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unusual facts about Fort Charlotte, Tortola



Fort Charlotte

Fort Charlotte (Mobile) - The British name of Fort Conde in Mobile, Alabama, reconstructed at 4/5 scale of the French Fort Condé at the site, also known as Fort Carlota (under Spanish rule)

Fort Charlotte, Tortola

The fort was built by the British Royal Engineers in 1794 at an elevation of approximately 947 feet over Road Town.

Fort Purcell

Dutch historians aver that at the outbreak of the Third Anglo-Dutch War, the then (Dutch) owner of Tortola, Willem Hunthum, put Tortola under the protection of Sir William Stapleton, the English Governor-General of the Leeward Islands.

Great Camanoe

Great Camanoe is a small island located just north of Beef Island and northeast of Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, a group of islands which forms part of the archipelago of the Virgin Islands, located in the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea.

Islanders FC

Islanders FC is a British Virgin Islands football club based in Tortola, competing in the BVIFA National League, the top tier of British Virgin Islands football.

Jost Van Dyke

The island is accessible by private boats and ferry service from Tortola and Saint Thomas (via Saint John).

Jost Van Dyke lies about 8 km to the northwest of Tortola and 8 km to the north of Saint John.

Salt Island, British Virgin Islands

Salt Island is one of the islands of the archipelago of the British Virgin Islands located about 4.7 miles south east (151 degrees true) of Road Town, the main town on Tortola.

Slavery in the British Virgin Islands

In 1665 the Dutch settlers on Tortola were attacked by a British privateer, John Wentworth, who is recorded as capturing 67 slaves which were removed to Bermuda.

Terrance B. Lettsome International Airport

The airport is located on Beef Island, a small island off the main island of Tortola, to which it is connected by the Queen Elizabeth II Bridge.

Currently, the largest aircraft to serve Tortola is the 50 passenger seat de Havilland Canada DHC-8 Dash 8 DHC-8-300 turboprop aircraft operated by Leeward Islands Air Transport (LIAT).

The Settlement, British Virgin Islands

The towns harbor is at Setting Point which is a popular place for sailboats, the harbor has connections with Road Town on Tortola thrice-weekly by ferries.

Tortola

In the late 1970s, the British businessman Ken Bates attempted to purchase the island on a 199-year lease, but this was blocked after a protest movement led by islander Noel Lloyd forced the local government to drop the plan.

The ferries run between Charlotte Amalie in the center of St. Thomas, and Red Hook in the East End of St. Thomas and St. John, and either Road Town or the West End of Tortola.


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