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Square-rigger to Saba: Caribbean Island Has Thrived for Centuries
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# : |
12197 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
2 / 1987 |
3,653 Words |
| Author
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Lowell D. Holmes Lowell D. Holmes is professor and chairman of the Department
of Anthropology at Wichita State University. |
Our destination, Nelson's Dockyard in the village of English Harbour, lay ten miles across the Caribbean island of Antigua, and our trip should have involved our first romantic encounter with a tropical night in the West Indies. But romance quickly turned to terror as we boarded a new Toyota taxicab and began hurtling through the pitch-black night. On a serpentine road posted with a 40 km speed limit, we raced through dimly lit villages and sugarcane fields at 95 km per hour. Our jovial, extroverted driver magnanimously offered, "If there is anything you would like to know about my island just ask." Since he turned his head around to answer each of our questions, we quickly elected silence, offered up fervent prayers for our deliverance, and searched in vain for seat belts.
In what must have been minutes, but seemed like hours, we reached the end of our ordeal when the taxi's headlights illuminated a young man, wearing a T-shirt that read ROMANCE, standing in the road. That was Andrew waiting to meet us.
Nelson's Dockyard was poorly lighted and steeped in an aura of antiquity. The place, which has existed since 1746, had served Admirals Nelson, Rodney, and Hood as a stronghold against the Spanish, Portuguese, French, and Dutch during the Napoleonic wars. Today the dockyard is still functional. Operated by an American yachtsman, V.E.B. Nicholson, and his two sons, the yard is primarily a yacht chartering facility, but much has been preserved or restored as a moment to its early place in seafaring history. The admiral's house (now a museum), the Porter's Lodge, the Guard House, Engineer's Workshop, Sail Loft, and Paymaster's House, as well as capstans and bollards, stand much as they did in the eighteenth century. Even the
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