|
Bahamas Travel Guide &
Location Information
The
Commonwealth of The Bahamas is an
independent English-speaking nation
in the West Indies. An archipelago
of 700 islands and cays (which are
small islands), the Bahamas is
located in the Atlantic Ocean, east
of Florida in the United States,
north of Cuba and the Caribbean, and
northwest of the British dependency
of the Turks and Caicos Islands.
Christopher Columbus's first
landfall in the New World in 1492 is
believed to have been on the island
of San Salvador (also called
Watling's Island), in the
southeastern Bahamas. He encountered
Taino (also known as Lucayan)
Amerindians and exchanged gifts with
them.
Taino Indians from both northwestern
Hispaniola and northeastern Cuba
moved into the southern Bahamas
about the 7th century AD and became
the Lucayans. They appear to have
settled the entire archipelago by
the 12th century AD. There may have
been as many as 40,000 Lucayans
living in the Bahamas when Columbus
arrived.
The Bahamian Lucayans were deported
to Hispaniola as slaves, and within
two decades Taino societies ceased
to exist as a separate population
due to forced labour, warfare,
disease, emigration and outmarriage.
Some say the name 'Bahamas' derives
from the Spanish for "shallow sea",
baja mar. Others trace it to the
Lucayan word for Grand Bahama
Island, ba-ha-ma ("large upper
middle land").
After the Lucayans were destroyed,
the Bahamian islands were deserted
until the arrival of English
settlers from Bermuda in 1650. Known
as the Eleutherian Adventurers,
these people established settlements
on the island now called Eleuthera
(from the Greek word for freedom).
The Bahamas became a British crown
colony in 1718 but remained sparsely
settled until the newly independent
United States expelled thousands of
American Tories and their slaves.
Many of these British Loyalists were
given compensatory land grants in
Canada and the Bahamas. Some 8,000
loyalists and their slaves moved to
the Bahamas in the late 1700s from
New York, Florida and the Carolinas.
The British granted the islands
internal self-government in 1964
and, in 1973, Bahamians achieved
full independence while remaining a
member of the Commonwealth of
Nations. Since the 1950s, the
Bahamian economy has prospered based
on the twin pillars of tourism and
financial services. Despite this
however the country still faces
significant challenges in areas such
education, healthcare, correctional
facilites and violent crime and
illegal immigration. The urban
renewal project has been launched in
recent years to help impoverished
urban areas in social decline in the
main islands. Today, the country
enjoys the third highest per capita
income in the western hemisphere.
The Bahamas is an archipelago of
some 700 islands and cays covering
over 100,000 mi˛ (260,000 km˛) of
the Atlantic Ocean between Florida
and Hispaniola. The archipelago has
a total land area of 5,382 square
miles (13,939 km˛)—about 20% larger
than Jamaica—and a population of
some 310,000 concentrated on the
islands of New Providence and Grand
Bahama.
The largest island is Andros Island.
The Biminis are just 50 miles (80
km) east of Florida. The island of
Grand Bahama is home to the second
largest city in the country,
Freeport. The island of Abaco is to
its east. The most southeastern
island is Inagua. Other notable
islands include Eleuthera, Cat
Island, San Salvador, Acklins,
Crooked Island, Exuma and Mayaguana.
Nassau is the capital and largest
city, located on New Providence. The
islands have a subtropical climate,
moderated by the Gulf Stream.
In the southeast, the Caicos Islands
and the Turks islands, and three
more extensive submarine features
called Mouchoir Bank, Silver Bank,
and Navidad Bank, are geographically
a continuation of the Bahamas, but
not part of the Commonwealth of the
Bahamas.
The Bahamas is a stable,
developing nation with an economy
heavily dependent on tourism and
offshore banking. Tourism alone
accounts for more than 60% of GDP
and directly or indirectly employs
almost half of the archipelago's
labour force. Steady growth in
tourism receipts and a boom in
construction of new hotels, resorts,
and residences have led to solid GDP
growth in recent years.
Manufacturing and agriculture
together contribute approximately a
tenth of GDP and show little growth,
despite government incentives aimed
at those sectors. Overall growth
prospects in the short run rest
heavily on the fortunes of the
tourism sector, which depends on
growth in the United States, the
source of the majority of tourist
visitors.
Not everyone has benefitted from the
prosperity of recent years and
Unemployment remains at 10%. The
poverty rate of 9% however, is low
compared to other Caribbean
countries.
The climate of the Bahamas is
subtropical to tropical, and is
moderated significantly by the
waters of the Gulf Stream,
particularly in winter. Conversely,
this often proves very dangerous in
the summer and autumn, when
hurricanes pass near or through the
islands. Hurricane Andrew hit the
northern islands in 1992, and
Hurricane Floyd hit most of the
islands in 1999. Hurricane Frances
of 2004 was expected to be the worst
ever for the islands. Also in 2004,
the northern Bahamas were hit by a
less potent Hurricane Jeanne. In
2005 the northern islands were once
again struck this time by Hurricane
Wilma. Tidal surges and high winds
destroyed homes, schools, floated
graves and made roughly 1,000 people
homeless.
|