As readers may well be aware, there have been recent calls for the removal of the statue of Christopher Columbus from the place it occupies just east of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.
There is no denying the fact that through his voyages of discovery, Columbus inadvertently precipitated untold horrors leading to the genocide of entire peoples, almost total decimation of the entire indigenous population of the Americas and eventually evolving into the transatlantic slave trade, the worst atrocity in human history.
Even from the outset, whatever the higher minded goals of the sailor as he made his historic expeditions west, were tempered with ideas of dominion as evidenced by the deals he struck with the monarchy of Spain for his own benefit since he expected to find an immense store of wealth.
Regardless of the varied opinions surrounding the legacy of Columbus, we as citizens are not exactly flush with historic monuments and artefacts to allow us the luxury of disposing of those we see as ideologically opposed to what we hold to be acceptable. Moreover, it is not left to us to decide what is 'good' or 'bad' history since we cannot boast of any great love for researching and documenting our past. Trinidad is also fortunate enough to be one of the few places with a tangible link to Columbus.
When he happened upon the island in 1498 (Discovery Day was an annual holiday on August 1 until it was replaced by Emancipation Day), he lost an anchor from one of his ships while anchored off Icacos Point during a tidal surge. This relic was rediscovered in 1877 by accident and after a tour of exhibition in several World Fairs, was eventually donated to the Royal Victoria Institute in 1912 by its discoverer, Francois Agostini. The RVI is now the National Museum and Art Gallery and the huge bronze anchor can be seen there still.
Part of the misdirected angst against the Columbus monument is possibly due to a complete lack of knowledge about its history. One faux-news online source even pontificated that it was 'donated by a big shot in the 1990s. The following is the fact of the matter on how this antiquity came to be.
In the Port-of-Spain of yesteryear, the dead were interred in a patch of muddy ground by the sea. Near the waterfront cemetery was a rickety wooden chapel which served the Catholics of the town. In 1816, construction of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception commenced, although the old wooden church continued to be used until 1824 when its severe dereliction began to pose a serious hazard to the safety of worshippers.
After the completion of the Cathedral, the old cemetery became a sort of refuse tip and impromptu storage area with rubbish sharing space with old sugar hogsheads, crates, carts, corbeau and the odd vagrant or two. Meanwhile, Hyppolyte Borde, a planter who had immigrated to the island from Martinique as a child in 1810 along with his father and two brothers, had become a very wealthy man indeed.
Hypolite's brother Pierre Louis Gustave Borde was a historian and one of the earliest chroniclers in the island. It is perhaps this consciousness of the island's history as well as innate public-mindedness which prompted Hypolite to landscape gratis, the land of the old cemetery behind the cathedral and erect a monument to the explorer, Christopher Columbus who discovered the island in 1498. The memorial, a fountain and bronze statue, was unveiled in 1881 by Governor Sir William A G Young. A description of the space a few years later (1887) runs thus:
"Columbus Square, to the east of the Roman Catholic Cathedral, is surrounded by an iron palisading. It was laid out and planted with ornamental shrubs by the Corporation, to whom it belongs. The handsome fountain, which was presented by the late Mr Hypolite Borde, a wealthy cacao proprietor, is surmounted by a bronze statue of one whose memory should be perpetuated in this colony–Christopher Columbus. This statue was unveiled and the Square opened with some ceremony by the late Governor Young in 1881. This end of the town used formerly to be much neglected, but the recent embellishments have greatly improved its appearance, and once a month, on the third Thursday, the Police Band plays at the usual hour, from 5 to 6 PM."
The square and statue are well-maintained today. We must not run the risk of rewriting history according to our own prejudices or emotions for then we will lose more than we can ever hope to recover.