Sunday, September 16, 2007

Time Machine to Eleuthera, Bahamas

Our Time Machine has us one hour east of the South Florida coast at 7,500 feet, traveling at almost 200 m.p.h. when the island of Eleuthera rose up from the sea. I throttled back and pushed the nose of the single engine aircraft into a gentle descent. The windshield of the Bellanca gradually filled with a view of the lush green island rimmed with it's famous pink sands and wearing necklaces of white, then pale green and finally, dark blue water.

This is the way to arrive in the Out Islands of the Bahamas, in a time machine that lets you overfly the clink of the dice and the noisy crowds of Nassau and Freeport, and land at the quiet, serene island of Eleuthera which, like most Out Islands is still dominated by sea, sun and yester-year; an ambience of warmth and contentment that has long since disappeared from most spots on this earth.

The Out Islands are for people who know how to enjoy doing nothing. Take the Current Club. It is hard by the village of Current on the northern tip of Eleuthera. People who travel the Out Islands say the Current Club typifies the better of the small resorts. One reason is that it is owned by Dann H. Lewis, assistant director of the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism.

His manager, Peter Smith greets guests warmly. Doors to the cottages are never locked. The cottages are nestled in a grove of Casuarina trees and surrounded by coconut palms, sea grapes and hibiscus bushes.

Days usually begin with a bounteous breakfast followed by a dip along a three mile stretch of sandy shores that is perfect for skinny-dipping, and is only five minutes away by fast golf-cart. Two side-trips that should be musts for guests at the Current Club are Spanish Wells and Harbour Island. Both of these trips are close enought to get you back to Current Club for the al fresco lunch served on the patio a few feet from the edge of the ocean. Meals here are above average and are certainly "Bahamian fare" - such as lobster or grouper.

So if you're a bum at heart, or want to learn how to become an expert at doing nothing, the Current Club is for you. And, if you are a qualified pilot (as is the multi-faceted Dann Lewis) you can leap Georgia and Florida in a single bound and touch down in paradise. The owner of Current Club, Dann Lewis, is now running the Ministry of Tourism for all the Bahamas Islands, and is embroiled in starting a new airline that will serve Eleuthera and other Out Islands from Nassau and Freeport.

from: Atlanta Magazine, August 1972

The next chapter in Dann's remarkable career will be the birth of Bahamasair, the national flag carrier of the Bahamas.

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Boxford Realty Investor, 23, Building Resort in the Bahamas

ELEUTHERA, Bahamas - The northern tip of this Caribbean Isle has blossomed overnight into a resort because of a young Boxford, Mass., man who can't wait to get back to college.

When Dann H. Lewis first gazed on Northern Eleuthera's rough coral land and heavy brush 18 months ago, he was awaiting graduation from Dartmouth and acceptance from M. I. T. But the sight of this untouched real estate in the Caribbean pushed Tech out of his mind - temporarily.

Since receiving his degree in English from Dartmouth, Dann Lewis has become president of two companies connected with the Current Club, which opens on once wild terrain, on December 27th.

The Current Club is five duplex cottage units in a coconut grove, a clubhouse, and a dock equipped for all types of boating. The Bahamas' best fishing areas, four hours travelling time (by water) from Nassau, at 10 minutes away.

The 23 year old Lewis, a graduate of Winchester, Mass., High School is now president of two firms: The Current Club Ltd., composed of family members and personal friends from the Boston area; and the Current Development Co., solely a family organization with plans to build a dozen exclusive winter homes in the area for outright sale.

The two firms were organized by young Lewis, who saw possibilities in North Eleuthera because of a nearby airstrip served by two flight daily from Nassau via Bahamas Airways, and a north-south highway to open by the end of December.

The blond, boyish looking Lewis proposed his idea to a willling investor, his father, Robert C. Lewis, president of Calidyne Co., Winchester, a division of Ling-Temco Electronics.

Dann, postponing acceptance to the electrical engineering school at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, began construction of his resort in March, 1960.

from: The Boston Sunday Herald, 1960

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Friday, September 14, 2007

"Everything from Climate to Cocktails"

Eleuthera, an out island in the Bahama archipelago, is the proverbial conglomerate of sea grape, coral reefs and sun.

There is an unwritten law that permeates the thinking of the people of this 110-mile long "escape hatch" from mainland ulcer production. Simply: "you needn't fear anything 'organized' here!"

A half-hour trip by plane from Nassau, Eleuthera (from the Greek word "eleutheros" meaning "free") is the mecca of shallow flats, the epitome of Bahamian villages and settlements, and a retreat from the rush rush rush of the business world. Eleuthera and neighborly residents have everything from comfort and excitement to climate and cocktails.

"Sir, you'll just have to be able to entertain yourself here. We don't dress for dinner, we don't plan a day's activities, and we don't try to force a good time on you," Dann Lewis welcomes a guest.

Dann Lewis is a 23 year-old Dartmouth graduate who planned and developed his little club hard by the northwest sector of Eleuthera.

"We believe people want a vacation, not a swap in timetables, so that's what they get," Lewis continues. "That's why we keep Current open in all four seasons. We want something for everyone.

Current serves as a typical example of the local modus operandi of Eleuthera. Current was begun, using only local help in August of 1960.

Accommodations for 24 and solid bookings through April was achieved by November. And the plans did not end there. "We're starting construction to accommodate at least 150 before we're through," Lewis said. "After we're finished dredging to dock boats with no more than a six feet draw, we will use the club house for a yacht club and build a new and bigger dining room and lounge area.

So what is the attraction of the more undeveloped out islands of the Bahama chain?

"You have to see this place to know" recalls Dann Lewis, who hails from Boston. "This particular spot where I built the Current Club was no more than an overgrowth of coral and sea grape. It is just breathtakingly beautiful and unspoiled."

from: Palm Beach Life, August 1961

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Building Current, Eleuthera, Bahamas

Good progress on a big new development at the Current, Eleuthera, was reported Friday by a young American Businessman, Dann H. Lewis, of Hanover, New Hampshire.

Dann Lewis, who at 22 must be one of the youngest overseas investors ever to come to the Bahamas, is President of the Current Development Ltd., a family owned company. The firm will be spending the next two years on the construction of some 20 duplex-type beach homes on the south side of Current Island. A Club, to be known as the Current Club will also be built on the south side together with a marina with a fueling dock, and water and power facilities for visiting yachtsman. Dann Lewis said Friday that already two private homes and one duplex had been completed at the Current, and five more buildings are under construction. The main clubhouse is scheduled for completion by mid-December, in time for the winter season.

Current Development Ltd. has bought 25 acres of land with magnificent beach frontages on the north and south sides of the island. There are good anchorages for yachts and swimming conditions that are ideal.

When the main club house is completed, Lewis said boats will be available for water skiing and fishing. The development is near the Current villages and near to the airstrip and main road.

Dann Lewis first came to the Bahamas during his vacations from Dartmouth College. He and his family were so impressed with the beauty of the islands that they formed the Current Development Ltd. to invest here. Lewis, as chief shareholder and President, came down on the eve of his graduation from Dartmouth to start operations in March of this year. He is enrolled as an electrical engineering student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), but has taken leave of absence in order to undertake the project. Local Bahamians will both build and staff the new resort property.

from: Nassau Guardian, August, 1960

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