Lighthouses of The Bahamas

Today they are romantic symbols of adventure, travel, and solitude. Lighthouses still stand watch throughout The Islands Of The Bahamas and The Bahamas Lighthouse Preservation Society safeguards three of the world’s few remaining kerosene-burning, hand-wound lighthouses.

Built in 1863, the famed Hope Town Lighthouse on Elbow Cay, Abaco still guides boats and ships today. Boating remains a way of life in The Abacos and throughout The Bahamas and the lighthouses are treasured even if modern captains navigate by satellite. The Dixon Hill lighthouse on San Salvador and Southwest Point lighthouse on Inagua has also escaped automation and still must be hand-wound every two hours by keepers who have tended their flames since the mid-1830s.

There are still two dozen active lighthouses in TheBahamasand many others that have been decommissioned; there are even a few faux lighthouses. Several are easily accessible and can be explored by visitors in search of their own seafaring tale or just a bird’s eye view of the island.

Hog Island Light

Originally built in 1817 and situated on popular Paradise Island just off Nassau, New Providence, Hog Island is the oldest lighthouse in The Bahamas and is also the oldest surviving lighthouse in the West Indies.

Pinder’s Point Lighthouse

Overlooking bustling Freeport Harbor, this red-and-white candy-striped icon was restored, relit, and reactivated in 2009. Grand Bahama also has two often-photographed “faux” lighthouses—Lucaya andHigh Rock.

Hope Town Lighthouse

In operation since 1863, Abaco’s red-and-white striped lighthouse is still hand-wound and accessible by ferry from Marsh Harbour where it is surrounded by Bahamian style buildings.

Hope Town Lighthouse
Hope Town Lighthouse

Hole-in-the-Wall

Also on Abaco, this British-style lighthouse is painted white on the lower third and red on the upper two-thirds and is home to the work of the Bahamas Marine Mammal Research Organization.

San Salvador Lighthouse (Dixon Hill)

Established in the mid-1800s and built in 1887, Dixon Hill is a very popular Bahamas lighthouse facility to visit because it is still occupied and operated by lighthouse keepers who refuel the 400,000 candle-powered lighthouse by hand every 2 hours and 15 minutes.

San Salvador Lighthouse (Dixon Hill)
San Salvador Lighthouse (Dixon Hill)

Andros Lighthouse

Built back in the early-1890s, this Andros landmark was made famous in the Blake Alphonso Higgs (known as Blind Blake) song, “Run Come See Jerusalem,” which told the story of a 1929 hurricane when more than 20 islanders drowned near the lighthouse.

Andros Lighthouse
Andros Lighthouse

Eleuthera Point

The long island of Eleuthera has several lighthouses and this early-1900s version is a classic. The island also has several other active lighthouses, including North Palmetto Point, which is available as a vacation rental.

Eleuthera Point
A lighthouse at Eleuthera Point

Southwest Point

Great Inagua’s classic all-white lighthouse near Matthew Town is popular with visitors who want to see the hand-cranked light and visit with local lighthouse keepers.

Gun Cay

Bimini’s famed 1836 lighthouse is alive and well, thanks to continued restoration. The island also features the recently reactivated Great Isaac Light, site of a late-1960s mystery when two lighthouse keepers went missing—and were never found.

Great Stirrup Cay

Built in 1863 in the sparsely populated Berry Islands, this historic lighthouse has become a popular spot for cruise ship passengers.

The Islands Of The Bahamas have a place in the sun for everyone from Nassau and Paradise Island to Grand Bahama to The Abaco Islands, The Exuma Islands, Harbour Island, Long Island, and others. Each island has its own personality and attractions for a variety of vacation styles with some of the world’s best scuba diving, fishing, sailing, boating, as well as, shopping and dining. The destination offers an easily accessible tropical getaway and provides convenience for travelers with preclearance through U.S. customs and immigration, and the Bahamian dollar at par with the U.S. dollar.

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