The river and forested watershed helped provide for all the water needs of the plantation. Right from 19th century it became part of the water supply system of the island, supplying water to its remotest parts.
The Wingfield River has 4 dams built across itself: 3 of them are not used except to control the flow of water down the river. The fourth collects the water at its highest point of the river and also serves as the main storage from where the water is distributed though pipes to households. This entire system used to serve the Wingfield Estate at some point in history.
Plantations/Estates
A history of succession
Gilbert Fleming was one of three commissioners the British Government had appointed for distributing the lands acquired from the French through the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713.
Fleming was appointed to the double post of Lieutenant General of Leeward Caribbean as well as Lieutenant Governor of St. Christopher in 1833. He acquired a large estate for himself, making good use of his official position and passed most of it to Gilbert Fane Fleming, his son. Shadwell was passed as a gift when Carolina, Gilbert Fane Fleming's daughter, married John Brisco. Lady Brisco in her turn passed this property to her first son.
By 1873 it was Thomas Berkeley Hardtman Berkeley who was the proud owner of Shadwell. He was a politician and a leading planter in his own right, (he even became president of Leewards Islands Federal Council just a few days before he died) and on his death in 1881 he passed this property to his son John. John Berkley's sister somehow got hold of Shadwell, and by the early part of the 20th century her descendents were controlling the place.
Finally, in 1962, a prominent pharmacist called Eric Skerritt bought the house, and he and his wife Agnes, along with 3 other family members, still live there.
Lodge Great House - This 18th century Great House was built by Samuel Crooke who was a planter-politician in the estate he received from his Crooke inheritance. It saw its first steps towards modernization in the early 20th century when a Phillip M. Todd fitted it with cold and hot running water, flush toilets and a grand kitchen. A group of English investors have now bought it for restoration and converted it into a Heritage Tourism Attraction.
Some more interesting history
Samuel Crooke, who built the house, was the great-grandson of Major Henry Crooke. Major Henry Crooke was Council member in 1672 and also the Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1676. He is even said to have been a frequent guest of Sir Thomas Warner. He probably resided on the island before Warner's death in 1648.
Crooke willed the plantation to his son Samuel Crooke also known as ‘the Little'. He too served on the Council just before the turn of the 18th century. There is even a ‘Crooke's Garden' in the cane field close to the Great House, as a reminder of the Crooke family's presence on the island.
By 1828, Charles Adamson, who was a leading attorney and a planter, controlled the property. It remained with his family till the early 20th century when it was bought by a relative, Phillip M. Todd. He is the person responsible for modernizing the Great House.
After Todd left the place in the 1940s, a business group got hold of the lodge in 1950. Mr. Christopher Walwyn, the appointed manager, stayed here for the next 50 years or so. In that period he added a couple of bedrooms and a bathroom to the house. In the 1970s, Walwyn purchased the Great House and the surrounding area of 2.83 acres. It was exempted from nationalization at the time when the sugar industry was being nationalized. Recently, some British investors have converted the house into a heritage tourism spot.
Belmont Estate Yard - The plantation was just 100 acres when it was bought by Peter Brotherson from the French in the early 18th century. In 1726, additional land surrounding this plot was granted to Brotherson. In those days sugar extraction was done on this estate using an animal mill.
By 1828 the land had grown to 286 acres and even had a windmill. It was owned by George Galway Mills, the great-grandson of Matthew Mills, who was a Speaker for the Assembly and also Chief Justice before he died in 1744.
G.G. Mills was quite active politically and was a councillor in 1800. He later migrated to England where he became MP for Winchelsea and Wallingford. G.G. Mills had his share of tragedy, too, along with this prosperity - his father was murdered by a lawyer called John Barbot in 1752 at Frigate Bay.
By the end of the 19th century Stuart Davis owned the plantation and it had spread to over 300 acres. Steam technology was introduced at around this time. Stuart's descendent Basil Davis became the general manager of the Basseterre Central Factory in 1923. During his time an incident occurred that led to the ‘Bull Story', which has become part of the island's folklore. The enactment of this story is a must for any performing group on the island.
Today the estate house and yard are occupied by an area manager who manages the sugar industry from this base. It is under the control of the Sugar Manufacturing Corporation, which is owned by the Government. There are plans to develop a Sugar Museum here.
St. Kitts Sugar Manufacturing Corporation
Phone: 869 465 8157
Address: Wellington Road, Basseterre, St. Kitts
Tomb of Sir Thomas Warner
Address: Old Road, Basseterre, St. Kitts.
Volcano Hike
Black Rock
Beaches
Dieppe Bay
Grange Bay
Hermitage Bay
Half Moon Bay
North Frigate Bay
North Friars Bay
Turtle Bay
Canoe Bay
Sand Bank Bay
Cockleshell Bay
Banana Bay
Major's Bay
Whitehouse Bay
Potatoe Bay
South Friar Bay
Frigate Bay

Meet Peter, Collier and the team at Caribbean Island Hotels, your local connection in the Caribbean. Our team comprises locals and expats, and we are pleased to be able to show off our home to you. Beautiful islands are easy to fall in love with, but it's the people here, their humour, their helpfulness and their passion for life that truly move us. The proud cultural traditions of the islands, as well as the historical sites dotted throughout the region, are things we are working to preserve for future generations to experience and enjoy as much as we do.

