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Despite its natural beauty, Grenada has experienced turbulent political upheavals in the past. Since the coming of Europeans, the Indians who lived there was forced into war to defend their island. It took the Europeans many years before they finally eliminated the Caribs and Arawaks from Grenada.

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"Mango Jullie"
by Eric Johnn (24x16
1986...watercolors on paper.)

Still life painting dealing with two mangoes of the same type, one ripe the other green. Both have definitive individual characters. The picture sets in a kind of still life /landscape atmosphere with a skyline and the ground upon rest the mangoes.


(Available in print/original US$269.00)
French and British colonialists fought for ownership until the British finally won . The travails of the island did not end there. Thousands of Africans were shipped to work on tobacco, sugarcane and coffee plantations for European merchants. The island prospered, but very little of the wealth stayed in Grenada. The island went through dozens of social and political unrest since and during slavery up until 1983 when thousands of US-military troops intervened to squash a military junta that assassinated several ministers in the ruling government at the time. These days, Grenada is enjoying stability and with the tourism industry booming and nutmeg price at a comfortable rate, there's no reason why the Spice Isle of the West cannot even be spicier than ever.



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