The origin of Kingston is bound up with one of the greatest catastrophes in Caribbean history. In 1692, a devastating earthquake and the tsunami that followed destroyed Port Royal, the prosperous and celebrated pirate city at the tip of a peninsula, across the bay. A large part of the city literally sank beneath the sea, and thousands of people died. The survivors needed a new place to settle.
And so, in 1692, Kingston was founded on the mainland, on the other side of the enormous natural harbor, on land that had been an estate. The new city was planned to take in the refugees from Port Royal and grew quickly, taking advantage of one of the great geographic assets of the place: Kingston Harbour is one of the largest and best-protected natural harbors in the world, ideal for maritime trade.
Over the following decades, Kingston established itself as the main commercial center of Jamaica, while the colony's official capital remained Spanish Town, the old city founded by the Spanish. Port activity, trade —including the infamous trade in enslaved people, as Kingston was one of the great slaving ports of the Caribbean— and sugar drove the city's growth throughout the 18th century.
Throughout the 18th century, Kingston grew into the commercial heart of Jamaica and one of the most important ports in the British Caribbean. Its extraordinary harbor made it ideal for trade, and the city prospered on the export of sugar and rum produced on the island's plantations, and on commerce in general.
A dark and central part of that prosperity was slavery. Kingston was one of the largest ports of arrival for enslaved Africans in the Americas: through its port passed, in atrocious conditions, hundreds of thousands of Africans who were sold and destined for the plantations of Jamaica and other colonies. The economy of the city and of the whole island rested on this brutal and unjust system.
Kingston's population grew with that mix of British settlers, merchants, an Afro-descendant majority —enslaved first, free later— and various communities. The abolition of slavery, decreed in 1834 (preceded by rebellions such as Sam Sharpe's in 1831), transformed Jamaican society. Kingston kept growing as a commercial and urban center, and its weight was such that in 1872 it officially became the capital of Jamaica, displacing Spanish Town.
In 1872, Kingston was designated capital of Jamaica, officially recognizing its economic and demographic dominance over Spanish Town, the old colonial capital. The city thus consolidated its role as the political, as well as commercial, center of the British colony. But the 20th century opened with a new tragedy that recalled the city's vulnerability to natural disasters.
In 1907, a strong earthquake shook Kingston, causing numerous casualties and great damage in the city center, followed by fires. It was one of the worst disasters in Jamaica's history. After the catastrophe, Kingston had to be rebuilt, which shaped its urban development in the following decades and much of the Downtown we know today.
Throughout the 20th century, the city grew enormously, driven by migration from the countryside to the city: thousands of rural Jamaicans came to Kingston in search of work and opportunity, swelling the working-class neighborhoods and the social housing (the 'government yards') in areas like Trench Town. That growth, with its lights and shadows —poverty, overcrowding, but also an intense community and cultural life—, would be the breeding ground for one of Kingston's great gifts to the world: reggae.
Perhaps Kingston's greatest legacy to the world is neither economic nor political, but musical. In the city's working-class neighborhoods, especially Trench Town —a cluster of social housing in west Kingston—, a musical revolution took shape over the 20th century that would conquer the planet. From the mix of Afro-Jamaican rhythms, mento, the influence of American rhythm and blues and the creativity of young people from the ghettos, ska, rocksteady and, finally, reggae were born in succession.
Reggae, which emerged towards the end of the 1960s, became much more than a musical genre: it was the voice of the poor, of resistance, of Rastafari spirituality and of a message of unity, justice and hope. And its greatest figure, born and shaped in this environment, was Bob Marley, who together with the Wailers (Peter Tosh, Bunny Wailer) took Jamaican reggae and its message to every corner of the world, becoming a universal icon.
Kingston was the epicenter of this explosion: here were the recording studios, the sound systems, the legendary producers and the neighborhoods where music was life. Trench Town, immortalized in songs like 'No Woman, No Cry', is revered as the birthplace of reggae. In 2018, UNESCO recognized Jamaica's reggae music as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, officially enshrining the extraordinary cultural contribution born in the streets of Kingston.
On August 6, 1962, Jamaica gained its independence from the United Kingdom, and Kingston consolidated itself as the capital of the new independent country: political center, seat of government, economic engine and cultural heart of the nation. The city lived the following decades with the intensity and contrasts typical of a great Caribbean capital: growth, modernization in the uptown area, but also social challenges, inequality and, in certain periods, problems of violence linked to poverty and politics in some neighborhoods.
Throughout these decades, Kingston maintained and expanded its enormous cultural weight. It remained the world capital of reggae and dancehall, genres that continued to evolve and project Jamaica to the world. Its cultural institutions —the National Gallery, the museums, the universities—, its artistic, literary and culinary scene, and its urban life all developed. The figure of Bob Marley, who died in 1981, became an eternal symbol of the city and the country.
Today Kingston is a vibrant metropolis of several hundred thousand inhabitants (more than a million in its metropolitan area), full of energy, contrasts and authenticity. For the traveler who wants to go beyond the beach postcard, the capital offers the true soul of Jamaica: its music, its history, its cuisine, its people and its culture. It is, without doubt, one of the most fascinating cities with the strongest identity in all the Caribbean.