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Place Names in Jamaica

Sometimes names are not what they seem

EUROPEAN ORIGIN

 

 

 

JAMAICAN ORIGIN

 

 

 

Welsh Origins

Bangor Ridge, Monmouth and Chepstowe in Portland, Llandilo in Westmoreland, Pencarne in St. Mary, Newport in Manchester, Swansea in St. Catherine, Milford in St. Ann, and Llandewey, are all Welsh place names.

Cardiff Hall in St. Ann is derived from the capital of Wales-Cardiff. Cardiff Hall was also one of the estates of John Blagrove who arrived in Jamaica in 1655.

Denbigh in Clarendon comes originally from North Wales. Denbigh was a property owned by the late Hon. W.G. Muirhead, C.M.G., Custos of Clarendon, who gave part of it for the Denbigh show ground.

Llandovery in St. Ann originates in north-east Carmarthen, Wales. It included, for some years, a sugar estate which was incorporated with the Richmond. It was once owned by Henry Morgan.

Morgan’s Bridge in Westmoreland, Morgan’s Pass and Morgan’s Valley in Clarendon were all named after Captain Henry Morgan – a Welsh privateer who eventually became Lieutenant Governor in 1673.

Pembroke in St. Mary is originally a Welsh place name and was owned in 1811 by Hungerford Spencer.

Wales in Manchester was known from 1811 when estates were first listed, and was owned by Edward Morgan, a Welshman, who evidently named it for the country from which he came.

Ythanside is in the parish of Portland and was named after a place in Wales. It was first owned by William Espeut (1843-1892), member of a Jamaican family of Huguenot origin who settled in Portland in 1868.

Sources

  • Beek, Rosanna. Place Names of Jamaica. Kingston: The University of the West Indies, 1975. Print.
  • Besson, Jean. Martha Brae’s Two Histories: European Expansion and Caribbean Culture Building in Jamaica. Kingston: Ian Randle Publishers, 2003. Print.
  • Cundall, Frank. Place-names of Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1939. Print.
  • Higman, Barry W. Jamaican Place Names. Kingston: University of the West Indies Press, 2009. Print.
  • Karras, Allan L. Sojourners in the Sun: Scottish migrants in Jamaica and the Chesapeake, 1740-1800. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1992. Print.
  • Sibley, Inez Knibb. Dictionary of Place-names. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1978. Print.
  • Tortello, Rebecca. Pieces of the Past: a Stroll down Jamaica’s Memory Lane. Kingston: Ian Randle Publishers, 2007. Print.
Irish Origins

Carrickfoyle Near Granville in Trelawny is the name of a place in Ireland. 

Charlemont Is found in St. Catherine. There is a Charlemont in Armagh in Northern Ireland. 

Cherry Gardens  In St. Andrew, at the foot of the hills north of Kingston, was owned in the 19th century by Mr. Joseph Gordon of Scotland, who had come to Jamaica as attorney for several absentee-owned sugar estates, and later purchased several of them. There is a Cherry Garden in Ireland. 

Clonmel In St. Mary originated in Tipperary, Ireland. 

Donegal& Kildare  In St. Elizabeth are derived from the name of Irish counties. 

Dublin Castle  Found in St. Andrew is the name of an important and historic building in Dublin, Ireland. 

Hibernia Found in Manchester is said to be the Latin name for the island of Ireland. 

Irish Town  In the hills of St. Andrew, below Newcastle Camp, was originally the site of Irish settlers, hence the name. 

Knockpatrick  In Manchester and Altamont in Kingston are some other place names that can also be found in Ireland. 

Mount Eagle  In Westmoreland, could have gotten its name from a Marilyn found in the Dingle Peninsula of Ireland. 

Newry  Is in St. Mary and the name originated in Northern Ireland. Newry Sugar Estate was first owned by John Ellis, a member of the Ellis family who also owned Fort George in this parish.

Spring Garden  Is in Westmoreland and it is said that the Irish origin of this name came from the long-gone London pleasure ground of Spring Garden that had flourished in the seventeenth century. 

