Teachers Resource1 - Department of Education
Transcription
Teachers Resource1 - Department of Education
Bermuda FIVE CENTURIES Teachers Guide Text copyright © Rosemary Jones, 2011 Written and designed by Brimstone Media Ltd. Published by Panatel VDS Ltd. Printed by Island Press Ltd. Produced for the Ministry of Education, Bermuda TEACHERS GUIDE Contents 4 How to Use this Guide Navigating Bermuda: Five Centuries 52 First-Person Accounts Ways to integrate first-person accounts into social studies lesson plans, including discussion themes and points of view PLUS: page-finder and synopses of the book’s 48 first-person accounts 6 Section Synopses: Sections 1 to 5 An overview of the five thematic sections spanning 1505–2000s, with summaries, notes, key topics and history-makers 12 Section 1: Isle of Devils 1505–1684 59 History-Makers Mini-biographies of those who made Bermuda history, with discussion guide and chapter listings 62 Image Study Analysing the book’s historic artwork and photos, discussion guide and activities 66 Connecting to the Curriculum Ways to use the book in Social Studies, Language Arts, Media Studies, Maths, Drama, Art, and Science classes 70 Real-World Resources Information to help plan enrichment fieldtrips to Bermuda museums and historic sites The Fight for Rights; A Perfect Paradise; the New Tourism; Second World War 76 Multi-Media Resources Further reading, websites, film Section 5: Coming of Age 1945–2010 78 Timelines Comparing and contrasting Bermuda events in a worldwide context, with discussion guide and activities CHAPTERS 1– 4 LESSON PLAN MATERIALS Age of Discovery; The Sea Venture; The First Settlers; The Company Island 20 Section 2: Sea, Salt & Slavery 1684–1834 CHAPTERS 5– 8 LESSON PLAN MATERIALS Call of the Sea; Scourge of Slavery; Wars and Defence; Freedom and Reform 28 Section 3: Boomtown to Boers 1834–1918 CHAPTERS 9– 12 LESSON PLAN MATERIALS From Sea to Soil; The Portuguese; American Civil War; Tourism Takes Off 36 Section 4: Votes, Visitors & Victory 1918–1945 CHAPTERS 13–16 LESSON PLAN MATERIALS 44 CHAPTERS 17–20 LESSON PLAN MATERIALS Progress in Peace; Growing Pains; Troubled Times; Into the Future Contents 3 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES How to Use This Guide Bermuda: Five Centuries brings our island’s history alive and makes it accessible, especially for young people. This special Teachers Guide was created to offer instructional support and help teachers and their students get the most out of this unprecedented narrative history that won the prize for non-fiction in the 2008 Bermuda Literary Awards. Now you can prepare dynamic lesson plans and take your classes on a fascinating journey back in time and experience the most dramatic moments of Bermuda’s past. Exploring our history: choose your path This Teachers Guide will aid you to navigate Bermuda: Five Centuries, which is divided into five thematic sections, each with four chapters, that tell our history in chronological sequence. Teachers can decide whether they wish to approach the book section-by-section and chapter-by-chapter, compare and contrast historic and social themes through the centuries, or take explore history through any of several other focus areas, including: First-Person Accounts—narratives of those who actually lived through historic events and described them throughout the book. See Pages 52–58 Image Study —images, both illustrative and photographic, can be found throughout the book, many from Bermuda’s national archives, museums or family and individual collections. These images capture the people and places of Bermuda’s past in a graphic way and can be examined as stand-alone features. See Pages 62–65 4 How to Use This Guide TEACHERS GUIDE History-makers—the characters of our history, from students to statesmen, played their different parts in an unfolding drama. History can be examined through the framework of such people, whose profiles span the chapters and centuries. See Pages 59 –61 Timelines—the island’s story unfolds against that of the world at large, allowing teachers and students to compare and contrast the two in historical, socio-economic and political contexts. See Pages 78–79 Connecting to the Curriculum—multidisciplinary ways to use Bermuda: Five Centuries in Social Studies, Language Arts, Maths, the Arts, and Science classes. See Pages 66–69 Chapters in the guide explore each of these separate options, offering myriad ways in which teachers can guide students through Bermuda history in classes that are both informative and engaging. Included throughout are sections on vocabulary, timelines, questions for group discussion, critical thinking, individual research and activities, as well as thematic connections, allowing instructors to adapt material to different grade levels in Bermuda’s middle and secondary schools. You will also find chapters containing Resources (books, websites, films) to