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'Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park' is a
UNESCO World Heritage Site of historical, cultural and architectural significance: a monument to the ingenuity of the
British military engineers who designed it and to the skill, strength and endurance of the
African slaves who built and maintained it. One of the best preserved historical fortifications in
the Americas, it is located on the island of
St. Kitts in the Federation of
St. Christopher (St. Kitts) and Nevis in the
Eastern Caribbean.

Battle of Saint Kitts, 1782, as described by an observer in a French engraving titled "Attaque de Brimstomhill".
Cannon were first mounted on Brimstone Hill in 1690, when the British used them to recapture
Fort Charles from the French. The French had not considered it possible to transport cannon up the steep and thickly wooded sides of Brimstone Hill. The construction of the fort then carried on intermittently for just over 100 years. In its heyday, the fort was known as 'The
Gibraltar of the West Indies', in reference to its imposing height and seeming invulnerability. In 1782, the French, under Admiral Comte
François Joseph Paul de Grasse laid
siege to the fort. During the siege, the adjacent island of
Nevis surrendered, and guns from
Fort Charles and other small forts there were brought to St. Kitts for use against Brimstone Hill. British
Admiral Hood could not dislodge de Grasse, and after a month of siege, the heavily outnumbered and cut-off British garrison surrendered. However, a year later, the
Treaty of Paris (1783) restored St. Kitts and Brimstone Hill to British rule, along with the adjacent island of
Nevis. Following these events, the British carried out a program to augment and strengthen the fortifications, and Brimstone Hill never again fell to an enemy force.
The fort was abandoned by the British in the mid 19th century, and the structures gradually decayed through vandalism and natural processes. Stabilization and restoration of the remaining structures started in the early 1900s, and in 1987 Brimstone Hill was officially declared to be a
National Park.
External links
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The official Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park homepage
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Many pictures of Brimstone Hill