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Aerial View Of Montego Bay


Montego Bay defies description: posh resort, package tour playground, market town, commercial centre, seaport, slum, second city, capital of the west - its disparate elements co-exist without blending. The result is an atmosphere of schizophrenic energy. Almost all tourists enter Jamaica through the Donald Sangster airport but Montego Bay has long outgrown the label "tourist town". It is sometimes referred to as "the Republic" a nickname dating back to the last century when independent local landowners criticized the government for neglecting the western parishes. That situation still exists and true Montegonians, born in the bay and known as "Bawn a bays" sometimes still threaten, only half in jest, to secede from the rest of the island.

Christopher Columbus sailed into the bay in 1494 and named it "el Golfo de Buen Tiempo" or Fair Weather Bay. The coast was frequented by Arawaks, traces of whose habitation can still be found in the surrounding hills. The first record of a Spanish settlement here shows it as Monterias. The Spaniards hunted the herds of wild hogs that used to roam the hills and produced and exported 'hog butter' or lard. The name Montego derives from the Spanish "manteca" meaning lard, and Montego Bay is shown on some ancient maps as Lard Bay.

The town, threatened from the interior by the Maroons and from the sea by pirates, grew slowly but by the end of the eighteenth century it had become a busy port visited by about 150 ships each year - more than use it now. The fortunes of the town were tied to "King Sugar" and declined when sugar slumped during the nineteenth century. Relief came with the development of banana plantations and the export of bananas but it was as a tourist resort that Montego Bay really came into its own. As early as 1908, the Montego Bay Citizens Association were advertising the charms of the town with an invitation to: Come South . . . to Montego Bay, the most beautiful spot in Jamaica. Here is situated the famous Doctor's Cave bathing place destined to be the favourite bathing resort of the Western Hemisphere. Leave the grim north, come south! Only four and a half days from New York.