San Francisco Chronicle

Faraway island extends welcome with weekly flight

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

JAMESTOWN, St. Helena — The Gates of Chaos, Lot’s Wife, Old Woman’s Valley, Man and Horse Cliffs. These are the names of places on St. Helena, an otherworld­ly Atlantic Ocean island far from anywhere whose British-ruled population of just over 4,000 is reaching out to the world.

Charles Darwin, astronomer Edmond Halley and Napoleon Bonaparte are a few of the luminaries who spent time on St. Helena over the centuries, though the deposed French emperor would rather have been elsewhere, confined as he was in exile until his 1821 death at Longwood House, which was prone to damp and rat infestatio­ns.

Now a new airport, condemned last year by British taxpayers as a boondoggle after dicey wind conditions were discovered, has opened to regular traffic (a single weekly flight from South Africa) that islanders hope will boost tourism and the sagging economy of what was once a linchpin of the British Empire.

The airport is a gamble, but tourists with time and money will experience the sense of stepping into history on an island that until recently was only reachable by boat and lies about 1,200 miles from Africa and even further from South America.

The coat of arms of Britain’s East India Co., the trading behemoth that helped to build the British Empire, adorns the arched entrance to the capital, Jamestown. The commercial brands that are so familiar in other parts of the world haven’t made it to this rugged island. The island only got its first cellular telephone network in 2015. The Saints, as islanders are known, speak English with a strong accent that is sometimes hard to understand.

The British used the island as a prison for Napoleon and for rebellious Zulu king Dinuzulu kaCetshway­o, thousands of Boer prisoners from South Africa at the beginning of the 20th century and, in the late 1950s, three leaders from Bahrain, then under British control.

Other notable events include the dispatch of settlers to St. Helena after the Great Fire of London in 1666, the use of the island as a base for British antislaver­y patrols and the 1941 sinking of a British vessel at anchor off Jamestown during World War II. A memorial to the 41 people from the RFA Darkdale “who have no grave but the sea” sits on the waterfront.

 ?? Christophe­r Torchia / Associated Press ?? The forbidding volcanic cliffs of the British-ruled Atlantic Ocean isle are often covered in fog.
Christophe­r Torchia / Associated Press The forbidding volcanic cliffs of the British-ruled Atlantic Ocean isle are often covered in fog.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States