Ferry Reach, Bermuda

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Ferry Reach, looking over the North Shore. Lovers' Lake is visible at the left.
Ferry Reach, looking over the North Shore. Lovers' Lake is visible at the left.
Looking across Ferry Reach towards St. David's.
Looking across Ferry Reach towards St. David's.

Ferry Reach is a three mile (five kilometre) long channel in the north-east of Bermuda, which lies between St. George's Island in the north and St. David's Island in the south south-west of the town of St. George's.

Map of Ferry Reach before the area to its south was radically altered in 1941 by the construction of an airfield.
Map of Ferry Reach before the area to its south was radically altered in 1941 by the construction of an airfield.
A Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officer, training at Ferry Reach.
A Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officer, training at Ferry Reach.

It extends south from St. George's Harbour, Bermuda, linking it with Castle Harbour, and is crossed by two bridges at its northern end.

The name also applies to the western end of St. George's Island which lies to the north of this channel, and, more loosely, to the water passage between the western tip (Ferry Point) of this and Coney Island. Three forts had been sited on Ferry point, the most recent being the Martello Tower built under the command of Major Thomas Blanshard in the 1820s. The War Department purchased the western thirty acres of Ferry Reach in 1846, but the main route from St. George's to the rest of Bermuda remained vis the Ferry Road and Ferry Point until the construction of the causeway in 1871. The area was used for housing part of the military garrison, primarily under canvas, as a way to minimise the effects of yellow fever, which struck hard in the closely packed barracks. The area was also used for quarantining those infected with yellow fever.

The land area contains two British military cemeteries[1] dating from the yellow fever epidemic of the 1860s. One of them, overlooking the North Shore to the east of Whalebone Bay, is a walled yard containing the graves of soldiers of the 2nd Battalion of the Queen's Royal (West Surrey) Regiment, and of one Royal Engineer, Sapper Aaron Boyes, who died during the epidemic.

Most of the area is, today, a public parkland, but is still used extensively for military training by the Bermuda Regiment. The area is also the site of the only receiving station and storage facility for petroleum fuels delivered to Bermuda, with both Esso and Shell Petroleum maintaing large storage facilities with tanks that are fed from tankers moored well off-shore. The adjacent facilities, known popularly as the Oil Docks, lie on the North Shore, immediately to the east of the public park.

  1. ^ The Bermuda National Trust


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