The Buccaneer on St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands has turn out to be a single of the Caribbean’s landmark resorts and one of the strongest ever developed, as it has weathered significant storms and served as a refuge after hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017.
Elizabeth Armstrong, the third-generation owner, not long ago declared that the resort has partnered with Wyndham Resorts & Resorts’ Trademark Collection, the to start with time the vacation resort has affiliated with a big lodge model.
Armstrong said that the present-day possession, administration and staff will stay in place, but the resort will obtain accessibility to the 86 million Wyndham Benefits members by way of the brand’s reservation method.
According to Wyndham, the Trademark Collection of accommodations all-around the world boast three frequent characteristics: character appeal, and individuality. The selection is geared to entrepreneurs who are passionate about upholding their hotels’ unbiased spirit. “The homes in the selection are made for daily vacationers trying to get exclusive, attainable accommodations in sought-following destinations,” a Wyndham spokesperson explained.
“We’re extremely thrilled about the prospects for growth with the elevated reach and model assurance to new marketplaces,” Armstrong claimed.
“The comfortable-brand selection is a ideal in shape for each the resort and the long-expression advancement of the Buccaneer vacation resort product, though guarding the historic and one of a kind mother nature of the resort,” she mentioned.
Relevant: Perspective entry requirements for the U.S. Virgin Islands and other Caribbean islands
The transition to the Trademark Collection by Wyndham will be finished more than the next several months.
The Buccaneer was opened as an 11-room inn by the Armstrong relatives in 1947, but the property’s background goes a great deal even more again. It dates to the 1650s, when the initial developing was produced by a Knight of Malta and later was household to Danish Governor Christian Leberecht von Prock in the 1700s.
The Armstrong family acquired the 340-acre estate in 1922 as a cattle ranch just before changing it to an inn.
Today, 138 guestrooms are spread through the estate, with hilltop villas and rooms with expansive terraces overlooking the ocean. An 18-gap golfing system, 8 tennis courts, a few beaches, two pools and a watersports heart give visitors loads of approaches to remain energetic, even though the whole-assistance spa and 7 dining places and bars offer the chance to unwind and indulge.
Historic attributes contain a sugar mill from the early 1700s that dominates the entrance the Cotton Property that was utilized in the early 1900s when cotton changed sugar as the Virgin Islands’ most important crop and the Hamilton Wing, rumored to have been Alexander Hamilton’s residence for the duration of his time on St. Croix.
Premiums get started at $428 per night, double for June arrivals. The resort has a selection of packages with bargains and specific choices.