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LOS ISLANDS (ISLAS DE LOS 1DOLos) , a See also: group of islands off the See also: coast of French See also: Guinea, West See also: Africa, lying See also: south of Sangarea See also: Bay, between 90 25' and 90 31' N. and 13° 46' and 13° 51' W., and about 8o m
.
N.N.W. of See also: Freetown, Sierra Leone
.
There are five See also: principal islands: Tamara, Factory, See also: Crawford, See also: White (or Ruma) and
See also: Coral
.
The two largest islands are Tamara and Factory, Tamara, some 8 m. long by 1 to 2 M. broad, being the largest
.
These two islands lie parallel to each other, Tamara to the west; they See also: form a sort of See also: basin, in the centre of which is the islet of Crawford
.
The two other islands are to the south
.
The See also: archipelago is of volcanic formation, Tamara and Factory islands forming See also: part of a ruined See also: crater, with Crawford See also: Island as the See also: cone
.
The highest point is a knoll, some 450 ft. above See also: sea-level, in Tamara
.
All the islands are richly clothed with palm trees and flowering underwood
.
Tamara has a See also: good harbour, and contains the principal See also: settlement
.
The inhabitants, about 1500, are immigrants of the Baga tribe of Senegambian negroes, whose home is the coast See also: land between the Pongo and Nunez See also: rivers
.
These are chiefly farmers
.
The See also: Church of
See also: England has a flourishing See also: mission, with a native pastorate
.
At one See also: time the islands were a See also: great seat of slave-traders and pirates
.
The latter are supposed to have buried large amounts of treasure in them
.
In an endeavour to stop the slave See also: trade and piracy, the islands were garrisoned (1812-1813) by See also: British troops, but the unhealthiness of the See also: climate led to their withdrawal
.
In 1818 See also: Sir See also: Charles McCarthy, governor of Sierra Leone, obtained the cession of the islands to Great Britain from the chiefs of the Baga country, and in 1882
See also: France recognized them to be a British possession
.
They were then the headquarters of several Sierra Leone traders
.
By article 6 of the Anglo-French See also: convention of the 8th of See also: April 1904, the islands were ceded to France
.
They were desired by France because of their See also: geographical position, Konakry, the capital of French Guinea, being built on an islet but 3 M. from Factory Island, and at the mercy of long range artillery planted thereon
.
The islands derive their name from the sacred images found on them by the early See also: European navigators
.
See A
.
B
.
See also: Ellis, West See also: African Islands (See also: London, 1885), and the See also: works cited under FRENCH GUINEA
.
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