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A Brief History of Saba, Drop by to find out more... Everything you always wanted to know about Saba but were to afraid to ask... Spread the treasure - Take home a t-shirt or two...


The Island of Saba
1493
Columbus discovers Saba; except for the Carib Indians (who may have lived here around AD 800) Saba was uninhabited.

17th Century Dutch Caribbean
1640 Dutch settlers arrived from St. Eustatius (Statia).

Dutch Flag Raised on Saba
1816 The Dutch flag is raised after Saba had changed hands 12 times whilst French, Dutch, English and Spanish had vied for control.

The Ladder Saba 1940's Sabans are very proud and resourceful. In the early days settlers carved 900 steps out of the mountainside to the “customs house” to get from Fort Bay to the Bottom. Everything from the Queen of Holland to pianos had to be carried up by hand. Those rugged steps were the only way to transport goods to the Islanders. A more practical supply network had to be arranged.


Josephus Lambert Hassell, a carpenter who took correspondence courses in engineering convinced Sabans and the Dutch authorities alike that a road on Saba was not just the stuff of a madman's dreams...

The Saba Road
Known as the "road that couldn't be built" (by Dutch Civil Engineers) construction lasted 25 years as no automated or heavy machinery could be used. Many of the people who worked on the construction are still resident on Saba up to this day.

Josephus Lambert Hassell
1980's The Saba Marine and Conservation foundations are established by renowned environmentalist Tom van't Hof.
With Marine & Conservation foundations in place tourism tentatively crept onto the island.

Today Saba is renowned throughout the world for its unique wildlife and pristine dive sites. The majority of the islanders today come from a Caribbean, Dutch, English or Irish background. There is a small expatriate population on the island who maintain second homes or have set up dive or tourism related businesses.

The Kingdom of the Netherlands comprises three entities: Holland, the Netherlands Antilles (Saba, St. Maarten, St. Eustatius, Bonaire, and Curaçao), and Aruba. Saba's local administration supervises internal affairs and has recently voted to have a direct representative in Holland.