Thursday, January 17, 2002, The Daily News Opinion Christiansted's fascinating history Oas- DaLis. an ecologist liver on St. Cii. He is a DAil News ceumribut- hW faimdtiiVl. This weekend the St. Croix Hiking Assiocialion will be touring historic Christiansted town. Hiking not only includes out in the bush. but also touring our historic towns. It was Nov. 16.1733. when he direc. trasofh Danish West IndiandGuinea Co. instructed Frederik Moth. the irst goveMnor of St. Croix tO find a suitable site to establish a fon and town in the newly purchased colony. This town was to he called Chnstiansted. The town was to be suhbdwided into regular building lots and the lots were to he sold with the stipulatinn that buyers were to build im their lots within live years from the purchase dlail. As Moth arrived on St. Croix from St Thomas. he explored the island and chose te fIorncr French village called Bassin on the northenas c.st SL. Croix as the site lor Christianmied He derived themrea to the company directors as large enough to conanin a town the size of Copenhagen He also promised the directors that Christinnstcd would he well laid out with streets as straight as those in Chlritiania. no1w Oslo. Norway Also he mentioned that ih hbest buhilings would he built in the vicinity ofr thc fort. while the poorer class buildings would be located on the outskirts orthc town. During his administration as govcmor ofSt. Cruix from 1734 to 1736 and then as governor of the Danish West Indies, from 1736 to 1744. Moth did hisbee to fidfl his promises to the company direct. tors. The first colonists arrived in Christiansted from St. Thomas on Sept. l, 1734. They immediately stan-. ed work on the construction of an earthwork, which was later convened into Fort Christianvacm. Moth used he fort as the focal point to lay out the streets ofthe town. On May 2, 1735. he sported back to the compa- ny directors in Copenhagen explaining to them that he had laid ou the first sre in the town with a width of 40 feet. According to historians, this street must have been Strand Street since Moth mcttioned granting several lots measur- "I Olasee Davis ing 100 feet along the street and 150 feet deep to the sea. e also mentioned other lots to he gnrntcd with only 100 feet deep. le fur- ther stated that the frontage along the street would be according to the needs and desires of individual buyers. Moth When Moth became governor of the Danish West Indies, he moved his headquarters to Charlotte Amalia, St. Thomas. However, this didn't stop him from directing the development of Christiansted town. then set aside a"n around the Iot for the construction of the customhouse. company residences, and warehouses on the waterfront of Christianstcd. When Moth became governor of the Danish West Indies, he moved his head- quartesto Charlotte Amalia. St. Thomas. However, this didn't stop him from ditrecingthedevlopmsntofChristiansted town. In the first decade of the town's exis- tence, it developed slowly because the first setlrs were planters who were too busy clearing land for cultivation. In 1742 there were about 20 inhabitants in the town. The slow growth of the town was also due to the high prices for building lots as compared to prices for plantations. A building code was also established for the town. The book "The Towns" by Herbert Olsen. Hans Henrik Engrqvist, Peter Bredsdorff. Lric Pettersson and Ok Svensson mentioned the codes in detail of how the town should be developed These codes are as follows: Owners were to obtain deeds to their lots within 14 days or forfeit them: good houses of either masonry or wood with shingled roofs were to be built fawing the street within three monsl and all how.- es built ofwood within town limits were to be built on footings or foundations. except on Strand Streetwhere they might be built on pilings. No house was to be built without con. suiting the government's surveyor iii order to ensure that the houses were built in a stmight line and that a passage 3 feet to4 liel wide was kept between houses." Thi code continued: No f .' colored person was to live in any other pan ol'toi i other lhan iluin section laidout for them by the surveyor, and no rIe colored person was to he granted a building lot larger thin 30 feet by 30 feet. Slaves were forbidden to live among the free colored population. Thatched roofs were prohibited within the town limits. mand houses already cov- cnrl with diri naternal wen: it be shin- gled within three ionthlls. The poorer class of people might connnue to thatch the roots of their houses with straw hii only on the western outskirts and water- fiont ofthe town. The importance of the building code was to control the development of the town as it continued to grow. In 1749, the final step in developing Christianstel in an orderly fashion was to establish a public cemetery on the western outskirts of the town. Burials csewhcre within the town wern prohibited except within the walls of churches in the town, In 1755 the town witnessed a signifi- cant growth in population because the capital of the Danish West Indies was transferred again from Charlotte Anmatlia to Christiansted. Frederik Moth irly deserves the title of the founder of Christiansted. Today. Christiansted's historic town is one of the best in the world for its size.