New Market is a small town in the parish of Saint Elizabeth, Jamaica.
S. J. Manley, the paternal grandfather of Norman Manley, was a shopkeeper at Kepp, New Market, in the 1860s.[1] His grave was rediscovered in 2016.[2]
In June 1979, New Market was heavily affected by floods induced by Tropical Depression One, which caused the deaths of 41 people across Jamaica.[3] A "lake district" was created at New Market, covering 600 acres of land with water up to 90 feet deep.[4]
Even after some flood waters had receded, the government reported that New Market was still "buried under 80 feet of water." The government proposed to build a new settlement in the area of the town at Mocho, and a new health centre. By February 1980, only half of the flooded areas at New Market were free of water.
The new town was built by the Urban Development Corporation and was named Lewisville after the Cleve Lewis, a former member of parliament (MP) for the area and the father of Neville Lewis, the MP at the time of the flood and reconstruction. The market at Lewsville housed "a butchery, a cold storage area and an area set aside for the sale of fish," while the town centre housed a branch of the People's Cooperative Bank, a memorial garden for flood victims, a health centre, police station, and community centre. These were surrounded by 14 house or shop units, valued at between $45,000–$50,000 Jamaican dollars. On 9 December 1983, Lewisville was officially opened by Edward Seaga, the Prime Minister of Jamaica.[5]