Wade's Green Plantation
🇹🇨North Caicos

Wade’s Green Plantation: Taking in TCI History in North Caicos

There’s no culture, no history in the Turks and Caicos.

The dis has become all-too-familiar to me over my years of adventuring around the TCI. Usually it’s other West Indians who level the charge. Other times it’s similarly well-traveled friends. Both groups, though, seem blinded, as it’s easy to be, by the beachy-sweet charms of Grace Bay. Or maybe it’s Provo’s swanky resorts, restaurants, shops. 

Either way, we’ve proven the notion wrong a time or two before. Osprey Rock. Pirate’s Cove. Mule Point. They all prove that there’s much more to see and discover in Provo than Grace Bay.

On a recent visit, the folks at Ocean Club Resorts turned me on to even wilder adventures in North Caicos and Middle Caicos.

Editor’s note: Like many of the larger, older hotels and resorts I love, Ocean Club does a great job of connecting guests with the local island community in which it’s based. You never feel locked in or sequestered from the real TCI vibe here. It’s a real plus in my book.

Adventuring Beyond Provo

Following a 30-minute boat trip and an even shorter bus ride, we made our first stop in North Caicos: Wade’s Green Plantation.

Wade's Green Plantation Welcome Sign | SBPR
Wade’s Green Plantation Welcome Sign | SBPR

Having grown up among the remains of centuries-old Danish plantations in St. Croix, I was more than a little excited to see how the TCI ruins differed from the ones I knew so well back home. At the same time, I was also a bit surprised. TCI colonial plantation days didn’t play prominently in any of my Caribbean history books.

Wade’s Green, I thought, would offer an altogether familiar experience that was entirely new.

Path through North Caicos history | SBPR
Path to Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR

A North Caicos Plantation Attraction

From the parking area, the plantation can be found at the end of a somewhat rugged quarter-mile path. Loose stones underfoot make the trek a little tricky. (This is especially so if you’re trying to shoot pics along the way.) Sneakers or hiking shoes are recommended.

Entrance to Wade's Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR
Entrance to Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR

If you can keep from tripping, you’ll soon arrive at this gate. A woman sitting in her car at the turnoff from the main road to the plantation holds the key. (She also collects admission fees.) Thankfully, our guide, a resident of North Caicos, knew the trick.

Info sign | SBPR
Info sign near the entrance to Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR
Mislabeled Slave Quarters | SBPR
Mislabeled Slave Quarters at Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR

Inside Wade’s Green

Once inside the gate, the value of our guide became even more pronounced. From him we learned about the various medicinal uses of local plants and trees. Snakewood, gumbo lumbo (though I thought he meant gumbo limbo), and more.

We also learned that some of the ruins throughout the plantation were mislabeled. The Slave Quarters, in particular, seemed very much out of place. I mean, they sit right next to the main entrance. This would seem to make escaping more convenient?

Wade's Green Plantation Ruins | SBPR
Wade’s Green Plantation Ruins | SBPR

Wade’s Green Plantation History

The story of Wade’s Green stretches all the way back to 1789. That’s when Loyalist, Wade Stubbs, was granted a bunch of land throughout the Turks and Caicos Islands from King George III. The “gift” was made as compensation for losses incurred by the Stubbs family during the Revolutionary War.

Stubbs established Wade’s Green as a cotton plantation. In short order, he grew and expanded his holdings on the backs of enslaved Africans. Eventually, he became the most successful planter in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Wade's Green Great House | SBPR
Wade’s Green Great House | SBPR

It’s hard to picture the breadth of Stubbs’ fortune these days. The TCI plantation era ended in the 1820’s (Stubbs died in 1822) due in large part to changes in world trade and soil degradation. Until recently, Wade’s Green had stood abandoned. This allowed Mother Nature to reclaim a good bit of the Stubbs empire.

Though mostly cleared and nicely laid out with dirt paths connecting all of the remaining structures, the plantation still seems more the province of Mother Nature than man. Only the old Great House truly stands out as a reminder of the plantation’s heyday.

New stairs to the old Great House | SBPR
New stairs to the old Great House at Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR
The Great House at Wade's Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR
The Great House at Wade’s Green Plantation, North Caicos | SBPR

Recently constructed wooden steps and a somewhat dodgy walkway (watch your step!) allow you to step inside and channel a bit of Wade’s Green history.

What You Won’t Find at Wade’s Green Plantation

You won’t find too many info signs at Wade’s Green. There are no restroom facilities, water fountains, or concession stands of any kind either. You’re really just out there, seemingly miles from civilization, way up in the bush. The only sounds are the ones you make, and those of the natural surroundings. Like these, for instance.

For me, Wade’s Green was much more like stumbling upon some old ruins back home in St. Croix than visiting a structured tourist attraction, which of course made it perfect for me.

How Best to Visit Wade’s Green Plantation

To make sure your visit to Wade’s Green Plantation is perfect for you, be sure you get with the awesome folks at Big Blue Collective to take you there. Small groups and really knowledgeable local guides make Big Blue the top choice for day-trip adventures from Provo to her sister Turks and Caicos Islands.

For pricing information and more, visit Big Blue Collective online.

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Last updated by Steve Bennett on .

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