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John Crow Mountains

John Crow Mountains
John Crow Mountains is located in Jamaica
John Crow Mountains
John Crow Mountains
Jamaica
Highest point
Elevation 3,750 ft (1,140 m)
Coordinates 18°03′13″N 76°21′17″W / 18.0534992°N 76.3546371°W / 18.0534992; -76.3546371Coordinates: 18°03′13″N 76°21′17″W / 18.0534992°N 76.3546371°W / 18.0534992; -76.3546371
Geography
Location Jamaica
Parent range John Crow Mountains
Official name Blue and John Crow Mountains
Type Mixed
Criteria iii, vi, x
Designated 2015 (39th session)
Reference no. 1356
State Party Jamaica
Region Americas

The John Crow Mountains are a range of mountains in Jamaica. They extend parallel with the north east coast of the island, bounded to the west by the banks of the Rio Grande, and joining with the eastern end of the Blue Mountains in the southeast. The highest point in the range is a little over 3,750 feet (1,140 m).

The name John Crow first recorded in the 1820s and comes from the Jamaican name for the turkey vulture. It has been suggested that previous to this, the range was known as the "Carrion Crow Ridge", after an earlier name for the vulture. In 1885 Inspector Herbert T. Thomas of the local constabulary began an attempt to reach the highest peak of the range, and in 1890 was successful, publishing an account in his book 'Untrodden Jamaica'.He requested the then governor Sir Henry Blake to consent that they be renamed the Blake Mountains, but admits in his book the change met with opposition. The new name did not stick and they remain the John Crow Mountains.

In 1920 the explorer Scoresby Routledge claimed to have been the first person to have crossed the John Crow mountains, leading to an exchange of letters in The Times regarding Inspector Thomas's prior claim. The matter was settled by the Jamaican Surveyor-General, who decided that though Thomas had been the first to scale the highest peak, and explore the ridge in a north-south direction, Mr. Routledge had traversed the valley and further range beyond: and thus he first "actually crossed them from west to east".


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Wikipedia

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