Vinegar Hill  Found in Westmoreland was Irish settlement that was named in memory of the defeat of the United Irishmen in the Battle of Vinegar Hill, Ireland, in 1798. 

Sources 

Beek, Rosanna. Place Names of Jamaica. Kingston: The University of the West Indies, 1975. Print. 

Besson, Jean. Martha Brae’s Two Histories: European Expansion and Caribbean Culture Building in Jamaica. Kingston: Ian Randle Publishers, 2003. Print. 

Cundall, Frank. Place-names of Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1939. Print. 

Higman, Barry W. Jamaican Place Names. Kingston: University of the West Indies Press, 2009. Print. 

Karras, Allan L. Sojourners in the Sun: Scottish Migrants in Jamaica and the Chesapeake, 1740-1800. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1992. Print. 

Sibley, Inez Knibb. Dictionary of Place-names. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1978. Print. 

Tortello, Rebecca. Pieces of the Past: A Stroll down Jamaica’s Memory Lane. Kingston: Ian Randle Publishers, 2007. Print. 

Scottish Places
Aberdeen, in the parish of St. Elizabeth, was so named by Alexander Forbes, a Scotsman, after the area of Scotland from which he came. He erected a great house there. The estate in time was sold, and the town which was established in that area took the name. Aberdeen is situated between Appleton sugar estate and the Cockpit Country.
Arthur’s Seat is in Clarendon and there are two sources given for this place-name: one is that it came originally from Scotland, the other that it took the Christian name of its first owner, Arthur McKenzie, who owned it from 1811.
Auchenbreck, in Westmoreland, was so named by Hon. John Campbell, a member of the branch of the ancient and highly regarded Scottish clan of Auchenbreck in Scotland.
Berrydale in Portland was originally a Scottish place name.
Caledonia in Mandeville, Manchester, was a large tract of land owned in the 19th century by Robert Crawford of Scotland. Sixty acres of this land became the town of Mandeville. There is a Caledonia Avenue in Kingston.
Clydesdale in Portland was owned in the 19th century by Colonel MacClaverty. It is on the River Clyde, as is Clysedale in Scotland. This Jamaican river supplied the power for working the huge waterwheel at the coffee works of this estate.
Culloden in Westmoreland, Dumfries in Kingston and Dee Side in Trelawny are all originally Scottish place names.
Dalvey, in St. Thomas, was a property first owned by Sir Alexander Grant in 1811. It is now a village. This is an original Scottish place name.
Dunkeld in St Mary, Dundee in St. Elizabeth, Dunisane in St. Andrew and Dumbarton in the hills of Portland are originally from Perth, Scotland, and once constituted a large coffee property first known as Gale Mountain. It once was owned by Thomas Turpin in the 18th century.
Elderslie, in St. Elizabeth, was originally a Scottish place name. This village in the hills of St. Elizabeth is near the entrance of Cockpit County.
Mount Vernon, in St. Thomas, may have been so called as a tribute to Admiral Edward Vernon, in celebration of his naval service to the British in the Caribbean- notably his defeat of the Spanish at Port Bello in 1739. Mount Vernon, originally called Wyndy/Windy Edge, is a residential area in Glasgow, (the largest city in Scotland).
Moy Hall, found in St. Thomas and Hanover in St. Thomas, was at one time owned by Captain George Goodwin Taylor, the son of Dr. George Taylor of Derby, England. There is also a Moy Hall in Scotland.
Papine, in St. Andrew was owned from 1756 by Colonel Alexander Grant of Banffshire, Scotland and named after a village there. It was while he was in the Mill of Papine in Scotland that he became heir to this estate and transferred the name to Jamaica.
Roxbro/Roxburgh – this is a Scottish place name and is found in St. Elizabeth.
Stewarton can be found in Trelawny and in Portland and this name comes from Ayr in Scotland.
Stirling Castle in St. Elizabeth, first known as Mount Zion, was owned by the Anglican Church in Jamaica. Archdeacon Ramson was in charge of the church and school. In 1895 when George Vassal Calder purchased this property, he named it Sterling. Stirling Castle in St. Andrew was named after its first owner, John Stirling. There is also a Sterling Castle in Sterling, Scotland.
Tulloch, in St. James, was first known as Tulloch Castle and was named after John Tulloch of Ross, Scotland, who owned it from 1769 to 1837.
Spanish Origins

Ocho Rios Is in the parish of St. Ann, and in English it means eight rivers. Once called Chareiras (bay of waterfalls) by the English, it is believed that this place name is a corruption of the Spanish word Chorreras, which describes the place’s many waterfalls. 

