Online Encyclopedia

JERSEY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 331 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JERSEY  , the largest of the Channel Islands, belonging to

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Great Britain . Its chief
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town, St Helier, on the south coast of the island, is in 490 12' N., 2° 7' W., 105 M . S. by E. of Portland
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Bill on the
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English coast, and 24 M. from the French coast to the east . Jersey is the southernmost of the more important islands of the
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group . It is of oblong form with a length of ro m. from east to west and an extreme breadth of 64 m . The
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area is 28,717 acres, or 45 sq. m . Pop . (1901), 52,576 . The island reaches its greatest
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elevation (nearly 500 ft.) in the north, the
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land rising sharply from the north coast, and displaying bold and picturesque cliffs towards the sea . The east, south and west coasts consist of a succession of large open bays, shallow and rocky, with marshy or sandy shores separated by rocky head-lands . The
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principal bays are Greve au Lancons, Greve de Lecq, St John's and Bouley Bays on the north coast; St Catherine's and Grouville Bays on the east; St Clement's, St
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Aubin's and St Brelade's Bays on the south; and St Ouen's
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Bay, the wide sweep of which occupies nearly the whole of the west coast . The sea in many places has encroached greatly on the land, and sand drifts have been found troublesome, especially on the west coast .

The

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surface of the country is broken by winding valleys having a general direction from north to south, and as they approach the south uniting so as to form small plains . The lofty hedges which bound the small enclosures into which Jersey is divided, the trees and shrubberies which
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line the roads and cluster round the uplands and in almost every nook of the valleys unutilized for pasturage or tillage, give the island a luxuriant appearance, neutralizing the
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bare effect of the few sandy plains and sand-covered hills . Fruits and flowers indigenous to warm . climates grow freely in the open air . The land, under careful cultivation, is rich and productive, the
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soil being generally a deep loam, especially in the valleys, but in the west shallow,
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light and sandy . The subsoil is usually gravel, but in some parts an unfertile clay . Some two-thirds of the
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total area is under cultivation, great numbers of cattle being pastured, and much market gardening practised . The potato crop is very large . The peasants take
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advantage of every bit of wall and every 'isolated nook of ground for growing fruit trees . Grapes are ripened under glass; oranges can be grown in sheltered situations, but the most
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common fruits are apples, which are used for cider, and
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pears . A manure of burnt sea-weed (vraic) is generally used . The pasturage is very rich, and is much improved by the application of this manure to the surface . The breed of cattle is kept pure by stringent
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laws against the importation of
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foreign horse to Queen Mary; and lord chamberlain to William III. and animals .

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milk is used almost exclusively to manufacture Queen Anne . In 1696 he represented his country at the congress i butter . The cattle are always housed in winter, but remain out at
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night from May till
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October . There was formerly a small black breed of horses
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peculiar to the island, but horses are now chiefly imported from France or England . Pigs are kept principally for
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local consumption, and only a few sheep are reared . Fish are not so plentiful as round the shores of Guernsey, but
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mackerel, turbot,
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cod,
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mullet and especially the conger
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eel are abundant at the Minquiers . There is a large
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oyster bed between Jersey and France, but partly on account of over-dredging the supply is not so abundant as formerly . There is a great variety of other shell fish . The
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fisheries,
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ship-
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building and boat-building employ many of the inhabitants . Kelp and iodine are manufactured from sea-weed . The principal exports are granite, fruit and vegetables (especially potatoes), butter and cattle; and the chief imports
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coal and articles of human consumption . Communications with England are maintained principally from Southampton and
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Weymouth, and there are
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regular steamship services from Granville and St Maio on the French coast .

The Jersey railway runs west from St Helier round St Aubin's Bay to St Aubin, and continues to Corbiere at the south-western extremity of the island; and the Jersey eastern railway follows the

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southern and eastern coasts to Gorey . The island is intersected with a network of good roads . Jersey is under a distinct and in several respects different form of administrative government from Guernsey and the smaller islands included in the bailiwick of Guernsey . For its peculiar constitution,
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system of justice, ecclesiastical arrangements and
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finance, see CHANNEL ISLANDS . There are twelve parishes, namely St Helier, Grouville, St Brelade, St Clement, St John, St Laurence, St Martin, St Mary, St Ouen, St Peter, St Saviour and Trinity . The population of the island nearly doubled between 1821 and 1901, but decreased from 54,518 to 52,576 between 1891 and 1901 . The
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history of Jersey is treated under CHANNEL ISLANDS . Among
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objects of antiquarian
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interest, a cromlech near Mont Orgueil is the finest of several examples . St Brelade's church, probably the
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oldest in the island,
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dates from the 12th century; among the later churches St Helier's, of the 14th century, may be mentioned . There are also some very early chapels, considered to date from the loth century or earlier; among these may be noted the Chapelle-es-Pecheurs at St Brelade's, and the picturesque
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chapel in the grounds of the
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manor of Rozel . The castle of Mont Orgueil, of which there are considerable remains, is believed to be founded upon the site of a
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Roman stronghold, and a " Caesar's fort " still forms a
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part of it .

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