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Ritz-Carlton Grand Cayman Sold to Dart Real Estate

 

By Alexander Britell

One of the Caribbean’s leading resorts has been sold, Caribbean Journal has learned.

Cayman-based Dart Real Estate has purchased the Ritz-Carlton, Grand Cayman from Five Mile Capital Partners, LLC.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The property had been put on the market last year.

Kenneth Dart’s Dart Real Estate is the most important real estate firm in the Cayman Islands, best known for its flagship Camana Bay mixed-use development and the Kimpton Seafire Resort + Spa and accompanying residences.

The Ritz-Carlton, located on Seven Mile Beach, was named Caribbean Journal’s Caribbean Hotel of the Year in the 2015 Caribbean Travel Awards.

“This investment demonstrates Mr. Dart’s confidence and willingness to invest in the strength and resilience of the Cayman Islands economy,” said Mark VanDevelde, CEO of Dart Enterprises, the parent company of Dart Real Estate.

The long-term management agreement with The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company remains in place, with no impact to operations, the company said.

The Ritz-Carlton has 375 guest rooms, set on the heart of Cayman’s Seven Mile Beach.

“The Ritz-Carlton, Grand Cayman has been the standard bearer for excellence in the region for more than a decade,” said Dart Real Estate President Jackie Doak. “We look forward to working with management on the preservation of the resort’s legacy, enabling the Cayman Islands to retain its position as a preferred luxury Caribbean destination for visitors and investors alike.”

The post Ritz-Carlton Grand Cayman Sold to Dart Real Estate appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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St Barth’s Le Guanahani Planning Summer Reopening

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

St Barth’s Le Guanahani hotel is planning to reopen in the summer of 2018.

It’s one of several top St Barts hotels that are planning to reopen next summer, including the storied Eden Rock, after damage from Hurricane Irma.

“We have come together to start rebuilding our beloved island home to welcome you all back to the Le Guanahani you know and love,” Le Guanahani said in a note on the property’s Facebook page. “It is from the bottom of our hearts that we thank you for your support and patience as we start our reopening journey for Summer 2018.”

St Barth’s recovery from Irma has begun in earnest, with some properties already planning to reopen in November like the island’s Les Ilets de la Plage.

The post St Barth’s Le Guanahani Planning Summer Reopening appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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10 Boutique Hotels to Try in the Caribbean Right Now

 

You’re looking for a different kind of Caribbean getaway: an authentic one.

One where you get a real taste of an island’s personality, of its soul. There are certain hotels made for that, smaller properties that are all about offering you a real sense of place.

Here are 10 boutique hotels to try in the Caribbean right now.

Calabash, Grenada The Caribbean’s newest Relais & Chateaux hotel is also the best hotel in Grenada, a rarefied, elegant 30-room property that’s also home to one of the Caribbean’s best restaurants.

The post 10 Boutique Hotels to Try in the Caribbean Right Now appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Caribbean History: Remembering Jamaica’s Moses Delgado

 

By David P. Rowe
CJ Contributor

Moses Delgado was as one of the leading businessmen in nineteenth century Jamaica as well as being a civil rights leader and pioneer in the commercial development of Kingston — and a major figure in the Jewish history of Jamaica.

Moses was born in London, England in 1789 and accompanied his parents as a child when they migrated to Jamaica in 1800.

His maternal grandfather had been the Chief Rabbi of the Bevis Marks Sephardic synagogue in London.

Initially, the family settled in Port Royal, which at the time had both a synagogue and a Jewish preparatory school, however the family moved after some time to the expanding Kingston the emerging commercial center of the island.

Moses was married at age 22 to Leah DePass from a Jewish family based in Port Royal. The couple had five children.

Leah died at the early age of 27 in 1818, and Moses remarried Marianne Nunes in Kingston in 1819. Moses had five children with Leah also, although one of these children died in infancy.

Moses was a merchant whose business was located on the waterfront in Kingston.

The name of his business was Moses Delgado and company. The business was very successful and he was known as a Merchant Prince of Kingston. Moses’ business provided colonial Jamaicans with dry goods and other products that were not previously available.

In the 1820s and 30s Moses acted as a lobbyist for the Jewish community in Jamaica petitioning the House of Assembly to give full civil rights to Jews including the right to vote and the right of Jews to serve in the House of Assembly.

In 1835, a Jew, Alexander Bravo was elected to the Colonial Assembly for Kingston.

Moses was also a very significant Mason. He rose to the positions of Senior Warden and Grand Master of the Provincial Grand Lodge of Jamaica in 1828. Moses’ involvement in Masonry made him both politically significant and socially influential despite the prevailing anti -semitism of 19th century colonial Jamaica.

Moses became President of the Kaal Kadosh Shangar Hashamayim the Sephardic Synagogue of Kingston in 1829 and served as a director of that synagogue for a very long period, 1826 to 1842.

In recognition of Moses’ contribution he was awarded by the synagogue a magnificent silver tankard worth at the time of the gift 1000 guineas.

The tankard has an inscription that reads inter alia “presented to Moses Delgado Esq as a grateful testimony of the sense entertained by them of his manly and indefatigable zeal and honourable exertions in support of the rights and privileges which they have now the happiness to enjoy in common with all His Britannic Majesty’s Subjects.”

Moses was appointed as an Assistant Judge of Common Pleas for Kingston in 1835. He was also appointed a Treasurer of the City of Kingston in 1842.Moses died on July 18,1842 and is buried in the Orange Street Jewish Cemetery. His estate devoted his assets to the support of his widow and children. The tankard awarded to him is in the custody of the Synagogue in Jamaica, and is kept there in safekeeping for the Delgado family.

As a businessman, civil rights leader and religious leader Moses Delgado was one the most important Jamaicans of the nineteenth century. His efforts contributed to political change and constitutional change which eventually boiled over into the Morant Bay rebellion of 1865.

David P Rowe is an attorney in Jamaica and Florida and an adjunct law professor at the University of Miami School of Law in Coral Gables, Fla.

The post Caribbean History: Remembering Jamaica’s Moses Delgado appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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Hilton Coming to St Lucia

 

By the Caribbean Journal staff

A major new hotel development is coming to the island of St Lucia, the country’s government announced.

The island’s Reduit beach will be redeveloped and become the home of a dual-branded project including a luxury five-star branded Curio by Hilton hotel and a traditional Hilton hotel.

The property will include a total of 500 rooms; 350 rooms assigned to the Hilton, and 150 assigned to the Curio by Hilton.

Work on the property is slated to begin in the final quarter of 2017, according to a government statement.

The new project is part of a major hotel development wave in St Lucia that should add 2,000 new rooms to the island’s hotel stock in the next four years.

The post Hilton Coming to St Lucia appeared first on Caribbean Journal.

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