Carriacou - a small island in the south Caribbean measuring just eight miles at its widest point - shares a unique connection with Huddersfield. It's believed that every one of Carriacou's 10,000 inhabitants knows someone from the West Yorkshire town. This unusual link dates back to the 1950s and 1960s when a significant number of Carriacouans migrated to Huddersfield.

Following the post-war labour shortage, residents of British overseas territories, including Grenada (of which Carriacou is a part), were invited to Britain. Many Carriacouans found their fellow islanders residing in Huddersfield and decided to join them, contributing to the town's engineering and other industries. "If everyone from Huddersfield went home at the same time the island would sink," quips Anne Joseph, a Huddersfield resident whose husband Leonard 'Giftan' Joseph emigrated from Carriacou in 1959.

READ MORE Holidaymakers heading to Greece dealt 'life-threatening' travel warning Giftan initially moved to London but soon relocated to Huddersfield to be with his friends. Similarly, John 'Rocky' Joseph (no relation) migrated from Carriacou to Huddersfield with his parents at the age of 14. Rocky, now 69, believes that Huddersfield offered better opportunities for young people in terms of further education and career choices, reports Yorkshire Live .

So, what's it like on this little island with such close ties to Huddersfield? "Thirteen square miles of absolute paradise," describes Anne, a retired advert.