
Queen’s Staircase and Fort Fincastle, Nassau
Sixty-six steps hewn through solid limestone by enslaved workers – Nassau’s gorge of memory climbing to the paddle-wheel fort above the town.
At a glance
- Type
- Rock-cut staircase and fort
- Period
- 1793-1794
- Style
- Colonial military engineering
- Location
- Elizabeth Avenue, Nassau, Bahamas
- Coordinates
- 25.0735, -77.3354
- Builders
- Enslaved African labourers under Lord Dunmore
Overview
The Queen’s Staircase ascends a hand-cut limestone gorge from Nassau’s old town to Bennet’s Hill – 66 steps carved through ten metres of rock in 1793-94 by some six hundred enslaved Africans, the Bahamas’ most visited and most sobering monument. Above, Fort Fincastle’s odd paddle-steamer prow of masonry watches harbour and island.
History
Governor Lord Dunmore ordered the cut as a protected route to the new fort during the French wars; the name honours Victoria’s long reign and, in island telling, the 1838 emancipation her era brought – one step per year of her life in the popular count. The fort fired no shot in anger; the staircase’s makers left the deeper mark, commemorated in guides’ narrations and the gorge’s cool shade of ferns.
Architecture and Design
The gorge’s sheer hewn walls preserve pick-lines and recesses; a waterfall threads the entrance. Fincastle’s wedge – shaped, tradition says, like Dunmore’s namesake paddle vessel – mounts replica guns over the water tower’s viewpoint, the island’s highest.
Cultural significance
Staircase and fort carry the Bahamas’ enslaved-labour memory at the heart of its capital – heritage the tourism narrative increasingly centres – and give Nassau its iconic short pilgrimage between straw market and hilltop.
Visiting today
The staircase is free and open daily; local guides at the base recount the history for tips. The fort’s small fee adds the panorama; mornings beat cruise crowds.
Getting there
Elizabeth Avenue climbs from Shirley Street, ten minutes’ walk from Bay Street and the cruise pier.
Sources and resources
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