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Bermuda Diaspora Trail

by Mello, Tomas; Harrison, Hattie; Rothwell, Grace

Pages 4 and 5 of 15

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Bermuda Heritage Museum
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Stanly Lowe was former speaker for the house.
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Fun activity: Try and find a man with a black suit next to a lady with a suit on, too, on the top floor of the museum.
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This museum is all about slavery and the olden days.
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Info on the museum: They used a typewriter to write letters to their family. There's a lot about under the sea life and the marine life. Freedom is not given; it is a right of birth, but there are moments when it must be taken. The museum has a lot of black history and slavery. This is the only museum that only shows African history!
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Important information:            Open hours: tuesday through saturday, 10 am to 3pm 
Admission: $5.00 for adults, $3.00 for children. Kids under 6 are free. Donations are accepted. 
located at the junction of duke of york street and water street, st. georgs.
bus routes: 1, 3, 10 or 11 

 

 


   
                                       






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This museum is located in Samaritan's Building!
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St. Peter's Church
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St. Peter's Church is one of the 13 Bermuda
African Diaspora Trail locations, one of the
6 included in this e-book. Located in the heart
of St. George's, a UNESCO World Heritage Site,
it is the oldest Anglican Church in continuous
use in the New World and one of the key sites
in Bermuda's African Diaspora Trail. This church and its graveyard still bear the traces of African slavery and the impact of it on those of the community and the church. One of the ways the traces of segregation and slavery is shown, is that there was an allocated graveyard for free blacks and slaves and a separate seating area in the church, further away from the action down below, showing that they were less worthy and didn't deserve as much as the whites, which is still standing, but with a new sense of worth today.
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Furthermore, in 1612 when the first settlers arrived in Bermuda, a church was one of the first buildings to be erected on the site still to be occupied by what was later named St. Peter's Church. Evidently, what makes this site so popular is the history behind the wooden pews and the meticulous displays. Behind the polished wooden doors and the marble plaques on the graves, there is a story. A story worth knowing about. Go to St. Peter's Church to see ancient artefacts like the pulpit made of Bermuda cedar in 1660, and ask volunteers on duty for the inexplicable story that can be fully accounted for through words! Enjoy!
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Rounded Rectangle
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