San Francisco Chronicle

1st commercial flight brings remote island to wider world

- By Christophe­r Torchia Christophe­r Torchia is an Associated Press writer.

PROSPEROUS BAY PLAIN, St. Helena — One of the world’s most remote places became a little less isolated on Saturday when the first commercial flight arrived in St. Helena, an island in the southern Atlantic Ocean that until recently was only accessible by boat and where Napoleon Bonaparte spent his last years in exile.

The SA Airlink plane left Johannesbu­rg on a six-hour journey to the British-ruled territory, which hopes to draw more tourists to the deposed French emperor’s final abode, Longwood House, as well as rugged landscapes, marine life and the novelty of visiting a spot far, far off the beaten track.

“Thank you for being part of this historical event,” the pilot said before takeoff. On arrival, the island’s governor shook passengers’ hands.

The new weekly air service brings an end to what had been the only regular way to reach the island. The royal mail ship St. Helena, which takes nearly a week to arrive from Cape Town, will stop its voyages in February.

“St. Helena, where you are a long way from a long way,” tweeted Lisa Phillips, the first female governor of St. Helena and two other Atlantic islands, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha. Phillips’ social media posts have highlighte­d some of the volcanic island’s quirkier fixtures, including a giant tortoise named Jonathan that is said to be 185 years old and Jacob’s Ladder, a 699-step outdoor staircase leading from a valley to a hilltop in Jamestown, the capital.

The official opening of the St. Helena airport, built on the island’s Prosperous Bay Plain for about $380 million of British taxpayers’ money, was supposed to happen in May 2016. But a Comair Boeing 737 test flight at the airport encountere­d severe wind shear, which prompted harsh criticism of the British government in a parliament­ary report that said the failure to foresee the difficult weather conditions was “staggering.” The SA Airlink plane conducted 13 flight trials at the St. Helena airport in August, according to a statement by island authoritie­s.

Tourism would bring a much-needed boost to St. Helena, which lies about 1,200 miles west of the border between Angola and Namibia, the nearest mainland. The island’s biggest industry was once growing flax for the manufactur­e of rope, but St. Helena’s population of more than 4,000 is heavily dependent on British government support.

Discovered by Portuguese mariners in 1502, St. Helena was a way station for ships for centuries and was a key port for Britain’s East India Company.

First exiled to the Mediterran­ean island of Elba, Napoleon escaped, met defeat at the battle of Waterloo and was sent to far more remote St. Helena in 1815. He died there in 1821 and his body was later exhumed and entombed at Les Invalides in Paris.

 ?? Gianluigi Guercia / AFP / Getty Images ?? A picture taken from the first commercial flight shows the cliffs of the volcanic island of St. Helena in the southern Atlantic.
Gianluigi Guercia / AFP / Getty Images A picture taken from the first commercial flight shows the cliffs of the volcanic island of St. Helena in the southern Atlantic.

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