City/Settlement: Arthur’s Town and Moss Town
Location: About 325 miles southeast of Miami and 130 miles southeast of Nassau/Paradise Island
Size: 48 miles long and one to four miles wide
Population: Approximately 2,000
Images Courtesy of: Bahamas Tourist Office
For more than four centuries, Cat Island was actually called San Salvador, and many believed this was where Christopher Columbus first landed in the new world. However, in 1926 a nearby island was redesignated San Salvador (as it is known today) and the name Cat Island was revived. British Loyalists who were fleeing the newly formed United States settled the island in 1783. They established cotton plantations, but when the cotton industry failed and the slaves were freed, the people of Cat Island turned to farming peas, corn, potatoes and later growing pineapples.
Continental Connection (800-525-0280)
Island Express (800-228-2566),
Bahamasair (800-222-4262)
Southern Air (242-377-2014)
Cat Island Air (242-377-3318)
SkyBahamas (242-377-8993)
Accommodations on Cat Island include:
Bridge Inn (242-342-3013)
Fernandez Bay Village (800-940-1905)
Greenwood Beach Resort & Dive Center (242-342-3053)
Hawk’s Nest Resort & Marina (242-342-7050)
Pigeon Cay Beach Club (242-354-5084)
Sammy T’s Resort (242- 354-6009)
Island HoppInn(242-342-2100)
Shannahs Cove Resort (242-354-4249)
Flamingo Bay Club (352-383-2477)
Deveaux Mansion: At Port Howe, one can see the ruins of the Deveaux Mansion, a two-story, whitewashed building formerly used as a cotton plantation and now overrun with wild vegetation. Deveaux Mansion was once the home of Col. Andrew Deveaux of the U.S. Navy and was given to him as a reward for recapturing Nassau from the Spaniards in 1783.
Hermitage on Mt. Alvernia: The Hermitage, a small monastery at the summit of this mountain, remains shrouded in mystique even to this day. Father Jerome, an Anglican seminarian turned Catholic priest who was well-known for having built cathedrals and convents throughout the islands, built the Hermitage and the rock staircase leading to it as a final act of religious dedication.
New Bight Beach: This active beach, located near the Government administration building, is the site of the annual Cat Island Regatta and is used by the locals for weekend dances and holiday picnics.