Before the arrival of Europeans, the Bahamas were
inhabited by the Lucayos, a group of Arawaks. Christopher Columbus first
set foot in the New World in the Bahamas (1492), presumably at San
Salvador, and claimed the islands for Spain. Although the Lucayos were
not hostile, they were soon exterminated by the Spanish, who did not in
fact colonize the islands.
The first settlements were
made in the mid-17th cent. by the English. In 1670 the islands were
granted to the lords proprietors of Carolina, who did not relinquish
their claim until 1787, although Woodes Rogers, the first royal governor, was appointed in 1717. Under Rogers the pirates and buccaneers, notably Blackbeard,
who frequented the Bahama waters, were driven off. The Spanish attacked
the islands several times, and an American force held Nassau for a
short time in 1776. In 1781 the Spanish captured Nassau and took
possession of the whole colony, but under the terms of the Treaty of
Paris (1783) the islands were ceded to Great Britain.
After
the American Revolution many Loyalists settled in the Bahamas, bringing
with them black slaves to labor on cotton plantations. Plantation life
gradually died out after the emancipation of slaves in 1834.
Blockade-running into Southern ports in the U.S. Civil War enriched some
of the islanders, and during the prohibition era in the United States
the Bahamas became a base for rum-running.
The United
States leased areas for bases in the Bahamas in World War II and in
1950 signed an agreement with Great Britain for the establishment of a
proving ground and a tracking station for guided missiles. In 1955 a
free trade area was established at the town of Freeport. It proved
enormously successful in stimulating tourism and has attracted offshore
banking.
In the 1950s black Bahamians, through the
Progressive Liberal party (PLP), began to oppose successfully the ruling
white-controlled United Bahamian party; but it was not until the 1967
elections that they were able to win control of the government. The
Bahamas were granted limited self-government as a British crown colony
in 1964, broadened (1969) through the efforts of Prime Minister Lynden
O. Pindling.
The PLP, campaigning on a platform of immediate independence, won an
overwhelming victory in the 1972 elections and negotiations with Britain
were begun.
On July 10, 1973, the Bahamas became a
sovereign state within the Commonwealth of Nations. In 1992, after 25
years as prime minister and facing recurrent charges of corruption and
ties to drug traffickers, Pindling was defeated by Hubert Ingraham of
the Free National Movement (FNM). A feeble economy, mostly due to a
decrease in tourism and the poor management of state-owned industries,
was Ingraham's main policy concern. Ingraham was returned to office in
1997 with an ironclad majority, but lost power in 2002 when the PLP
triumphed at the polls and PLP leader Perry Christie replaced Ingraham
as prime minister. Concern over the government's readiness to
accommodate the tourist industry contributed to the PLP's losses in the
2007 elections, and Ingraham and the FNM regained power.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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