Port Esquivel  Also called Old Harbour Bay, is in the parish of St. Catherine and was named after the first Spanish governor of the island, Juan d’ Esquivel. 

Port Maria  It is the main town of St. Mary and is the English equivalent of what the Spanish once called Puerto Santa Maria. 

Seville  Was the first major town to be established around 1509 by the Spaniards who then called it Sevilla Nueva. It was the capital of Jamaica for 23 years. 

Oracabessa  Is found in the parish of St. Mary and has its origins in the Spanish word Auracabeza, Aura meaning air or breeze, and Cabeza, head or highland. On the other hand, some believe that the word is derived from Oro Cabeza, the golden head. 

Porus  A town in Manchester, is said to have been referred to as Porras, named after the Porras brothers who were trapped on the island with Christopher Columbus. It is also believed that Porus is a corrupt form of Las Pocas. 

 Port Antonio  The capital of Portland parish is derived from the Spanish variety: Puerto de San Antonio and Pto de Anton, both of which were found on different Spanish maps. 

Spanish Town  Now the capital of St. Catherine and the former capital of the island, is the second and final major town to be built by the Spaniards who named it St. Jago de la Vega. 

Mount Diablo  In St. Ann has its origin in the Spanish words, Diablo Monte (Devils Mountain), which suggests its harmful pathway. 

Savannah la Mar  The capital of the parish of Westmoreland and was the English’s reference to what was Sabana-de-la-mar for the Spaniards, which means the plain by the sea. 

Montego Bay Is the main town of St. James. Even though it was originally called El Golfo De Bueno (Fairweather Gulf) by Christopher Columbus, the Spanish word Manteca which means lard or butter is actually what it originates from, as an abundance of hogs were slaughtered here and sent to Cartagena in Spain. It was even once referred to as Lard Bay. But there is also the notion that it was named after Montego Salamanca who was a colonist. 

Galina Point  Is found in St. Mary and has its origins in what the Spanish called Gallina Punta. 

Liguanea  Is in St. Andrew. It comes from the Spanish predecessor, Hato de Liguane and was also once called Lia- with-guana. 

Lluidas Vale  Is in the parish of St. Catherine and is derived from what the Spanish words luzida (happy or fine) or lluvias (rains). 

Bog walk  Is in the parish of St. Catherine. It is a corruption of what the Spanish called Boca d’agua (water’s mouth). 

 Lacovia  The former and first capital of St. Elizabeth, is derived from the Spanish place name La Caoban. 

Magotty  Is found in St. Elizabeth; however, there have been other places with this name. It is believed that it comes from the Spanish word Magote, which means bundle or heap in English. 

Cabaritta Punta Is in the parish of Westmoreland. It is a Spanish place name which is equivalent to kid or goat point in English. There are also other places with similar names such as Cabariita Pint near Old Harbour and Cabaritta Island in St. Mary. 

Sources 

Beek, Rosanna. Place Names of Jamaica. Kingston: The University of the West Indies, 1975. 

Cundall, Frank. Place – Names of Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1939. 

Higman, B.W., & Hudson, B.J. Jamaican Place Names. Kingston: University of the West Indies Press, 2009. 

Sibley, Knibb Inez. Dictionary of Place – Names in Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1978. 

Bizarre Place Names

Names are identifiers which labels a unique persons, place or thing. As such, there are peculiar place names in Jamaica which are historical in meaning. Sometimes, names are not what they seem. 

Danks In Clarendon, it was the name given to a property Sir Henry Morgan deeded to his German wife. When accepting the deed, it was said she spoke the word “danke”. In German “danke” means “thank you”. 

