From Wikipedia

Nonsuch Island (originally Nonesuch Island) is part of the chain which makes up Bermuda. It is in St George's Parish, in the northeast of Bermuda. It is 5.7 ha (14 acres) in area and is at the east entrance to Castle Harbour, close to the south-easternmost point of Cooper's Island (now ostensibly part of the much larger St David's Island). Latitude (DMS): 32° 20' 52 N Longitude (DMS): 64° 39' 48 W

History

In 1865 it served as a Yellow Fever quarantine hospital. On the eastern part of the island there still remains a small cemetery. In 1930 it served as a base for William Beebe and Otis Barton's landmark bathysphere dive and his original field station.


Environment

The island is a wildlife sanctuary. It is wooded and with a small freshwater marsh, access to the public is strictly limited. The restoration or “re-wilding” of the once barren island into a 'Living Museum of pre-colonial Bermuda' is the lifetime work of now retired Bermudian ornithologist and conservationist David B. Wingate and now chief Terrestrial Conservation Officer Jeremey Madeiros, and part of their efforts to bring back from near-extinction the once plentiful, endemic nocturnal seabird, and national emblem of Bermuda, the Cahow. This project involves the reintroduction of other species, notably the West Indian Topshell, the Yellow-crowned Night Heron and a Lazarus species of Snail.

Accounts written at the time of Bermuda's settlement leave no doubt that herons and egrets of several species were resident and breeding on the island. Diego Ramirez (in Wilkinson 1950) describing the events of his shipwreck on Bermuda in 1603, wrote of "the many very large dark herons" and Sylvanus Jourdain, (in Lefroy 1877), a survivor of the Sea Venture shipwreck of 1609 that led to British settlement, reported in 1610 that "there are also great store and plenty of herons and those so familiar and tame that we beat them down from the trees with stones and staves, but such were young herons. Besides many white herons without so much as a black or grey feather on them." Likewise, William Strachey (in Lefroy 1877), another survivor of the Sea Ventureand the official chronicler of the Virginia expedition, wrote of the "white and grey Hernshawes and bittons.