enhance topic learning, plus a full listing of the island’s historic sites and museums (complete with contacts, locations and websites), to enable educators to build on lesson plans with additional fieldtrips and group visits. How to Use This Guide 5 SECTION SYNOPSES SECTIONS 1 to 5: 1505–2000s An overview of Bermuda: Five Centuries Bermuda’s historical evolution can be deconstructed and examined via major changing themes. Bermuda: Five Centuries does this through five sections, with four chapters each, spanning the island’s 500-year history—from Bermuda’s discovery in the 16th century through to the present day. 6 TEACHERS GUIDE SECTION ONE Key topics Isle of Devils l Maps and early navigation l Bermuda’s fearsome reputation among 1505–1684 Includes Chapter 1: Age of Discovery Chapter 2: The Sea Venture Chapter 3: The First Settlers Chapter 4: The Company Island Summary This section details the first period of human history in Bermuda, from the island’s discovery by Spaniard Juan de Bermúdez in 1505, to the 1609 accidental shipwreck by English colonists en route to Virginia, to England’s decision to send the first official colonists to the island in 1612, and the first decades of settlement. Teaching Notes: l Only relatively recently have historians settled on the date 1505 as the correct year of Bermúdez’s discovery of the island; in texts prior to 2000, the date 1503 was often used, but is now believed to be incorrect. l Refer to “England” and the “English” (not “Britain” and the “British”) in this section’s chapters. The United Kingdom of Great Britain was not formed until 1707; until then, England, Scotland and Ireland remained separate political entities. mariners l World powers of the 1500s and 1600s l How Spain’s disinterest in Bermuda allowed for English colonisation l Bermuda’s first early visitors (castaways) l The Sea Venture shipwreck l How Bermuda saved Jamestown (with supplies on Deliverance & Patience) l Bermuda and Shakespeare’s The Tempest l Survival by Sea Venture’s crew and passengers l Bermuda’s first settlers in 1612 l St. George and Jamestown l Defence and fortification l Pocahontas and native people l Colonial economic challenges l Bermuda’s shareholder “tribes” and parishes l Hog money l Witchcraft, crime and punishment l How government in Bermuda began l Bermuda’s first slaves l The Virginia Company and Bermuda Company History-makers l Juan de Bermúdez l Diego Ramirez l Christopher Columbus l Sir George Somers l Sir Thomas Gates l William Strachey l William Shakespeare l Elizabeth I l Richard Moore l Richard Norwood l John Rolfe and Pocahontas l Daniel Tucker l Captain Nathaniel Butler Turn to Page 12 for a full analysis of Section One’s chapters Isle of Devils Section 1 7 SECTION SYNOPSES SECTION TWO Key topics Sea, Salt & Slavery 1684–1834 Includes Chapter 5: Call of the Sea Chapter 6: Scourge of Slavery Chapter 7: Wars and Defence Chapter 8: Freedom and Reform Summary This section marks the end of private Bermuda Company rule over the island, and the start of new freedom as a Crown Colony. Strict economy-related rules set by London investors for Bermuda’s settlers were now lifted, allowing Bermudians to forge ahead with new mercantile ventures—particularly maritime pursuits. The 1700s can be categorised as the major sea-going period of local history. Slavery in Bermuda is dealt with in this section, as well as Bermuda’s part in the American Revolution. l Whaling l Shipbuilding l Piloting l Atlantic maritime trade l Pirates vs privateers l Bermuda cedar l Bermuda sloop l Salt-raking in Turks l Mary Prince l Slavery in Bermuda l Middle Passage l American Revolutionary War l The Gunpowder Theft l Irish poet Thomas Moore l Fortifications at Bermuda l War of 1812 l Emancipation l Reform for Bermuda blacks l Friendly Societies l The Enterprise incident l The first newspaper l New capital: Hamilton History-makers l John Bowen and Nathaniel North l Jacob Minors and Jemmy Darrell l Mary Prince l Olaudah Equiano l Sally Bassett l Joshua Marsden l George Washington l Colonel Henry Tucker l St. George Tucker l Governor George Bruere l Lieutenant Thomas Hurd l Andrew Durnford l Thomas Moore l Governor Henry Hamilton Turn to Page 20 for a full analysis of Section Two’s chapters 8 Section 2 Sea, Salt & Slavery TEACHERS GUIDE SECTION THREE Key topics Boomtown to Boers 1834–1918 Includes Chapter 9: From Sea to Soil Chapter 10: The Portuguese Chapter 11: American Civil War Chapter 12: Tourism Takes Off l Convicts and the building of the Summary This section describes Bermuda’s economic return to agriculture in the 1800s, after the demise of the shipbuilding industry. The island is characterised at the start of this era as an isolated, sleepy outpost, largely cut off from world affairs. That would change in the later 1800s, when Bermuda played a key strategic role in the US Civil War. By the turn of the 20th century, tourism was shaping up