Save Rent In Westmoreland, the name is aalteration of a French man named M. Saverent who owned property between 1773 – 1811. Likewise, “Shotover” in Portland, is a mispronunciation of the French Chateau Vert. The surrounding district later adopted the nameSave Rent  

Putogether Corner Near Mandeville, it is a spot where market women stopped to put their goods – and their dress – in order before proceeding to town. 

I-No-Call-You-No-Come In the Cockpit country of St. Elizabeth during their early years, Maroons did not have a very positive attitude towards unexpected visitors. If they did not sanction someone’s entrance, he/she was led through the most torturous routes in the hope that this would lessen his curiosity. 

Shoe Myself Gate When persons who were unaccustomed to wearing shoes acquired a new pair, they would sling them over their shoulders until they arrived at their destination.  At this particular “gate”, they would “shoe themselves”. 

Gutters This town is aptly named. After heavy rains, water flows through the town from three directions, making it almost impassable. Gutters is located at the foot of Spur Tree Hill. 

Y.S. Estate   The property lies near a bridge over the river of the same name.  Some say that the curious name of the river derives from a Welsh word meaning “winding” (on early maps it is written “Wyess”) and possibly the form Y.S. was first adopted as the estate mark stamped on hogsheads of the Wyess Sugar. 

ACCOMPONG  (Maroon settlement) is in St. Elizabeth. This name is said to be derived from the Ashanti word, Nyamekopon, which means “the lone one, the warrior”. This name was also given to one of the brothers of Captain Cudjoe, the second Maroon leader. ACCOMPONG was established in 1739, and the compound is in the charge of a colonel, the army rank being honourable. The colonel appoints a major, several captains, and a council. This council functions like an open meeting. (see MAROOON TOWN). 

AUGUST TOWN  In the hills of St. Andrew, is thought to have been named from the fact that freedom came to the enslaved people of this country on the 1st August, 1838. From that date, this day was designated and celebrated as ‘Emancipation Day’ for many years. AUGUST TOWN became notable because at this place a prophet, whose name was Bedward, arose – the proponent of religion which became known as ‘Bedwardism’. He had thousands of followers but outdid himself when he proclaimed THAT HE WAS God and could fly. He set a date for his flight, and when it did not occur his people lost faith in him. Bedward had folk songs written about him. The verse of one is as follows: “Dip him Bedward, dip him. Dip him in the healing stream. Dip him deep, but don’t dip him too deep. Dip him Bedward, dip him”. Another song goes in part: “Run mongoose, you name gone abroad, Mongoose go into Bedward kitchen, eat out all him righteous chicken, run mongoose”. 

 BLENHEIM In Hanover, is a place-name found also in south-central Manchester, and originates from Bavaria, Germany. Blenheim (in Germany) was a site of a great battle, which no doubt led to the use of the name in Jamaica. BLENHEIM in Hanover is the birthplace of the Right Honourable Sir Alexander Bustamante, P.C., K.T., D.D., L.L.D., C.B.E., and National Hero. The house at BLENHEIM in which he was born has been designated a National Monument. 

BOG WALK In St. Catherine, was originally the Boca d’ agua (water’s mouth) of the Spaniards, corrupted to Bog Walk by the English after their occupation of the island in 1655. Bog Walk is now a centre for processing agricultural products. It has a sugar factory, milk condensery, and citrus packaging plant. 

CHAPELTON In Clarendon, was first known as “Chapel Town”, as the village took the name from the church. The Chapelton Church (Cundall tells us) was dedicated to St. Paul and was built at the time when the present parish of Clarendon was divided into the parishes of Clarendon and Vere. The “Cross” Church, near May Pen, now in ruins, was then the Parish Church of Clarendon. The Chapelton Church was built as a “chapel of ease” to the Cross Church and was the first place of worship of any size erected in upper Clarendon. The oldest records go back to 1666. (Cundall, Historic Jamaica, p.395) 

HALF-WAY-TREE  In St. Andrew, was originally Half-Way-Tree Pen and is said to have been owned by the Hotchkyn family for 130 years. Robert Hotchkyn, Attorney General of Jamaica (1707), was a lineal descendant of this family. It is claimed that HALF-WAY-TREE was named after a cotton tree which was at the junction of four roads. The cotton tree is said to have existed there from before the conquest of the island (1655) and until 1866 it was halfway between two places: Greenwhich in the St. Andrew Hills, where the English soldiers had their camp, and the fort near Spanish Town. The soldiers always rested at this spot before proceeding to the fort.  

