
Charity, Pomeroon River, is said to have existed about 3000 years ago. It has a population of 5000 and exhibits a well laid out housing scheme which is ever developing. This small township is the main intransit point leading to Region One, Venezuela and Trinidad and holds a rich cultural heritage.
Charity has all the basic amenities inclusive of banking and customs facility as well as road and river transport system. It is an exciting hub for tourists.
Originally, Charity was occupied by the Dutch settlers in 1640. In the area of Vryden Hope, cotton was cultivated. By 1840, the Portuguese occupied much of the abandoned Dutch plantations in the lower Pomeroon, and the area of Vryden Hope was divided and part of it was allocated as Charity by Alfred Surroung and Manuel Gouveia. These two families cultivated coffee and established the first steam-driven coffee mill in 1896. The intermarriages of Goveias, Vansluytman and Stolls saw the rapid economic and cultural development of this enclave. At that time, the Portuguese land owners were solely dependent on African and indentured laborers to cultivate their farm lands.
Access to the Pomeroon River was by the Tapakuma Lake or by sea until the road link between Dartmouth and Charity was discovered in 1908. The trail was discovered by three young hunters- Jerry Goveia, John Baharally and Gusy Surroung. It was an early morning expedition by these three trail blazers. The starting point was at the eastern end of the Charity coffee estate now known as “bamboo bridge.” After trailing for eight hours in swamps and tall grass teeming with wildlife, they saw rising smoke in a remote direction and followed it only to discover that they had reached an Essequibo civilization.
