AROUND 1945, RÉMY DE HAENEN – a London-born French-Dutch aviator, sailor, playboy, entrepreneur, “gentleman smuggler” and adventurer, flew the first airplane to the island of St Barthélemy, landing on a thin strip of grassy savannah between a rocky hill and the ocean, precisely where a small airport and, one of the most iconic runways in the world would be built soon after. This tiny island – Saint Barths for the French, St. Barth for the Americans, Ouanalao for the native Carib Indians – has a surface of just twenty-one square kilometers and is nested in the Caribbean Sea latitude 17.9000°N, longitude 62.8333°W, the silhouettes of the nearby islands of Saint Martin on the South; and St Kitts, Nevis, Montserrat, Saba, and Sint Eustatius on the Northeast are visible on clear…