The earliest mention of HALF-WAY-TREE was in 1696 when the governor was informed that certain prominent citizens were assembled together “at halfeway tree in the Parish of St. Andrews and had obleiged several of His Majesty’s subjects passing that way to drink a health to the late K. James” (Cundall, Historic Jamaica, p. 197). 

The late sir Noel Livingston claimed that in his research he found the name HALF-WAY-TREE mentioned in a Chancery Suit filed in the year 1782 wherein a James Parker was described as “late of Half-way Tree in the Parish of St. Andrew”. 

MILK RIVER   In Clarendon, was the Rio do Manatines of the Spaniards. The mineral baths are situated at the foot of a hill, which is of limestone formation. The water, which is extremely saline, issues from crevices in the rocks directly into the baths, through which it flows at a rate of 240 gallons per minute, or 345,600 gallons per day. The temperature of the water maintains a uniform 91-92 degrees Fahrenheit throughout the year. Besides being rich in mineral salts, it possesses a highly radioactivity, which renders it of a therapeutic value unsurpassed by any mineral bath in the world. Gout, rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, neuralgia, eczema, kidney and liver complaints are the ills for which this water is specially recommended. Milk River Baths are 54½ miles from Kingston.  

PORUS Is a town in Manchester. There are two reasons given for this name: one, that PORUS is possibly a confusion between Las Pocas (the pits) and should be called Pocos, or two, that since Porus was referred to by the Spaniards as “the district of Porras”, they must have named it after the brothers who were marooned with Christopher Columbus at St. Ann’s Bay for over a year. The Porras brothers finally mutinied against Columbus. 

SAVANNA-LA-MAR  Chief town and shipping port in Westmoreland, was the Sabana-de-la-mar (“the plain by the sea”) of the Spaniards. During English occupation of the island, the “de” was dropped, and the name became Savanna-la-mar, sometimes abbreviated Sav-la-mar. 

 

 SEVILLE  In St. Ann, was the Sevilla Nueva (New Seville) or Sevilla de ora (Golden Seville) of the Spaniards. 

SPANISH TOWN St. Catherine was founded by about 1534. It was once known as Santiago, the name given by Christopher Columbus to the whole island. The English, however, called the city St, Jago de la Vega, that is, ‘St. James of the Plain’, and that name remained in popular use for some years. Finally, it became known as SPANISH TOWN. 

Sources 

Higman, B W, and Brian J. Hudson. Jamaican Place Names. Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 2009. Print.  

Notes from National Library.  

Sibley, Inez K. Dictionary of Place-Names in Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1978. Print. 

MANCHESTER

 

BERRY HILL bears the surname of Curtis Philip Berry an architect and member of the House of Assembly.

BULL HOLE was named because of a legendary story which declares that at a certain time of the day a roaring would be heard and the Golden Table of folklore would appear, only to be quickly pulled beneath the waters by a bull.

CROSS KEYS could have come originally from Newport, Monmouthshire, England.

