US MILITARY OCCUPATION OF TRINIDAD
by Simeon Humphrey
Post date: Apr 17, 2021 11:46:11 PM
Simeon Humphrey
The history of the US occupation of Trinidad is not widely known here or in the rest of the Caribbean. Caribbean people, including citizens of Trinidad and Tobago, know little about the American occupation of the then British colonies during and after the Second World War. During a recent discussion with some comrades, objection was raised to the use of the term “occupation” to describe the experience .
We must not allow a definition of 'occupation' given by the British colonial power to mislead us into believing that the deal they made with the US during World War II to give lands across the West Indian islands in exchange for 50 old naval assets did not result in the military occupation of our country with its attendant violence, discrimination and plunder. They engaged in land dispossession, rape, murder, bullying and violence against local people and created " Federal military preserves " where local law and authority had no jurisdiction.
Both my father and grand-father worked with the Yankees during the occupation so my knowledge is first grounded in their oral histories and later records of the US and British Imperial archives. There were several military bases in Trinidad but none in Tobago. The Chaguaramas naval base occupied the entire northwest peninsula of Trinidad and all the adjacent islands at the entrance to the Gulf of Paria. Military historian and former TT Coast Guard chief Gaylord Kelshall has written books on the history of the strategic role and importance of this naval base to the US /UK war effort and the battle for the Atlantic sea lanes.
The Fort Reid army airbase at Wallerfield was the logistical hub for the North African campaign and was the largest airbase in the world during that period. It was not unusual to find the body of a local woman with her throat slit in one of the rivers traversing this base after a weekend.
The Andrews Sisters immortalised the prostitution driven by the Chaguaramas occupation when they stole the calypso composed by Lord Invader which celebrated "Drinking rum and Coca Cola, going down Point Cumana..." Point Cumana and Carenage being the villages at the entrance to the US " Federal " territory. The US Army established its first training school for jungle warfare on the north Manzanilla Peninsula and it operated thus until its transfer to Panama after the war. A primary mission of the military occupation of Trinidad was to also protect the several oil refineries located here which supplied the fuel for the US/British war machine during and after WW 2!
Other smaller bases were located at Carlsen Field, Couva, Cedros and there was an emergency landing strip at Toco, Kelshall also created and curated the Chaguaramas Military Museum, which now faces demise since his death since, with the exception of the annual November Remembrance Day ceremony, none of the neo-colonial regimes since 1962 have examined that aspect of our history and paid proper respect, gratitude or reparations to the people who were subject to the occupation.
The Chaguaramas base was also the site of one of the OMEGA navigation stations which allowed Polaris submarines to circumnavigate the globe before satellites took over and it was also the site of one of the radar tracking stations used for the Apollo missions.
Much more information can be obtained from the archives of the Imperial War College and Pentagon and US Naval archives. I hope this helps you obtain more perspective on our region’s role in the military adventures of the empires.
ARMED FORCES RADIO WVDI
In May 1943 the U.S. Armed Forces Radio Station WVDI commenced regular broadcasts to the service men at the Chaguaramas base in Trinidad. Although intended for the military personnel situated at the U.S. Naval base in Chaguaramas, the 250-watt signal could also be heard faintly throughout the Island.
While the transmission was not intended for general consumption Trinidadians tuned in as rock and roll was dawning in America and gaining popularity in Trinidad.
The station also provided a platform for local Calypso musicians whose performances were broadcast and proved to be very popular. Holly Betaudier, during the 1950s, worked as an announcer at the American Naval Base in Chaguaramas and the WVDI Station. He was the host of "Holly's Happy Moments," a popular radio show that featured the best of local talent He utilised his position at the U.S. Armed Forces radio service network WVDI in the 1940s to promote calypso and parang music.
Boscoe Holder also had his own programme, Piano Ramblings, on the U.S. Armed Forces Radio Station, WVDI. The show aired every Sunday afternoon. His dance company also performed constantly at various Officers’ Clubs and U.S.O.’s, and Holder was commissioned by scores of servicemen to paint their portraits. On Saturday mornings from 10 a.m. you could her at least 4 episodes of comic strip heroes: Lone Ranger, Flash Gordon, Hopalong Cassidy and Roy Rogers.
The social pathology associated with occupation by military forces repeated itself in the aftermath of the invasion of Grenada by the US and its regional puppet forces in 1983.
The Grenadian owner of the popular disco in the Lagoon, St. Georges bitterly recounted to me how a Jamaican soldier one Friday night loaded a round in his SLR and threatened to shoot him because he would not allow the soldier to enter his disco to party without paying the entrance fee like everyone else.
The Grenadian comrades from that period would know both the owner and the name of the business place!