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A Comment on the Windsor Site, Jamaica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

C. S. Cotter*
Affiliation:
golden springlime hall p.o.jamaica, b.w.i.

Extract

In Marian DeWolf's recent interesting article on Jamaica archaeology she refers to an earthwork and trench as Windsor Fort, built by the British in 1803 (DeWolf 1953: 236), citing Cundall (1915) as her authority. Actually Cundall mentions the fort but makes no attempt to suggest that its site was on Windsor Hill, which trench has always been known as Spanish Fort. From my local research, Fort Windsor was built on the sea shore, 1000 yards north of the hill, where up to a few years ago stone foundations still existed.

The Windsor Hill site presents one of the most curious mysteries of the north coast, and in 1951 I excavated the hole with a view to a solution and moved and sifted about three tons of earth which had been thrown in during the early part of the 19th century.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1954

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References

DEWOLF, MARIAN W. 1953 Excavations in Jamaica. American Antiquity, Vol. l8, No. 3, pp. 230–38. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
CUNDALL, FRANK 1894 The Story of the Life of Columbus and the Discovery of Jamaica. Journal of the Institute of Jamaica, Vol. 1, No. 4. Kingston.Google Scholar