Saint Peter (Antiguan and Barbudan Creole: Sen Peetah), officially the Parish of Saint Peter, is a parish of Antigua and Barbuda on the island of Antigua.
Saint Peter is dominated by farmland, savanna, and undeveloped fields, and its borders are not well-defined.
There is almost no settlement in the eastern portion of the parish other than the hamlets of Coconut Hall and Gilberts.
Saint Peter is however home to many historic Amerindian villages, and the Betty's Hope sugar plantation, one of the major symbols of the island.
Saint Peter also has populations of European fallow deer on Guiana Island.
[3] Saint Peter and the four other parishes were permanently established in July 1692, and confirmed in January 1693.
Numerous historical relics from the parish can still be seen today, including the Mercer's Creek[4] and Coconut Hall[5] plantations.
[10] Although the parish is mostly flat and suitable for habitation, most of the population lives in the dense eastern cities on the western border.
[14] The largest religious groups were Anglicans (20.29%), Adventists (15.46%), Pentecostalists (11.22%), Methodists (10.87%), and irreligious people (7.68%).