Kingston
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Join Britannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work!Kingston, city, capital, and chief port of Jamaica, sprawling along the southeastern coast of the island, backed by the Blue Mountains. It is famous for its fine natural harbour, which is protected by the Palisadoes, a narrow peninsula that has been developed as a recreational and tourist resort.

Kingston was founded in 1692 after Port Royal, at the mouth of the harbour, was destroyed by an earthquake. The core of the old city is a consciously planned rectangle with streets in a grid pattern. In 1703 the city became the commercial capital, and in 1872 the political capital, of Jamaica. On several occasions it was almost destroyed by fire, and in January 1907 it suffered a violent earthquake.
In the main streets of the city, modern buildings contrast sharply with the decaying architectural relics of former centuries. The Church of St. Thomas, on King Street, the chief thoroughfare, was first built before 1699 but was rebuilt after the earthquake in 1907. At the eastern limits of the town stands Rockfort, a moated fortress dating from the late 17th century and last manned in 1865. On Duke Street stands Headquarters House (formerly the seat of government), built by Thomas Hibbert, an 18th-century merchant; it is one of the few remaining architectural showpieces of a city once renowned for its fine houses. The Institute of Jamaica on East Street maintains a public library, museum, and art gallery especially devoted to local interests. The University of the West Indies (founded 1948) is at Mona, 5 miles (8 km) from Kingston’s city centre. The Royal Botanical Gardens are at nearby Hope.
By the 1980s most of the old wharves had been demolished and the entire waterfront redeveloped with hotels, shops, offices, a cultural centre, and cruise and cargo ship facilities. The airport at Palisadoes has domestic and international service. A government-owned railway ran from Kingston to most of Jamaica’s 14 parishes over 210 miles (340 km) of track until 1992, when operation ceased because of lack of funding and low passenger usage. A few rail lines still function to transport bauxite.
Since 1923 the small parish of the original Kingston has merged physically and administratively with St. Andrew parish. More than one-quarter of the population of the whole country lives within the boundaries of the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation. Pop. (2011) Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation, 662,426.
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