History Sandy Lane
Once upon a time in the 1960s - the fashionable retreat opens.

Sandy Lane

While enjoying his winter home in Barbados, former British politician Ronald Tree was inspired to create a luxury hotel with a golf course on the island, and he had in mind the old Sandy Lane sugar plantation. Finance was raised and architects appointed, Happy Ward and Jimmy Walker, started work on the Sandy Lane Hotel in 1958. With just 52 rooms, Sand Lane welcomed its very first guests in February 1961 and quickly became known as the only truly elegant, sophisticated and chic, hotel in Barbados, indeed at that time, in the Caribbean.

sandy lane dance floor
The dancefloor was the venue for international singers who performed for a formally dressed crowd.
divider

 I put myself in the position of a well-educated English gentleman of the late 18th century going to the West Indies to build a Great House."
Happy Ward, architect of Sandy Lane

 

Since the heady days of the sixties and seventies, celebrities treated Sandy Lane as their home away from home. The stories that swirl around their visits have become legend: Aristotle Onassis being rowed in from his yacht while Maria Callas swam ashore with a pet marmoset on her back; David Niven inventing his own cocktails at the bar; Elton John adhering to the New Year's Eve black-tie dress code  ... (read more under Legendary Stories >).

 


HISTORY IN BRIEF
1961: Opening of Ronald Tree's Sandy Lane.
1967: Sale of the hotel to Trust Houses, which became Trusthouse Forte three years later.
2001: Purchased five years earlier by Irish magnates, the hotel reopened after a lavish revamp.

HISTORY IN DETAIL
1960: Construction began on the resort, on what was once a sugar plantation. It was the brainchild of Ronald (or Ronnie) Tree, who had fallen in love with Barbados and its people since he began spending time there in 1946. After inviting friends to his Barbados home, Heron Bay, for several years, Tree decided to open Sandy Lane. Tree was British-born but American by origin, the grandson of Chicago department store magnate Marshall Field. He brought in American architect Happy Ward and funded the project thanks to a group of rich and influential friends.
1961: Sandy Lane opened. It was built on 380 acres and encompassed an intimate hotel, nine-hole golf course and real estate lots. Said Ward of his design for the neo-Palladian style hotel, "I put myself in the position of a well-educated English gentleman of the late 18th century going to the West Indies to build a Great House."
1960s/70s: The guestbook read like a Who's Who of that era (see famous guests).
1967: The hotel was sold by Tree to Trust Houses. 1970: Trust Houses became Trusthouse Forte, then the largest hotel company in the world. Sandy Lane was a special favorite of Trusthouse Forte head Lord Forte, who frequented it often.
1996: Tycoons Dermot Desmond, J.P. McManus and partners purchased the property and golf course and embarked on the major rebuilding programme. Due to the wear of over 30 years and several structural problems, the resort was demolished then rebuilt and expanded, in the same neo-Palladian style as the original, complete with its white coral stone rotunda - albeit larger and even more luxurious.
2001, March: The hotel reopened.
2006: The Sandy Lane Country Club golf course hosted the 2006 World Golf Championships-World Cup.

Source: www.sandylane.com

Sidney Poitier, Mick Jagger, Princess Margaret, Queen Elizabeth II, Frank Sinatra, Harry Belafonte, Raquel Welch, Michael Caine, Luciano Pavarotti, Twiggy, Lord Snowden, Joan Collins, Natalie Wood, Peter Sellers, Vivienne Leigh, Sarah Vaughn, T.S. Eliot, Elton John, Maria Callas, Aristotle Onassis and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, David Niven, ...
Since the heady days of the sixties and seventies, celebrities treated Sandy Lane as their home away from home. The stories that swirl around their visits have become legend: Aristotle Onassis being rowed in from his yacht while Maria Callas swam ashore with a pet marmoset on her back; David Niven inventing his own cocktails at the bar; Elton John adhering to the New Year's Eve black-tie dress code with a black tie around his thigh, and later giving an impromptu concert at the piano; house guests of Sandy Lane neighbor Claudette Colbert - such as Slim Keith, Babe Paley and Kitty Carlisle Hart - regularly popping by for lunch and dinner. Several of the stories also originated in the hotel's chic Dotto Boutique, where guests could find the perfect outfits for that evening's festivities. The reclusive Greta Garbo (who traveled under the name "Harriet Brown") felt so comfortable that she once asked the boutique to make her a pair of baggy Bermudas, which she wore for the rest of her stay. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and daughter Caroline tossed clothes from one fitting room to another as they bought up a storm. An American heiress who was a repeat guest and discreetly known only as Mrs. N, bought a psychedelic watch with no numbers to wear on the island, saying "With this watch, it's always martini time." Ronnie Tree's daughter Penelope tried on everything and inevitably left a pile of clothes on the floor (she would soon thereafter become a top model and one of fashion's hottest faces in the 70s).

-

Michael Pownall
Paul Williams (former F&B manager)
Richard R. Williams
Colm Hannon
Robert Logan

96 rooms + 14 suites + 2 penthouses, one villa (14 people) Rooms
-
Sandy Lane is located on the western coast of the island of Barbados and sits on a 1000-foot white sand beach beside the sparkling waters of the Caribbean Sea. The resort is approximately a 35 - minute drive from Grantley International Airport.
-
-

-

-
-
Google Map

Our Select Member Hotel

Sandy Lane
Country: Barbados, West Indies
City: St. James
Opening date: Feb 1961 / Nov 1991

Note from the Host

General Manager Randall Wilkie
Hotel Manager: Jan Tibaldi

Coordinates

Sandy Lane
Barbados, West Indies, St. James

Tel: +1 246 444 2000
Fax: +1 246 444 2222

Google Map

Book a Room

Click on the link below to start your trip (no booking fees)!