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| Activity Guides | Cruise Visitors | Families | Honeymooners | African Diaspora |
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St. Peter’s Church and “slave” graveyardMeandering through the St. Peter’s Church graveyard offers a fascinating glimpse of life and death in the 16th through 18th centuries. Take a look for yourself at this nod to our history.
Duke of York Street, Town of St. George St. George’s Post Office“John Stephenson, Methodist missionary, was imprisoned in this cell six months and fined fifty pounds for preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ to African Blacks and captive Negroes — St. George’s, Bermuda, June, 1801.” So reads an inscription written upon the wooden floor of what is now St. George’s Post Office. The preacher was imprisoned just two months after his arrival on our island for boldly preaching to the black community. He left Bermuda in 1802 — ill, disillusioned and unfit for the missionary duty he once loved. Water Street, Town of St. George St. George’s Historical Society Museum
Duke of Kent Street, Town of St. George The Bermudian Heritage Museum
Water and York Streets, Samaritan's Lodge Building Tucker House MuseumWhen Confederate soldiers began to draft Free Blacks to work on Charleston’s fortifications, Joseph Hayne Rainey and his wife Susan escaped to Bermuda aboard a blockade runner. The Raineys quickly embraced Bermudian life, Joseph becoming a member of Alexandra Lodge 1026 of the Grand Order of Odd Fellows, and later the first Black man in the House of Representatives. At Tucker House, you will find the Rainey memorial room, where you can view copies of speeches he made during his term in the House of Representatives, and other memorabilia. Water Street, Town of St. George |
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