Districts of Saint Lucia

The island nation of Saint Lucia is divided into 10 districts (formerly called Quarters). The name Quarters or Quartiers originally came from the French period in Saint Lucia (Sainte Lucie in French). The 2001 and 2010 Census of Saint Lucia refers to the first level administrative divisions as districts. The FIPS and ISO standards regularly called these divisions quarters or quartiers in French. The former district of Dauphin Quarter was merged into Gros Islet District and the former district of Praslin Quarter was merged into Micoud District.[1][2][3][4]

Districts of Saint Lucia since at least 2001

History

1758 map of Saint Lucia

After the French claimed title of Saint Lucia in 1744, commandant de Rougueville divided Saint Lucia into districts and parishes. Quarters were administrative districts for the control of settlors and slaves. The French Surveyor General of Saint Lucia, M. Raussaim, initially divided Saint Lucia into seven quarters.[5]

In 1844, Henry Breen describes how Saint Lucia was divided into two districts, the eastern district on the leeward side of Saint Lucia facing the Atlantic Ocean and the western district on the windward side facing the Caribbean Sea. It was further divided into eleven quarters or parishes, i.e. Castries, Anse Laraye, Soufriere, Choiseul, Laborie, Vieux Fort, Micoud, Praslin, Dennery, Dauphin, and Gros-ilet. Each quarter or parish had a town in the coastal bay within its territory that was named the same as the quarter. Breen further talks about stipendiary magistrates introduced during the period of the apprenticeship system.[6] These magistrates were as follows:

  1. Castries, Gros-ilet, Daughpin, and Anse Laraye
  2. Soufriere, Choiseul, Laborie
  3. Vieux Fort, Micoud, Praslin, Dennery

Still later the number of stipendiary magistrates was increased to five:

  1. Castries and Anse Laray
  2. Gros-ilet and Sauphin
  3. Soufriere and Choiseul
  4. Vieux Fort and Laborie
  5. Micoud, Dennery, and Praslin

The magistrates did not survive. However, the quarters or parishes did survive, as such, with some mergers and changes in the names.

Districts

Since the 2001 Census of Saint Lucia there have been 10 districts in Saint Lucia.[3]

2010 Census Population and area of Saint Lucia Districts[1][4]
#DistrictPopulation[1]Households[4]Land Area[1]Population density[1]
1Anse la Raye6,0602,17137.6 km2 (14.52 sq mi)161 per km2, 417 per mi2
2Canaries2,04478924.3 km2 (9.38 sq mi)84 per km2, 218 per mi2
3Castries[7]65,65623,296102.7 km2 (39.65 sq mi)639 per km2, 1,656 per mi2
4Choiseul6,1282,07725.9 km2 (10.00 sq mi)237 per km2, 612 per mi2
5Dennery12,7674,41972.3 km2 (27.93 sq mi)177 per km2, 457 per mi2
6Gros Islet20,8729,804100.3 km2 (38.73 sq mi)208 per km2, 539 per mi2
7Laborie7,3632,18933.8 km2 (13.05 sq mi)218 per km2, 564 per mi2
8Micoud16,2845,623112.1 km2 (43.29 sq mi)145 per km2, 376 per mi2
9Soufrière7,6572,88658.4 km2 (22.55 sq mi)131 per km2, 340 per mi2
10Vieux Fort14,7545,66549.8 km2 (19.22 sq mi)296 per km2, 768 per mi2
Saint Lucia165,59658,919617.00 km2 (238.23 sq mi)268 per km2, 695 per mi2

Notes

Dauphin Quarter
Praslin Quarter
  • A former quarter, Dauphin Quarter was merged into Gros Islet Quarter. It was not enumerated separately in the 2010 Census. The 2001 Census shows Daphin as part of Gros Islet.[3][4]
  • A former quarter, Praslin Quarter was merged into Micoud Quarter. It was not enumerated separately in the 2010 Census. The 2001 Census shows Praslin as part of Micoud District.[3][4]
  • The Central Forest Reserve with an area of 78 km2 (30 sq mi) was not included in the 2010 Census. Without this region, the area of Saint Lucia is 540 km2 (208 sq mi).[4]
  • The final population numbers are used in the table above. Preliminary results published in April 2011 were different.[4][8]

Political divisions

Electoral boundaries of Saint Lucia

Saint Lucia electoral boundaries are based, generally, on the districts. There are 17 constituencies in Saint Lucia that are represented in the House of Assembly of Saint Lucia. A study was done in 2014 to look into variations in census and boundaries and possible expansion of the number of constituencies.[9][10]

DistrictConstituency NamePopulation
Gros IsletGros Islet23242
CastriesBabonneau12,844
CastriesCastries East11782
CastriesCastries South9463
CastriesCastries Central7274
CastriesCastries South East14516
CastriesCastries North11463
Anse la Raye and CanariesAnse la Raye and Canaries8363
SoufrièreSoufrière8424
LaborieLaborie8588[11]
Vieux FortVieux Fort North7201
Vieux FortVieux Fort South9336
MicoudMicoud North7173
MicoudMicoud South7330
DenneryDennery South4896
DenneryDennery North7570
ChoiseulChoiseul6130[11]

See also

References

Additional bibliographic references: