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Devon House, Jamaica
Devon House

Surrey County (Saint Andrew)

Devon House

Kingston's restored 1881 Great House โ€” built by Jamaica's first black millionaire, and now loved as much for the I-Scream ice cream and patties as for the mansion tour.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Kingston, Jamaica

Opening hours

The grounds and courtyard shops, including the ice-cream parlour and bakery, keep daily daytime and evening hours, busiest at weekends; the Great House guided tours run set daytime hours that are shorter than the grounds. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Tickets

The grounds and courtyard are free to wander, so you can come just for the food. Only the guided tour of the Great House is ticketed โ€” on the order of US$10 for an adult at the time of writing, with reductions typically for children. Confirm current hours and prices on the official site.

Time needed

An hour or so for the courtyard, ice cream and a poke around the grounds; add about 45 minutes if you take the Great House tour.

In short

Visiting Devon House

Devon House is a restored 1881 Great House in Kingston, built by George Stiebel, reckoned Jamaica's first black millionaire. The mansion tour tells that story, but locals come as much for the courtyard food: the famous Devon House I-Scream and Jamaican patties under the trees. Grounds are free to wander; the guided house tour costs a modest fee. A relaxed half-day of history and eating.

The house and the man who built it

Devon House is a graceful 1881 Great House set in landscaped grounds in the Saint Andrew side of Kingston, and its story is the reason it matters. It was built by George Stiebel, widely described as Jamaicaโ€™s first black millionaire, who made his fortune partly in mining and then put up one of the finest houses in the city. The guided tour of the restored interior โ€” period furnishings, the architecture, Stiebelโ€™s rise โ€” is the historical heart of a visit, and at roughly US$10 for an adult it is an easy add-on rather than a big spend.

The thing to understand is that the tour is now almost the supporting act. The grounds and courtyard are free to wander, so plenty of people never go inside at all.

Why locals actually come

Because the real draw, these days, is the food. The courtyard is home to the famous Devon House I-Scream, an ice-cream parlour that locals will queue for, and a bakery turning out proper Jamaican patties. People come to sit under the big trees on the lawns with a cone and a patty as much as for any history lesson โ€” it is a genuine Kingston weekend ritual, not a tourist invention.

That mix is what makes it a relaxed, low-cost outing. Reckon on an hour or so mooching the courtyard and grounds with an ice cream, plus about 45 minutes if you take the house tour. The grounds and shops keep long daily hours and get busiest at weekends, while the Great House tours run shorter set times โ€” so if the mansion is your priority, confirm the current tour hours and prices on the official site before you go. If it is the ice cream, you can more or less just turn up.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Kingston city guide.

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Devon House FAQs

Do you have to pay to go to Devon House?
No, not to visit the grounds. The lawns, courtyard and shops โ€” including the ice-cream parlour and bakery โ€” are free to enter, which is why many people come purely for the food. Only the guided tour inside the Great House is ticketed, at around US$10 for an adult.
What is Devon House famous for now?
As much for eating as for history. The courtyard is home to the celebrated Devon House I-Scream ice cream and a bakery turning out Jamaican patties, and locals come to sit under the trees with both. The 1881 mansion and the story of its builder are the historical draw alongside it.
Who built Devon House?
It was built in 1881 by George Stiebel, widely described as Jamaica's first black millionaire, who made his fortune partly in mining. The restored Great House and its furnishings tell that story on the guided tour, set in landscaped grounds in the Saint Andrew part of Kingston.