Jakes Hotel Treasure Beach | Photo Credit John Mcbean
ST. ELIZABETH, Jamaica – On Jamaica’s magnetic south coast, Jakes Hotel has always existed slightly outside of time. It is a bohemian cluster of seaside cottages, verandas, and saltwater rhythms built on creativity and community. The pioneering spirit of founder Sally Henzell and her family, communitarian Jason and producer Justine, along with her husband, the late Perry Henzell, is evident. Perry Henzell was the genius behind The Harder They Come with the late Jimmy Cliff.
After Hurricane Melissa passed through the region in late October, Treasure Beach felt the storm’s sweep, but not its devastation. Today the village’s spirit is intact. The hotel’s heartbeat is strong, and Jakes is set to reopen on December 18th with renewed optimism and its signature charm.
Though peaceful by nature, Jakes is also one of the most socially vibrant corners of Jamaica. Mornings begin with strong coffee and sea breezes. Afternoons unfold across the seaside pool, farmers’ fields, small coves, or bike paths. Evenings shimmer with local music, conversation, and the glow of Jack Sprat Bar & Restaurant. This legendary beachfront hub is known for its jerk chicken pizza, fresh fish from the boats, and easy camaraderie.
It is a place where writers edit manuscripts under almond trees, filmmakers gather after a day of shooting, and locals and guests mingle without hierarchy. You feel it instantly: this is a real community, not a manufactured escape.
Jakes will reopen with 30 accommodations available, while four suites remain offline for final enhancements. The landscape is currently in a natural phase of renewal. It is being reimagined with native planting and resilient design. What could be framed as post-storm repair is instead becoming a thoughtful, long-term investment in the land. The Henzell family and community members are leading the work.
Visitors will find the Jakes they love — the sunsets from the dock, the breezy verandas, the driftwood paths, the stillness and sea — but with refreshed vitality.
Long before “sustainable design” became a global movement, Sally Henzell was practicing it intuitively. In the early days, she built Jakes room by room with local hands, reclaimed materials, and a joyful disregard for convention. Empty colored bottles embedded in concrete walls created stained-glass mosaics. Broken china, shells, driftwood, found objects from the sea — nothing beautiful was wasted, everything was transformed.
Her palette is the Caribbean itself: turmeric yellows, bougainvillea pinks, sea-washed greens. The architecture isn’t architecture as much as it was sculpture — an invitation to live inside color, shadow, breeze, and memory. Her touch still defines Jakes today. Every room feels personal, crafted, and soulful, as if the house itself is telling a story.
This creative lineage continues. The Henzell family remains deeply involved in the hotel, ensuring Jakes evolves without losing its essential poetry.
To understand Jakes is to understand Treasure Beach — not as a resort area, but as a culturally alive village of fishermen, farmers, artists, coaches, storytellers, and families.
BREDS The Treasure Beach Foundation, co-founded by Jason Henzell in 1998, represents this ethos. What started as a request from local youth for a basketball court has grown into a major community engine. It has raised $5 Million USD since its inception.
The funds are used in support of education, youth sports, sustainable farming initiatives, and environmental conservation. Jakes contributes through its “Dollar-A-Night” program and ongoing collaborative projects.
And now, post Hurricane Melissa, BREDS has raised $400,000 USD from donors around the world. With the island in a period of post-storm stabilization, the work of BREDS has never been more important. Guests don’t just visit Jakes. They actively support a community strengthening itself from within.
Jakes has long attracted creative thinkers — not just because of its beauty, but because of its atmosphere: contemplative, elemental, generous with solitude and story.
Treasure Cot, one of the area’s simple, beloved early cottages, holds a particularly luminous chapter in literary history. Here, Alex Haley wrote Roots, drawing on the quiet of the village, the cadence of fishing boats, and the unbroken horizon. This background helped shape what would become one of the most influential books of the century. The cottage was built by Sally’s father in 1941, the year she was born. It is a reminder that great ideas often require a place that offers great stillness.
That legacy extends to the internationally acclaimed Calabash International Literary Festival, founded by poet Dr. Kwame Dawes, novelist Colin Channer and producer Justine Henzell. Every two years, Treasure Beach becomes a world stage for literature, performance, music, and global storytelling. Writers from across the diaspora and around the world gather under open skies, reading to an audience of locals, travelers, and book lovers.
Visitors looking for an escape that is real — not polished, not staged — will find Jakes fully itself. The hotel reopens at a moment when the village is ready to welcome guests back. Community-supported work is thriving, and optimism, music, and south-coast sunlight feel particularly meaningful.
Treasure Beach was not hit as hard as other regions, the atmosphere is warm and confident, and the return of Jakes signals something larger than a reopening: a reaffirmation of place, culture, and the power of a tourism model that gives back rather than takes.
Guests arriving via Kingston will find the improved 2.5-hour drive an easy, scenic approach — a long exhale into one of the Caribbean’s most singular enclaves.
A place built by artists. Sustained by community. Guided by creativity. Open to all who seek beauty, depth, humor, discovery, and a slower, more soulful way of being. On December 18, the doors reopen.
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