Port Maria is one of the oldest settlements on the north coast of Jamaica and the capital of the parish of Saint Mary. Its bay, sheltered and with a small island off the coast (Cabarita Island), was known from early colonial times. The place name 'Maria' probably dates back to the Spanish period of Jamaica, before the English conquest of 1655, when the island was a Spanish colony and many places on its coast received Spanish names that survived, wholly or partly, under British rule.
After the English conquest, Jamaica became one of the most valuable colonies of the British Empire, organized into parishes. Saint Mary, on the north coast, was one of them, and Port Maria, because of its bay and its position, was established as its capital and main port. The economy of the parish, like that of the rest of the island, revolved around the large plantations of tropical products for export.
During the colonial centuries, the region saw the rise of sugar, cacao and other plantations, administered by British colonists and worked by enslaved Africans. Port Maria fulfilled the function of administrative, commercial and port center of that system, with its court house, its churches, its warehouses and its dock. Much of the layout and the historic buildings still recognizable in the town come from that era.
The most important and moving historical episode tied to Port Maria is Tacky's rebellion (Tacky's War or Tacky's Revolt), one of the largest insurrections of enslaved people in the history of the British Caribbean. It broke out in 1760 in the parish of Saint Mary and was led by Tacky, an African of Akan origin (from the region of present-day Ghana) who, according to the chronicles, is said to have been a leader or chief in his homeland before being enslaved and taken to Jamaica.
The rebellion began around Port Maria, where the insurgents seized a fort and obtained weapons, and spread through the parish and beyond, drawing in hundreds of enslaved people determined to end the colonial system and slavery. The uprising shook the foundations of colonial Jamaican society and provoked a forceful military response from the British authorities, who counted on the support of troops and of the Maroons bound by treaty to help capture runaway slaves. Tacky died in the conflict and the rebellion was finally repressed.
Despite its defeat, Tacky's rebellion left a deep mark: it increased the fear of the colonists, fueled the debate on slavery and became a symbol of Afro-Jamaican resistance. Today Tacky is considered a hero of the struggle for freedom, and his memory is preserved in the Port Maria area with a monument that honors him. Understanding this episode is key to understanding the history and identity of Saint Mary.
After the abolition of slavery in the British Empire (1834, with full emancipation in 1838), the economy of Saint Mary, like that of the rest of Jamaica, underwent a profound transformation. The sugar plantation system entered a crisis, and the parish gradually shifted toward other crops. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the banana became the great export product of the Jamaican north coast.
Port Maria, with its bay and its port tradition, took an active part in that banana boom. From its docks, bunches of bananas destined for the markets of the United States and Europe were loaded, in an activity linked to large fruit companies. The banana trade gave work to the local population and kept the port relevant for much of the 20th century. The culture of banana work —the stevedores, the long shifts, the work songs— is part of the folklore of the whole north coast.
Over time, the banana trade declined because of plant diseases, market changes and competition from other regions. Port Maria lost that port dynamism and gradually became a quieter town, the administrative capital of the parish and a service center for the area, with fishing and farming as everyday activities. Its historical heritage —churches, the old court house, colonial buildings— survives as a testament to those different eras.
In the mid-20th century, the north coast of Jamaica became fashionable among British and American celebrities, writers and artists who sought in the island a paradisiacal refuge. In that context, the Galina headland, above Port Maria, lived its golden age thanks to an exceptional figure: Sir Noël Coward, the celebrated British playwright, actor, composer, singer and director, one of the most brilliant and prolific personalities of 20th-century entertainment.
Coward fell in love with Jamaica and the views of Galina. He first had a house by the sea (Blue Harbour) and then, in the 1950s, built his most intimate retreat high on the headland: Firefly, a house of simple lines but with a spectacular panorama over the Caribbean Sea and the bay of Port Maria. It is said that he considered it one of the most beautiful places in the world. There he wrote, painted, rested and received a parade of famous figures of the era —Hollywood stars, writers and members of British royalty—, in what was a sort of Caribbean salon of high culture and entertainment.
Noël Coward spent his last years in Jamaica and died at Firefly in 1973. Such was his attachment to the place that he asked to be buried there, and his tomb is in the garden of the house, facing the view he loved so much. Over the years, Firefly became a museum, preserving his personal belongings and its atmosphere, and it is today one of the most singular cultural attractions of the Jamaican north coast, as well as a testament to that era when Galina was a refuge for celebrities.
Today, Galina and Port Maria make up one of the most authentic and least crowded areas of the north coast of Jamaica. Unlike tourist hubs like Montego Bay or Ocho Rios, here there are no big resort chains or crowds: what predominates is discreet tourism, based on charming villas, guesthouses, the cultural appeal of Firefly and the natural beauty of the headland and the coast.
Port Maria remains the administrative capital of Saint Mary, an unhurried port town where life unfolds among fishing, farming, commerce and services for the parish. It preserves its bay, its historic buildings and the memory of its colonial and banana past, as well as the memory of Tacky's rebellion, a milestone of the struggle for freedom that is an essential part of local identity.
Galina, for its part, keeps its profile as a privileged viewpoint over the Caribbean, with Firefly as its jewel and with villas and lodgings that make the most of the views. The area as a whole offers an experience of the most genuine Jamaica: deep history, spectacular landscapes and the hospitality of its people, far from mass tourism. For the curious traveler, Galina and Port Maria are an invitation to slow down and get to know the different layers —indigenous, colonial, slavery-era, banana and cultural— that make up the rich history of the Jamaican north coast.