(Redirected from Crooked Island, Bahamas)
Crooked Island and Acklins Island from space, February 1984

Map of the Bahamas
'Crooked Island' is an island and
district of the
Bahamas.
It is one of a group of islands lying in a shallow
lagoon called the
Bight of Acklins, of which the largest are Crooked Island in the north and Acklins in the south-east, and the smaller are Long Cay (once known as Fortune Island) in the north-west, and Castle Island in the south.
The islands were settled by American
Loyalists in the late 1780s who set
cotton plantations employing over 1,000
slaves. After the
abolition of slavery in the
British Empire these became uneconomical, and the replacement income from
sponge diving has now dwindled as well. The inhabitants now live by fishing and small-scale farming.
The main town in the group is
Colonel Hill on Crooked Island.
The population of Crooked Island was 350 at the
2000 census.
It is believed that first
Post Office in the Bahamas was at
Pitt’s Town on Crooked Island.