St. Lucia is the second largest island of the British Lesser Antilles. Located roughly in the center of the Windward island chain, it is nestled between Martinique to the north and St. Vincent and the Grenadines to the south. Plan Your Vacation Well!

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  In case you happen to be interested, the reason we created scuba, scuba is because we intend, one day, to sell our home in Houston, Texas, and develop our own scuba diving operation in St.Lucia, a small island in the Caribbean, situated between the very French island, Martinique, to the North, and the very British island, Barbados, to the south. And, the reason for this decision is that your host, Frederick, who is British, is married to Anne-Marie, from Trinidad and Tobago, whose sister is now living in St.Lucia.
    The plans are for Anne-Marie and Patsy to run a small hotel and Frederick to run the dive operation. Frederick has just completed his PADI Divemaster certification, and will soon embark on Instructor courses.
    When the time is right, we will take off for the sunshine! Why not plan on coming with us? You will be very welcome!

    We have two special goals -
1. To confirm scuba diving as a recreational sport for the "young at heart" and the "not so young in years"; and
2. To play our part in protecting the environment - we will take care of the coral reefs.

    Another thing holding us back at the moment is the $1 million or so needed to purchase a small hotel, or large house to convert to a small hotel. Here is a business opportunity for five people with $200,000 and the desire for a permanent, staffed holiday home in the Caribbean. For a single, lump sum purchase, you would get a 2-month vacation every year forever, or for as long as the property remained a hotel. Your investment would be in the property, not the business, so your investment would be quite secure. If you have any interest at all, or would like to establish contact in order to develop a relationship prior to considering this proposal, please e-mail us in confidence.

  Frederick



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    A Brief History of St.Lucia - St. Lucia is the second largest island of the British Lesser Antilles. Located roughly in the center of the Windward island chain, it is nestled between Martinique to the north and St. Vincent and the Grenadines to the south. Castries, the capital city, is situated on the northwest coast and known for its magnificent harbor. St. Lucia, said to be named for the patron saint of the day on which it was discovered, has an uncommon heritage of mixed cultural and historical influences, including Amerindian, European, and African.
    St. Lucia was inhabited by the Carib (Amerindian) Indians when sighted by the Spanish in the first decade of the sixteenth century. Many believe that Columbus viewed the island in 1502. St. Lucia remained uncolonized until the mid-seventeenth century. Earlier attempts by the British in 1605 and 1638 had met with disaster; would-be colonizers were either forced from the shores of the island or killed by its inhabitants. Permanent French settlement occurred in 1660, after an armistice had been agreed with the indigenous population.
    But there was no lengthy period of peace. Military conflicts among the Dutch, British, Spanish, and French, both on the European continent and in the colonies, resulted in St. Lucia's falling alternately under the control of France and Britain fourteen different times in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. During this period of constantly changing European alliances, both the British and the French sought control of St. Lucia for strategic purposes. The island's natural deep-water harbors afforded ready protection for military vessels and as an ideal location from which to monitor enemy movements in the Caribbean.
    The battle for control of St. Lucia continued intermittently throughout the rise and fall of the French Republic, following the French Revolution, because possession of the sugar-producing islands of the Caribbean was considered essential for raising revenue to support the ongoing war in Europe. From 1793 until Napoleon's fall in 1815, St. Lucia was captured alternately by France and Britain no fewer than seven times. Although the French permanently ceded St. Lucia to Britain in 1815, it was many years before the population, whose sympathies rested with the French, accepted British rule.
    The twentieth century saw St. Lucia's gradual transition to self-governance. Representative government was introduced in 1924 when a constitution was established; however, there was only incremental progress toward the development of a locally-controlled political system for the next thirty-four years.
    Following the dissolution of the short-lived West Indies Federation, St. Lucia agreed to become an associated state of Britain, which entailed a mutually sanctioned relationship that could be dissolved at any time by either party. This arrangement lasted until 1975, when members of the West Indies Associated States chose to pursue independence at their discretion and convenience. Following three years of planning and deliberation, St. Lucia gained independence on February.22nd, 1979.

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Frederick Pearce,
Pearman Cooperation Alliance of Houston, Texas.
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