Walker's Cay

Walker's Cay

Bull sharks hand fed from the beach at Walker's Cay
Walker's Cay
Geography
Location Caribbean
Coordinates 27°15′36″N 78°24′07″W / 27.260°N 78.402°W / 27.260; -78.402Coordinates: 27°15′36″N 78°24′07″W / 27.260°N 78.402°W / 27.260; -78.402
Archipelago Bahamas
Area 0.4 km2 (0.15 sq mi)
Administration
District North Abaco
Demographics
Population Uninhabited (2014)
Additional information
Time zone
  Summer (DST)

Walker's Cay is the northernmost island in the Bahamas, part of the North Abaco district. Once a popular sport fishing location, the island has been deserted since 2004, following severe hurricane damage.

Geography

Walker's Cay lies 53 miles to the northeast of West End, Grand Bahama, in the northern Bahamas. Its surface is only about 100 acres (40 ha). The island sits on the edge of the Little Bahama Bank, the bank containing shallow green colored water, averaging about 10 feet in depth. However, on the north side of Walker's Cay the water drops off sharply into deep blue ocean depths. The closest island is Grand Cay.

History

Walker's Cay was named after Thomas Walker, a British judge exiled on the island in the early 1700s. After his death in 1721, the island remained uninhabited for over two hundred years, until Buzz Shonnard, a businessman from Palm Beach, Florida, leased the land from the Bahamian government in 1935 and built a small hotel, attracting anglers and tourists to the island. A 75-slip marina was built, and also an airstrip, Walker's Cay Airport, with a 2,500 feet-long runway suitable for light aircraft.[1]

Shonnard had connections with affluent American sport fishermen of the 1930s and promoted Walker's Cay as a location for billfishing. Blue marlin in excess of 500 pounds have been caught off Walker's Cay.

During World War II, Walker's Cay was used by the U.S. Military as an anti-submarine base, since its airstrip allowed aircraft to patrol the waters near the southeast Florida coast.

One of Walker's Cay's seasonal residents was American businessman Robert Abplanalp, the inventor of modern-day aerosol valve for spray cans. Abplanalp bought the lease on the island in 1968 and continued to develop it as a sport fishing destination, while paying attention at the same time to the conservation of the island.[2]

Various celebrities became regular visitors of Walker's Cay, such as US President Richard Nixon, actress Jane Fonda, singer Roger Daltrey and athletes like Davey Johnson and Roger Staubach.[1]

Present day

Abplanalp died in 2003, and the following year the island's fortunes were dealt a further blow, when two severe hurricanes, Frances and Jeanne, destroyed the hotel and marina, which were not rebuilt. Despite some recent expressions of interest from US investors to purchase the island and revive it, as of 2014 Walker's Cay remains essentially deserted.[3][4]

The Walker's Cay marine area was declared a national park in 2002.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 Waters, Steve (June 5, 1992). "It Begins With A Cay". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  2. Waters, Steve (July 26, 1992). "There's nothing to do on the island of Walker's Cay but fish, dive and relax". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  3. Hartnell, Neil (20 Aug 2014). "Us Billionaire In Walker'S Cay Talks". Tribune242. Ellington. Retrieved 16 April 2016.
  4. Fusco, Mark (20 Nov 2014). "Bahamas Hopes To Sell Walker's Cay To U.S. Billionaire". PassageMaker. Annapolis, MD: Cruz Bay Publishing. Retrieved 16 Apr 2016.
  5. "Walkers Cay marine park" (PDF). Currents: Newsletter of the Bahamas National Trust. June 2002. p. 4. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
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