Mandeville, the parish capital is located at
latitude 17°51'N,
longitude 77°38'W. Manchester is bordered by
St. Elizabeth in the west,
Clarendon in the east and by
Trelawny in the north. Manchester covers an area of 830 km2, making it Jamaica's sixth-largest parish. It has three mountain ranges — the Carpenters Mountains, the May Day Mountains, and the Don Figuerero Mountains. The highest point is above
sea level in the Carpenters Mountains. Manchester is divided into four political districts (constituencies): North-West, North-East, Central and Southern Manchester. Over 90% of the parish's surface is limestone so there is an abundance of cockpits,
sinkholes,
caves and underground passages. Gourie Cave, near
Christiana, is the longest of the over 100 caves in the parish, as well as the longest known cave in Jamaica (3505m). Smokey Hole Cave, in Cross Keys, is the deepest known cave on the island (194m). Oxford Cave, near Auchtembeddie, in the NW part of the parish, is another of the major speleological sites found in Manchester, and was once noted as a roosting site for the now possibly extinct bat species
Phyllonycteris aphylla. Manchester also has large
bauxite deposits, with parts of the parish having been strip-mined as a result, notably in William's Field, Hope, and Blue Mountain. The parish offers a variety of
climate,
vegetation and
scenery. The capital, Mandeville, is situated at an
elevation of . The town is noted for its climate, and
temperatures range from a low of in December and January, to a high of in July and August. There are very few
rivers in the parish, and the existing ones are rather small; Alligator Hole River, Alligator Pond River,
Gut River, Hector's River, Two Rivers, and Swift River. Hector's River runs along the border of Manchester and
Trelawny, sinks at Troy where it flows underground for approximately six kilometers and rises below Oxford Cave as One Eye River. Despite this, water supply is generally scarce; the southern districts often suffer
drought. ==Commerce==