Various starting points for the cycle of disturbances have been proposed: the February 1934 labour agitation in
British Honduras (which ended in a riot in September) the May–July 1934 sugar estate disturbance on
Trinidad (which broke out on several estates in the central sugar belt, involving over 15,000
Indo-Trinidadian labourers), and the January 1935
Saint Kitts sugar strike. In any event, after St Kitts (which turned into a general strike of agricultural labourers) came a March strike in Trinidad's oilfields and a hunger march to
Port of Spain. In
Jamaica labour protests broke out in May on the island's north coast. Rioting among banana workers in the town of
Oracabessa was followed by a strike of dockworkers in
Falmouth that ended in violence. In September and October there were riots on various sugar estates in
British Guiana; there had been strikes the previous September on five sugar estates on the west coast of
Demerara. In October rioting also took place on
St Vincent in
Kingstown and Camden Park. The year ended with a November strike of coal workers in
St Lucia. After a relatively tranquil year in 1936, there was widespread unrest in Trinidad that saw unprecedented cooperation between Indo-Trinidadian and
Afro-Trinidadian labourers, in
Barbados in June 1937, and Jamaica in May to June 1938. The 1937–38 disturbances were of greater magnitude than the 1934–35 ones, which had been more localized. In Trinidad, for example, the protest began in the oilfields but eventually spread to the sugar belt and the towns. In Barbados the disorder that started in
Bridgetown spread to rural areas, In Jamaica most areas of the island experienced serious strikes and disturbances. At least two ending points have also been suggested: the Jamaican cane-cutters' strike of 1938 or the major February 1939 strike at the Plantation Leonora in British Guiana, which led to further disturbances. In 1937, there were numerous deaths as strikes descended into riots, At least 429 were injured, with thousands detained and prosecuted. Women played a crucial role at almost every level of the popular protests. As workers, many women were involved in the planning and execution of the strikes, and they were active in radical organizations such as the
Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. The Caribbean unrest was not limited to British colonies: massive strikes took place in independent
Cuba in 1930, 1933 and 1935, as well as a hunger march by sugar workers on French
Martinique in February 1935. ==Causes==