m0s F 1659 .N3 N3 o V ^ ""- '^ %. .^^^:^i^.%. ..-\^:4-i;>-. ./.^^»;%% ,."/:i*i:-"--^ <^ 'o . , * C' ,0^ ^^--^ 1 J, - ^:«- H o '^y' '^<^ < o Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/nassauislandofneOOnewy 4 ROYiUL VIC TORIA HOT EL NASSAU With Meteorolo$icat Tables and other Sfafistics Merestini to invalids and Travelers — -"^^ ^ ^ ^ 'V' NASSAU, Island of New Providence, BAHAMAS. A GUIDE TO The Sanitarium of tlie Western Heniispliere, ITS ATTRACTIONS, AND HOW TO GET THERE; ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS, METEOROLOGICAL TABLES, AND OTHER STATISTICS OF INTEREST TO INVALIDS AND TRAVELERS ; INCLUDING "An Isle of June." REPUBLISHED FROM Scribner's Monthly for November, 1877. ISSUED BY THE N™ YORK, NASSAU AND WEST INDiA MAIL STEAMSHIP LINE, '/^SAVANNAH; NASSAU AND HAVANA MAIL STEAMSHIP LINE; (Via St. Au'gustine, Florida ;) AND THE ROYAL VICTORIA HOTEL OF NASSAU, N- P. MURRAY, FERRIS & CO., 62 South Street, N. Y., Agents for the Steamship Lines. ROUTE OP THE ANNAH, ST.AUGUSTINE, NASSAU & HAVANA MAIL STEAMSHIP LINE. ATLANTIC C E A N V e rg L a d e s V S\\ii / //" "^ J' I >l ^ 1 V''i I U Abaco \ I ;,^_ "■"■ ( 1 E V e rgj. a d e s V ^f ^^^ ^' Z/" ' « 7^/ ? \ ^ > "Miami Al/lAr//'^^/ if r^X •/ O' /LnUTHEKA \.^' 6'i';<:'5^4./ NASSAU. N. P. B^HA.]MA^S. 'The air breathes upon us here most sweetly P The Sanitarium of the Western Hemisphere. TO THOSE WHO DESIRE HEALTH, LONG LIFE AND PLEASURE, THE FOLLOWING ' DESCRIPTION OF THE FINEST AND MOST EQUABLE WINTER CLIMATE IN THE WORLD— LOVELY SCENERY! SPLENDId'^YACHTING ! FINE SEA BATH- ING! CHARMING DRIVES! &c., &c., &c.— IS COMMENDED:— The History of the Bahamas began in 1492, when Columbus, the great pioneer, navigator and discoverer of a new world, landed on the shore of Guanahani, and named it "St. Salvador." Commerce did not immediately follow in the wake of dis- covery, but about two hundred and fifty years after that event Pine Apples were grown at and exported from Eleuthera; and fifty years later cotton was extensively cultivated, and Salt and Wood added to the exports. At the present time the col- ony's staples are Salt, Fruit, Sponge, Barks, Dye and Furniture Woods, Guano and Straw, Turtle Shell, Fish Scale, and Shell Work. The articles on exhibition at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia fair- ly represented the productions and manu- factures of the Islands, and both might be indefinitely extended. But it is not the commercial resources of the " Bahamas " only which should make a knowledge of them general. Their equability and wonderful salubrity of climate commend them to all who seek a genial, healthy, life-giving atmosphere. As a winter home for the afflicted, Peter Henry Bruce wrote, nearly a century and a half ago, " It is no wonder the sick fly hither for relief, being sure to find a cure here." Modern travelers also testify that as a resort from damp and cold to sunshine and summer, for those who require change and climatic benefit, the Bahamas offer peculiar advantages. The heat is tempered by an ocean breeze of softness and purity seldom experienced elsewhere. Tropical flowers gladden the eye, and the luscious pine-apple, orange, pomegranate and melon tempt the palate with their freshness and beauty. Fish abound in the clear pellucid waters surrounding these Islands^ and the northern fowl seek a home on the lakes. In a word, the Bahamas seem by nature fitted as a grand sanitarium for the afflicted from the North American Continent, and as a most desirable winter resort for all who wish to escape the rigors of a Northern season. New Providence is the most important of the Bahamas group ; Nassau, its chief and only town, was settled by Euroj^eans' in 1629, since which time it has been the seat of government. It is situated in north latitude 25° 5', and west longitude 77° 20', covering an area of 85 square miles, with a population of about 12,000. Its history is full of interest to the student, but limited space and a desire to place before the reader important facts regarding it as a winter re- sort, compel us to ignore the claims of both history and romance. The City of Nassau is built on the north- ern side of the Island, which slopes down NASSAU, N. P. to the water's edge, affording sure and per- fect drainage. It extends along the water- front for about three miles and back to the crest of the slope, on which stands the Government House, the Royal Victoria Hotel, and many of the finest private resi- dences, at an elevation of about 90 feet from the waters of the harbor. The streets are laid out at right angles with each other, and are uniformly macadamized, as are also the drives around the Island. The houses are, for the most part, built of stone, and the grounds surrounding them are ornamented with flowers and trees. The City has a fine public library of over supply fish in abundance, unrivaled for beauty and size. The Royal Victoria Hotel was built by the Government in i860, to meet the de- mands of invalids and others seeking to avail themselves