Originally, Harbour Island and Eleuthera were home to the Lucayan and Arawak People. Christopher Columbus famously discovered the Bahamas in 1492 and wiped out the local indigenous populations by the middle of the 16th century. The island would remain uninhabited for 100 years until some ministers fleeing religious persecution from England settled the island in 1650.
That all changed in 1717 when the settlement surrendered to the British Crown, officially making Eleuthera and Harbour Island a part of the colony of the Bahamas. The complex coral systems around Briland made it notorious for shipwrecks. Naturally, wrecking became an important source of income for the island’s inhabitants. In the 18th century, residents of Harbour Island carried special licenses to assist wrecked ships in return for a third of the recovered loot.
As the settlement grew, so did its economy. Prosperous years were on the horizon as shipbuilding, sugar refinement, and a prohibition-fueled rum boom stimulated the local economy.
You may be wondering how Dunmore Town, Harbour Island’s only town, got its name. It turns out that the governor of Virginia fled to the Bahamas during the American Revolutionary war. He was awarded the title of Lord Dunmore, Governor of the Bahamas and settled in a Victorian cottage on Bay Street. He was responsible for the urban planning of the town you see today!
World War I became a major turning point for the island. As the global depression affected the island’s economy its idyllic pink sand beaches and tropical environment had no choice but to step into the spotlight. The island started becoming a tourism destination in the 1920s and exponentially grew when Bahamas Airways began flying to the island in 1941. Since then, tourism has been the island’s main industry.
In 1973, the colony claimed its independence and became a member of the British Commonwealth with its own parliament, flag, and national anthem.