BAHAMAS JAMAICA By Sir WM. ROBINSON, G.C.M.G. (late Governor of the PAGE 350 By FRANK CUNDALL, F.S.A. (Secretary, Institute of C.M.G. (Colonial By SYDNEY OLIVIER, C.M.G. (Colonial Secretary, BRITISH GUIANA. By EMIL REICH, Doctor Juris (Author of "History of THE FALKLAND ISLANDS By W. E. L. CANADA WEST INDIES 367 497 512 APPENDIX 521 530 KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO. LTD NEW PUBLICATIONS. THE BRITISH EMPIRE SERIES. In Five Volumes, with Twelve Maps. Large post 8vo. VOL. I.-INDIA, Ceylon, Straits Settlements, British North Borneo, Hong-Kong. Two Maps. VOL. II.-BRITISH AFRICA. Four Maps. VOL. III.-BRITISH AMERICA. Two Maps. VOL. IV.-AUSTRALASIA. Two Maps. VOL. V.-GENERAL. Two Maps. The Volumes will be issued successively at intervals of about one month. THE LAST BOER WAR. By H. RIDER HAGGARD. Paper Cover. 18. CETYWAYO AND HIS WHITE NEIGHBOURS; or Remarks on Recent Events in Zululand, Natal, and the Transvaal. By H. RIDER HAGGARD. New and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d. Paternoster Library. THE WOLSELEY SERIES OF MILITARY WORKS. Edited by Captain W. H. JAMES, late R.E. NEW VOLUMES. Uniform. Demy 8vo. THE CONDUCT OF WAR. By Baron von der GOLTZ. 10s. 6d. CROMWELL AS A SOLDIER. By Lt. Col. T. S. BALDOCK, R.A. With Twelve Maps and Plans. 158. NAPOLEON AS A GENERAL. By Count YORK VON WARTENBURG. Two Vols. GOURKO'S RAID. By Colonel EPAUCHIN, of the Russian Staff. LONDON: PATERNOSTER HOUse, Charing CROSS ROAD, W.C. WITH TWO MAPS \3, LONDON KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO. LTD PATERNOSTER HOUSE, CHARING CROSS ROAD 1900 Br 392.12 (3) HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY FROM THE LIBRARY OF The rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & CO. At the Ballantyne Press PREFATORY NOTE THE papers comprised in these volumes were most of them given originally as lectures in the Sunday Afternoon Course at the South Place Institute, Finsbury, from 1895 to 1898, with the object of affording trustworthy information concerning the various colonies, settlements, and countries scattered over the world which go to form the whole known as "The British Empire." It was thought that a wider and deeper knowledge of the growth, present condition, and possibilities of each integral part of our Empire would tend to strengthen the sympathetic, material, and political ties which unite the colonies to the mother country. The generous response to the invitation to lecture was very gratifying; travellers, natives, and those to whom had been given the onerous task of governing the various provinces of our Empire, vied with one another in their willingness to impart the special knowledge which they had acquired. The lecturers were asked, when possible, to give a short account of the country prior to its incorporation, its colonial history, the effect of the British connection on the country and the natives, and the outlook for the future. To these topics were added the conditions for colonisation, of trade and commerce, the state and local government, and the laws of the country, especially |