of the peculiar advantages offered by Nassau for a winter residence, and neither pains nor expense was spared in answering the requirements of the most modern and scientific theories of archi- tecture. The building is of limestone, four stories high ; each of the three first stories being surrounded by a piazza ten feet wide, forming an uninterrupted promenade of STREET IN NASSAU. six thousand volumes. Nassau has as much right to be called "the City of Churches " as our own Brooklyn. All creeds find themselves at home in the services of the various churches and chapels. Tiic drives are not to be excelled — the roads being equal to the best; the scenery, both seaward and inland, is varied and beautiful, and the harbor and neighboring waters afford at once a safe and extensive boating ground ; while the shores are cov- ered with marine treasures in the form of shells and corals. In the interior and on the out Islands game rewards the labors of the sjiortsman ; while the adjacent waters over one thousand feet in extent — affording to those unable to withstand the fatigue of out-door exercise perfect facilities for en- joying the fine scenery and refreshing breezes. The rooms are large and per- fectly ventilated; those of the first, second and third stories being provided with French casements, opening on the piazza, and each door and window having a fan- light. The house is provided with bath- rooms and other modern improvements. The' tanks for rain water exceed 300,000 gallons in capacity; while spring water is forced through the building from a fine well on the premises. The parlors are NASSAU, N. P. large and conveniently situated. The din- ing room will seat one hundred and fifty- persons comfortably. Sea-bathing is con- veniently near the house, and salt water baths, either in the bathing-rooms or pri- vate apartments, can be furnished at all times. The hotel has recently changed hands, the present proprietors being Messrs. Mel- len, Conover and King. Mr. A. L. Mellen, and the Superintendent, Mr. H. L. Hoyt, have been for the past two years connected with the Grand Union Hotel, Saratoga Springs. Mr. A. H. King, of this firm, can be con- sulted as to particulars during the entire season, at 115 Broadway, New York, where plans of the house can be seen and rooms engaged. After an experience of several years, the following mail and passenger service has been arranged as best suited to the require- ments of Nassau as a winter sanitarium and pleasure resort : A first-class steamer, with ample passen- ger accommodations, will be despatched monthly, throughout the year, from New York direct to Nassau, and from thence to Santiago and Cienfuegos on the south side of Cuba, returning to Nassau and thence to New York direct. ^During the winter season a first-class steamer, specially adapted to the carriage of passengers, will be run between Savannah, Ga. ; St. Augustine, Fla. ; Nassau and Ha- vana, leaving Savannah every two weeks, thus forming the most delightful winter excursion ever offered in American waters, combining Florida, Nassau and Havana, with their varied scenes of tropical life. One of the most charming incidents of this trip is the opportunity of taking St. Augustine in the direct route, either by making it the point of departure or stopping over a trip on the arrival of the steamer from Savannah, and seeing the rare old town, with its many balconied houses; its semi-tropical trees and foliage; its long sea-wall, the pride of St. Augustine; its grand old fort "San Marco," standing as it has stood for three hundred years, with its moat, its mossy walls, and its outlook towers. Verily it is a temptation to make the trip, and for a few hours at least, while the steamer waits, imagine yourself a Spaniard of the sixteenth century. Close connections are made at Savannah with the new and elegant steamships of the New York and Savannah Line, both to and from New York, and by railroad with all parts of the country. For further particulars as to routes, &c., consult the Itinerary at the end of this pamphlet. The trip from Savannah to St. Augustine is made in about twelve hours, and from St. Augustine to Nassau in about thirty hours, following the coast line from Savan- nah River nearly south to St. Augustine and Cape Florida, then crossing the Gulf Stream, occupying about five hours, and thence,with Bahama Banks on the right, and the Islands of Grand Bahama and Abaco on the left hand, a pleasant run of a few hours brings the ship into the harbor of Nassau. For the accommodation of visitors to the Island, arrangements have been made by which telegraphic communications may be forwarded to all parts of the country on the arrival of the steamer in St. Augustine or Savannah, and answers received will be brought over by the steamer on her return trip, thus bringing sojourners on the Island almost within telegraphic communication with their own homes. A reference to the subjoined table, com- piled by Surgeon General Bagot, R. A., Avill show the mean temperature at Nassau, during the winter months, for ten years : THERMOMETER AT 9 A. M. November 74° February 71° December. . .... .73° Marcli. .' 