COBBLA (COBBLA CAMP) is said to have received this rather odd name because of the following incident which took place there. A man was seen in the early days of the history of this place putting up a building but seeming not to make much success of it. Someone passing
remarked, “What a ‘cobbla’ you are”. Those hearing the remark began to call the place
COBBLA and what was a joke in the first place has now become a place-name.
DEVON was originally that of an English county. The property was once owned by Hugh Crawford, M.D., a native of Cumnock, Ayrshire, Scotland, who died there, August 1, 1837.
ENFIELD originally from Middlesex, England, was in the 18th century owned by Thomas James
and Elizabeth, his wife of Southend, England, and afterwards of Dover, Kent, England. It was
left to his son, John T. James. The place-name Enfield is also found in Westmoreland, St. Ann
and St. Catherine.
FLOG MAN was so named because in old Jamaica, villagers could apply punishment to
wrongdoers without appealing to the law. A man was severely flogged here.
HARRISON PIECE near Newport is said to have been named after its first owner, Thomas
Harrison, who also owned Oldbury in the 19th century.
HERON’S HILL was named after Alexander George Heron, who owned Williamsfield,
Chudleigh, Shooters Hill, Spitzbergen, and Wigton Estates. Heron’s last wish was that he should
be buried at the top of Heron’s Hill, so that even after death he would be in sight of his estates.
PORUS is a village stretched out along the main May Pen to Mandeville highway. The name
Porus dates back to Spanish times and is probably derived from the family name Porras.
KENDAL originates in Kent, England. Kendal was a large coffee plantation which extended to
Mile Gully Pen, St. Elizabeth, and Martin’s Hill. It was owned from 1839 by Mr. John Clark of
Thornbury, England, who was the first of the Clark family to settle in Jamaica.
MANDEVILLE is the capital of Manchester which bears the title of the eldest son of William,
Duke of Manchester, after whom the parish was named.
MIKE TOWN is named after Mike E. Muirhead, who was once the owner of Marshall Pen, and
sold a part of it for the establishment of this town.
NASHVILLE was first owned by the late George Nash whom the name is said to have come
from.
Sources Used
Higman, B W, and Brian J. Hudson. Jamaican Place Names. Kingston, Jamaica: University of
the West Indies Press, 2009. Print.
Sibley, Inez K. Dictionary of Place-Names in Jamaica. Kingston: Institute of Jamaica, 1978.
Print

CLARENDON

Clarendon Map 

Chapleton – in Clarendon was first known as “Chapel Town” and it is believed that the
village of Chapleton took the name from the church.

Colonel’s Ridge – is believed to have been named after Colonel Dawkins, an early
English settler, who also owned “Dawkins Pen” and “Dawkins Kraal”

Dawkins – is named after James and Henry Dawkins, early English settlers. Henry
Dawkins was Member of Assembly in 1774.

Halse Hall – was named after Major Thomas Halse, who joined the invading English
army under General Venables and Admiral Penn at Barbados, and was granted land
here.

Hay’s Savannah – (now spelt “Hayes”) was named after John Hays who was an early
English settler The village of Hay’s was built on the savannah, hence the name and is
approximately seven miles south of May pen. There is also Hay’s Cornpiece. Both are
part of the Yarmouth Sugar Estate.
• Jackson Bay – is named after Colonel Jackson, who commanded the Clarendon militia in
the early history of that parish.
• Kellits – the correct spelling is Kellets and an early attorney Mr. H. E. Upton made the
claim that Kellets was owned by the Kellet and Mackenzie families.
• Kemps Hill Lookout – is located four miles from ‘The Alley’. It is the site of an old English
Camp, and was first known as ‘Camp Hill’. This lookout commands a view of Carlisle Bay,
and was used during the attack by the French at that Bay in 1694.
• Longville – is named after Samuel Long, first of his family to settle in Jamaica. This
occurred in 1655 when he accompanied the expedition under Admiral Penn and General
Venables.
• Malmsey Valley – was owned from 1740 by Peter Beckford Senior of the famous
Beckford family, early English settlers from Gloucestershire, England.
• Morgan’s Valley – was named after Sir Henry Morgan, who acquired land there when
he gave up piracy and was trying to encourage buccaneers to become gentlemen
farmers.
• Pennants – was named after its first owner, Gifford Pennant, a royalist who settled in
Jamaica soon after the restoration and represented Clarendon in the Assembly from
1672 to 1675.
• Rock River – a village that was first a property owned by William Beckford from the
Beckford’s in Gloucestershire, England. His family was granted 1000 acres of land in
Clarendon by royal patent on March 6, 1669.
• Sanguinetti – is said to bear the name of an Italian Jew (Jacob Sanguinetti), who owned
the Sanguinetti property listed as comprising 3,248 acres.
• Sheckles – is named after John S. Sheckles, Member of the Assembly, Custos of
Clarendon, and Brigadier – General of the Militia. A resident in the island for 55 years,
he died in 1782.

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