Sea Islands

islands, United States
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Also known as: Golden Islands

Sea Islands, low-lying chain of about 100 sandy islands off the Atlantic Ocean coast of the southeastern United States. The islands stretch for some 300 miles (480 km), generally southwestward and then southward along the coasts of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida between the mouths of the Santee and St. Johns rivers and along the Intracoastal Waterway.

The islands were inhabited by Native American tribes such as the Creek and Guale when the Spanish claimed and partly occupied them in 1568. By the end of the 17th century, the English had made them part of the Carolina colony. In 1717 several of the Georgia islands were granted to Robert Montgomery, who included them in his Margravate of Azilia on the mainland; he termed the group Golden Islands in a promotional booklet (1720). Amelia Island, settled in 1735 by James Edward Oglethorpe, the founder of Georgia colony, became part of East Florida; it became Spanish in 1783 and was ceded to the United States with the rest of Florida in 1821.

The Sea Islands were early looked upon as private kingdoms. St. Catherines was awarded to Mary Musgrove, a Creek princess, in payment of a debt claimed against Oglethorpe; it later came into the possession of Button Gwinnett, one of Georgia’s three signers of the Declaration of Independence. In the antebellum period, almost all of Sapelo Island became the domain of Thomas Spalding, a prominent Georgia slaveholder, planter, and legislator. In the last half of the 19th century, Jekyll Island was made an exclusive winter playground for members of the Jekyll Island Club; the Carnegie family also secured most of Cumberland Island for the same purpose. Jekyll Island was bought by the state of Georgia and since 1947 has been the site of a state park, and Cumberland Island National Seashore was established in 1972.

Island, New Caledonia.
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Rice and cotton were cultivated, especially on St. Helena and Port Royal (long the most economically important of the islands), and the fine long-staple Sea Island cotton was developed in the islands. After the American Civil War, abandoned plantations were confiscated and land given to formerly enslaved people. In the 1920s, after the boll weevil had infested cotton crops, a more diversified agriculture was developed, and shrimp, crab, and oysters were harvested.

The islands have a subtropical climate. The mainland-facing sides are generally marshy, while the ocean-facing sides are sandy. East-facing beaches and sand dunes covered with sea oats give way to stands of palmetto and live oak hung with Spanish moss. Former farm fields and freshwater ponds stretch to the cordgrass tidal marshes on the western sides of the islands. Wildlife includes white-tailed deer, armadillos, and opossums; dolphins and manatees swim through shallow waters and inlets. The islands’ position on the Atlantic flyway makes them a stopping point for migrating birds. Pelicans and other shorebirds are common. Endangered loggerhead sea turtles nest on the islands, and the waters off southern Georgia and northern Florida are the only breeding ground of the endangered northern right whale (Eubalaena glacialis). The marshes support alligators, herons, egrets, and marsh hens.

The Carolina and Georgia islands retain a predominantly Black population that has developed distinct customs and dialects, notably Gullah. Several wildlife refuges and parks have been established on the islands, some of which are linked to the mainland by causeways and bridges. Although some are resort areas, such as South Carolina’s Hilton Head Island, others are uninhabited. Parris Island (South Carolina) serves as a training base for the U.S. Marine Corps. Other notable points of interest include Fort Sumter National Monument off Charleston, South Carolina; Fort Pulaski National Monument on Tybee Island near Savannah, Georgia; and Fort Frederica National Monument (authorized 1936) on St. Simons Island near Brunswick, Georgia. In 1803, Igbo Landing on St. Simons Island was the site of one of the largest mass suicides of enslaved West Africans in the history of chattel slavery.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.