72° January 70° April 75° General James Watson Webb, in writ- ing of Nassau in 1870, says : " Madeira is tlie great Sanitarium of Europe, and until lately was considered to be without a riva,l tlirougliout the world. Recently, however, Nassau has not only been proved to be superior to all other localities as a Sanitarium in the New World, but superior also to Madeira itself. From the first November to the first June, there is not, in all prohahility, any spot on the face of the earth so desirable for persons suffering from pulnionary complaints. " Such are the facts of the, case in regard to the climate of Nassau; and extraordinary as they are, when compared with other places on the globe noted for their salubrity, there are great natural causes, visible and apparent to all, why it should be found free from frost, although in Lat. 25° 05' North; and at the same time boasts all the bene- fits of the Tropics, with a warm summer climate, equable as man can desire. Those causes consist in the very peculiar and remarkable position of the Island. Look at the map, and you will at once perceive that on the South it is bounded by the South Atlantic, and the warm waters which constitute that mighty arm of the ocean — the IVASSAU, N. P. Gulf Stream. On the West, that great wonder of the ocean separates it from the continent of America, and again protects Nassau on the North, and modifies all the cold winds of the continent into gentle zepli_vrs by the time they reach New Providence: and on the East we are open to the broad Atlantic, which in Lat. 25'^ never emits any amount of cold which the invalid may not safely inhale." A -writer from Nassau to the Albany Even- ing Jouf/ial, under the nom-de-pliime of "V. Q.," also says: " We luxuriated in a soft balmy atmosphere of seventy-four degrees, and could but feel that there was health in every breath. "All the ordinary tropical fruits abound in great perfection, and are had for little more than the gathering. The senses are rapt by the novelty of the surroundings, the suddenness and entirety of the change. In a less distance from New York than Chicago, the transformation is perfect; not a shrub or tree is seen which surrounds alike both those i)laces; not any other dress than a light and summer toilet." Governor Rawson, in his report upon the Bahamas, says : " The reputation of New Providence for salu- brity and the charms of its climate has been long established, and has annually attracted to Nassau numbers of invalids from the United States and "British North American Provinces." Governor Robinson, in his report to the British Government on the Colonial Sec- tion, at the Vienna Exhibition, 1S73, says of the Bahamas : " Lying as they do in one of thfe most serene, genial, and delightful climates of the world, and yiidding by cultivation most of the vegetable pro- ductions of the temperate as well as the torrid zone, it might seem strange that the Bahamas have not hitherto become generally settled. Nas- sau, liowever, has become, for many years past, a winter resort for those seeking to escape from the rigors of a Northern to a milder Southern clime. Many eminent American Physicians strongly recommend such of their patients as may be suffering from or threatened with pulmo- nary disease to jjroceed to Nassau for the winter, in consequence of the mildness and equability of the tcmjjerature. With a view to attract such a class of visitors, a very commodious hotel, l)uilt on the American ]ilun, was erected at the (!Xi)ense of the Government. Tiie lessees of tlm hotel, Americans, an; bound to conduct it like a first- clasB New Yorlc liotel. Ample and good accom- modation lias tlieref 2 On the Macon & Brunswick R. R. JOHN LINDSAY, Proprietor, (Also of the Fabyan House, White Mountains, N. H.) This is on the direct line from Jacksonville to all points North, and is 200 miles south of Aiken, hence the climate in the earl)'^ Spring will be found more even. The air of these Pine Uplands is found to have a healing virtue in all bronchial and pulmo- nary complaints, and is recommended by many of our most distinguished physicians. One of the best medical men of the State resides in our Village. The Mile Drive. — The Mile Drive around the Hotel Grounds, and those of Judge Bishop, Mr. Eastman and others, passes through this park. There are five or six longer drives to places of interest. The pine woods, free from undergrowth, are accessible in all directions. Excellent saddle and carriage horses are to be had at the livery stable in town. BROCK HOUSE, Entef\prise, 'Floi^da. First-Class in all Respects. TERMS REASONABLE. IBOIDIIsrEl cfei :M:cO^^:E^T^r, F^ro^^rletors, \4:: ■ ^y \ I'KT.T,, PRTNTKn, NI P^o"^ A. V" .r>c ^^•n^. V •0^ e V" s!*-% C^ 0^ 't. ^^ ^^"\ '' ^°-^^, ^\^ * '^^H^ V *tK ''.^ ^^-;^. • y-. A^ »V\'^^/k-. ^^ ^^ ;^»' >. A^ .0 ^ > ^' 0' i°-'*-. 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