Mayaguana was inhabited by
Lucayans (Taíno) prior to the arrival of the Spanish following 1492. After the last of the Lucayans were carried off to
Hispaniola by the Spanish early in the 16th century, the island remained uninhabited until 1812, when people began to migrate from the
Turks and Caicos Islands, which are located about southeast. The
Brazilian historian
Francisco Adolfo de Varnhagen suggested in 1824 that Mayaguana is
Guanahani, the first island visited by
Christopher Columbus at his discovery of the
Americas. His theory has found little support.
Mayaguana apparently was the Lucayan name (meaning "Lesser Midwestern Land" ) for the island. The first
steamship to circumnavigate the globe, the
Royal Navy sloop
HMS Driver, wrecked on Mayaguana on 3 August 1861, 14 years after the completion of her epic voyage in 1847. During
NASA's
Project Mercury and the
Apollo program, the
United States space program had a missile tracking station on what is now
Mayaguana Airport. The station was used to help keep
astronauts on course. The Mayaguana Airport was built by US Army Engineers attached to the
US Air Force. The airport was built as a runway for jet planes that would follow missiles fired from Cape Canaveral. Real-time sighting and photography was the best technology of the time for observing the flight of the missiles. The Bahamian government has recently approved working with
American investors MMC to turn Mayaguana into a "
free trade zone," complete with
tourism development of approximately 14% of the island. Actually, this is 14% of the total landmass but essentially most of the coastal region. The proposal was met with moderate resistance by Mayaguanians, who look forward to economic expansion but are unsure of what change is to come. This development is still in a planning phase and is trying to maintain the nature of the island as a quiet eco-tourist destination while still creating sustainable economic growth. ==People==