The written history of Oracabessa dates to the year 1502, when
Christopher Columbus sailed into Oracabessa Bay. He named it Santa Maria island, a property now located within the Goldeneye estate. At the time, the area was sparsely populated by
Taino and
Arawak Indians. The Spanish established a small supply post named Oracabeza, to support their exploration in the Caribbean. It remained a Spanish settlement until 1655, when the British captured the North Coast of Jamaica. For the next 200 years, Oracabessa functioned as a tiny agricultural community with its main crop, bananas, controlled by a small group of British landowners. The arrival of Baptist missionary
James Phillippo in 1834 changed the course of Oracabessa's history. Phillippo built the first church in Oracabessa and led a defiant protest against the local landowner's refusal to sell land to former slaves after emancipation. The parish of St. Mary, where Oracabessa is located, had a large population of
Jamaican Maroons, who had escaped from slavery and lived independently in the mountains. They worked closely with Phillippo in his quest for justice. With this show of force, combined with a decree from the British Government, the landowners relented and sold Phillippo enough land to build houses, schools, churches, and businesses for the hundreds of freedmen residents in the area. Reverend Phillippo was a pioneer of
Free Villages, settlements established to allow independent living by freedmen, on land they controlled. Phillippo purchased land from plantation owners (often secretly, through agents, as they did not want to sell to freedmen). He sold the land to the former slaves with terms that required them to repay only what they could afford. Within 3 years, Phillippo had received full payment and the residents of Oracabessa owned their land and businesses outright. Phillippo's belief and faith in the people of Oracabessa led to the development of other Free Villages throughout the island. Phillippo successfully demonstrated that the Free Village concept worked and that it represented a great opportunity for a community to be self-sufficient. The Oracabessa farmers' market, which still operates today, was the first such market in Jamaica to be owned and operated by former slaves. Within a few years, an entire
socio-economic system had developed, and a vibrant fishing and agricultural community was born. Oracabessa and the parish of St. Mary were largely left alone by the planter elite, but a series of devastating hurricanes and floods at the end of the 19th century brought an end to Oracabessa's brief success as an independent, self-sufficient community. In 1910,
Ruth Bryan Owen, the daughter of one of the richest men in the United States, had read the story of James Phillippo and his grand experiment in Oracabessa. She decided to continue his work. She convinced her husband, a senior
British Military officer, to accept a posting in Jamaica. They moved to Oracabessa, where he would oversee the construction of new roads and schools, and she would help rebuild the local economy. Owen encouraged local residents to develop their skills as
artisans and cultivated a community of painters and carvers. Given her social standing and wealthy friends in the U.S., she was able to send the artwork to various galleries for sale and gain a
sustainable living for this artistic community. In addition to her philanthropic work in Oracabessa, Owen built a mansion,
Golden Clouds, which still stands today. She had many influential friends in politics and entertainment who visited her regularly in Oracabessa. Among them was the actor and director
Charlie Chaplin. Owen eventually left Oracabessa for a life in politics. She achieved international fame by gaining appointment as the first female
U.S. Ambassador in history, but she held on to Golden Clouds and returned faithfully every winter for the next 30 years. In 1946, Ian Fleming became the next famous resident of Oracabessa. Fleming purchased the land next door to Golden Clouds and built his house, Goldeneye, where he proceeded to write the James Bond novels and earned worldwide acclaim. Fleming's coterie of friends included actors, musicians, and filmmakers, who were enamoured with Oracabessa's main street, beautiful beach and its quiet, unassuming local population. In the mid-1990s, the Island Outpost corporation owned by Blackwell bought 70 acres of prime coastal land and opened the village's main attraction, the
James Bond Beach Club. Located just off Main Street along Old Wharf Road, this facility has changing rooms, a water sports centre, a bar, and a restaurant. Its expansive lawns are a regular venue for concerts by local and international artists. Scenes from the classic James Bond movie
Dr. No, which features
Ursula Andress, were filmed in and around the area.
Honey Ryder (Andress) was filmed emerging from the sea at Laughing Waters further up the coast and at
Dunn's River Falls. In the 21st century, Oracabessa has again become known as an artist community with studios operated by musicians, painters, and carvers. Art galleries in Oracabessa include Von White's studio and the Wilderness House of Art. Oracabessa has a wide range of musicians who live, record, and perform in the area. The music group
UB40 has a studio in Oracabessa and large
reggae concerts are presented at James Bond Beach, with artists such as
Rihanna,
Ziggy Marley, and
Lauryn Hill performing. Oracabessa's unique landscape has served as a stunning backdrop for photo shoots by some of the world's top photographers. In 2012, Mikeal Jansson shot the
Ferragamo campaign featuring
Gisele Bündchen in Oracabessa and referred to it in
Vogue magazine as "a dream-like location." The
Oracabessa Bay Fish Sanctuary was established in 2010 to protect Oracabessa's marine ecosystem. The eastern shoreline of Oracabessa is located on the edge of the
Cayman Trough with walls that begin at and drop down to over . These walls are covered in a large variety of hard and soft corals. The walls contain many overhangs and ledges, and are home to lobsters, king crab, green and spotted moray eels, and a host of other marine creatures. Beyond the boundaries of the Oracabessa Bay Fish Sanctuary, the Cayman Trough plunges to depths of over and is renowned for deep-water sport fishing, including
marlin and
tuna. ==In popular culture==