The 2012 census has a population count of 105.[1] Public healthcare is administered in adjacent towns, such as Charity (district hospital) or Suddie (hospital).[2][3]
Commercial woodcutting was established in the area in 1834, when George Frederick Pickersgill, ex-Justice of the Peace for North-West District (predecessor to modern Regions 1 and 2), and James Chapman operated a troolie (Thatch palm) and woodcutting business at the confluence of the Pomeroon and its tributary, the Arapiaco. Pickersgill Saw Mills Ltd. was a presence here, as well as in Pomeroon and Essquibo,[4] and up to the 1950s a large sawmill remained at Pickersgill.[5]
In 1887, due to Venezuelan encroachment on the British claim to Guiana, the Colonial Government installed police stations in the North Western district.[6][7]
The Pomeroon area is known for producing coconuts and other cash crops,[8] and Pickersgill has been of interest for agricultural improvement.[9]