as the island’s new economic pillar. Royal Naval Dockyard l Yellow fever and diseases l Governor William Reid l Gibbs Hill Lighthouse l Agriculture and the export of onions and lilies l Portuguese immigration l Civil rights for Portuguese l Blockade-running in American Civil War l Artist Edward James l Princess Louise and the first tourism l Mark Twain and early visitors l Bermuda’s coat of arms l Advent of tennis l More fortifications l West Indian immigration l Boer War prisoners l Bermuda and the First World War History-makers l John Mitchel l Governor William Reid l Captain Benjamin Watlington l Monsignor Felipe Macedo l Georgiana Walker l Major Norman Walker l US President Abraham Lincoln l US Consul General Charles Maxwell Allen l John Tory Bourne l Joseph Hayne Rainey l Edward James l Princess Louise l Mark Twain l Mary Outerbridge Turn to Page 28 for a full analysis of Section Three’s chapters Boomtown to Boers Section 3 9 SECTION SYNOPSES SECTION FOUR Key topics Votes, Visitors & Victory 1918–1945 Includes Chapter 13: The Fight for Rights Chapter 14: A Perfect Paradise Chapter 15: The New Tourism Chapter 16: Second World War Summary This section follows Bermuda as it both is influenced by world changes and participates in global events. Civil-rights struggles by disenfranchised women slowly change the island’s social landscape in the first half of the 20th century. Labour unions take root. Air travel and cruise ships bring mass tourism. Bermudians take part in the Second World War, and the island plays a critical role. l Tourism takes off l Gladys Morrell and suffragettes l Birth of newspapers l West Indians’ contribution to local culture l Charles Monk and Jamaican workers l First union: Bermuda Union of Teachers l William Beebe’s deep-ocean discoveries l Bermuda’s environmental history l Cedar blight l Return of the Bermuda petrel (cahow) l New modes of travel (by air and sea) l Bermuda Railway l Celebrity visitors l Second World War l Bermuda’s baselands l Censorettes l Rations and local defence l U-505 History-makers l Gladys Morrell l Charles Monk l Marcus Garvey l John Parker l William Beebe and Oris Barton l Louis L. Mowbray l Louis S. Mowbray l David Wingate l Governor Sir J. H. Lefroy l Captain Lewis Yancey l Major Anthony “Toby” Smith l Sir Winston Churchill l Woodrow Wilson l James Hartley Watlington Turn to Page 36 for a full analysis of Section Four’s chapters 10 Section 4 Votes, Visitors & Victory TEACHERS GUIDE SECTION FIVE Key topics Coming of Age 1945–2000s Includes Chapter 17: Progress in Peace Chapter 18: Growing Pains Chapter 19: Troubled Times Chapter 20: Into the Future Summary This section reveals a period of unprecedented change in Bermuda and the world. The advent of cars, home appliances, technology—and a new airport—brought post-war Bermuda to modernity. Tourism developed, and was later surpassed by international business. Bermuda endured growing pains of civil-rights strife as blacks fought to end discrimination. Racial turmoil wracked the island. Bermuda became a global citizen, sharing the troubles of terrorism, the wonder of the Digital Age, and the challenges of sustainable progress. l The first cars l Kindley Field Airport l New technologies: TV, appliances l Bermuda’s NASA station l Post-war tourism (“Jet Age”) l Departure of Royal Navy l Bermuda and the Cold War l Dr. E. F. Gordon and the BWA (BIU) l Theatre Boycott l New Constitution and party politics l Labour strife l Racial battles l The Sharples murder l The 1977 riots l AIDS l Independence debate l First PLP government l 9/11 l Digital Age l “Bermuda Inc.” History-makers l The Talbot Brothers l Wil Onions l Martin Luther King Jr. l Dr. E. F. Gordon l Progressive Group l Sir Henry Tucker l W. L. Tucker l Sir Edward Richards l Kingsley Tweed l Sir Richard Sharples l Erskine (Buck) Burrows and Larry Tacklyn l George Duckett l Gina Swainson l Ottiwell Simmons l Rhondelle Tankard and Boyd Gatton l Shaun Goater l Pamela Gordon l Jennifer Smith Turn to Page 44 for a full analysis of Section Five’s chapters Coming of Age Section 5 11 ISLE OF DEVILS 1505–1684 CHAPTER ONE SECTION 1 10 Age of Discovery CHAPTER ONE Age of Discovery LAND-HO! ISLAND NAMED FOR A MARITIME PIONEER I n October 1603, a Spanish sea captain named Diego Ramirez found himself exploring a deserted half-moon-shaped island in the Atlantic where his galleon had run aground during a storm. Four other ships in the same fleet had been destroyed, but he and his men lost only provisions and were able to hobble into the nearest bay. They anchored and went ashore to scout for fresh supplies. Ramirez would describe his surroundings over the next 22 days in Edenic detail—a reefguarded oasis blanketed in cedar forests and palmetto palms, where plump pigs roamed wild with herons, sparrow-hawks and web-footed cahows so tame, his crew caught hundreds of the strange birds to eat on their return voyage to Europe. The island’s natural harbours swam rich with turtles, parrotfish and red snappers and its shallow inlets were littered with oysters, though when he cracked these open, Ramirez found no pearls. “The island is very peaceful, it is not high,” he wrote of the idyllic but barely-known archipelago called ‘Bermuda.’ “One can travel all over it on foot or on horseback, good black soil, thinly wooded, very good level country. Very deep on the south side, no shoals from end to end. A vessel can come within a musket shot of land, for the sea breaks on the coast itself.” The captain, who eventually resumed his voyage to Spain from the Americas, sailed around the whole island and drew a rough sketch, a chubby facsimile of the map of Bermuda we recognise today. The drawing, together with his detailed account, provide an engaging snapshot of early Bermuda before its eventual settlement by the English nine years later. His description of a pearl-laden paradise also renewed Spanish interest in the island, which for more than a century had been decried as an “Isle of Devils” or “Isla de Demonios” and shunned by mariners plying trans-Atlantic routes between the New World and Europe. BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM Summary This chapter launches the human history of Bermuda—that is, the first century (1500s) before actual settlement by the English. This period of world history is known as the “Age of Discovery,” as mostly Portuguese and Spanish seafarers made journeys of exploration to find previously unknown territories. Bermuda was spotted by accident in 1505 by Spanish mariner Juan de Bermúdez as he sailed back to Europe from the Caribbean. After this milestone, Bermuda began to appear on maps, and trans-Atlantic mariners started using the island as a northern landmark for return voyages. Many shipwrecked on Bermuda’s reefs. Survivors explored the island, writing about it in diaries and letters. Some built ships from cedar timber to escape. Peter Martyr’s map of 1511 offers the first cartographic record of Bermuda, shown upside-down at top right Fast Facts l Unlike some islands of the Caribbean, Bermuda had no indigenous people. l The first recorded sighting of Bermuda was by Juan de Bermúdez in 1505. l Bermuda didn’t appear on any map until six years later—in 1511. l Many 16th-century sailors landed on Bermuda, usually by accident after shipwrecks. l Mariners usually tried to avoid Bermuda because of its dangerous reefs and their own superstitions. l The island served a useful purpose as a navigational marker: ships returning to Europe sailed north as far as Bermuda, then veered east on homeward journeys. l We have evidence of castaways spending time on Bermuda, including maps, detailed accounts— plus the Portuguese Rock carving at Spittal Pond in Smith’s Parish. 12 Chapter 1 Age of Discovery SECTION 1 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary What if the Spanish had claimed Bermuda first? Stimulate discussion on hypothetical history: have students imagine how Bermuda’s past might have unfolded differently, and how their lives would be changed today, if our heritage and culture were Hispanic. abyss archipelago cartographic emblem encompassed facsimile fictitious indigenous inscribed malevolent Class activity Brainstorm what it would have been like to be the first human to walk on Bermuda. Encourage students to describe in detail, orally or in writing, what they see, feel and hear, as well as list the probable plants and animals they might encounter in the 1500s before manmade and natural impacts on the environment. premature prevalent profound rampant rapaciously repercussions resourcefully testimonials unbridled undeniable Unit project On a photocopied map of the world, have students shade or otherwise indicate which areas of the globe were known by European world powers before—and then after—this period of major exploration, and compare differences. Trace the oceanic routes key explorers took on major expeditions. Research skills Direct students to go online or consult other nonfiction sources to find out more about the biggest discoveries of the golden age of exploration (late 1400s and 1500s). Who were the maritime heroes of the time? Who were the monarchs? What did explorers bring back Christopher Columbus from their travels? Which regions remained unexplored? How did discoveries benefit different nations? Remind students to list information sources. Age of Discovery Enrichment Take fieldtrips to: l Portuguese Rock at Spittal Pond and visit the site where Portuguese castaways crawled to safety and inscribed the mark of their king. Tour the park trails and get students to list native vs. introduced flora and fauna. l Nonsuch Island, where a population of Bermuda petrels, or cahows—whose night-time calls were thought by mariners to be the sound of attacking devils—has been slowly restored. Chapter 1 13 ISLE OF DEVILS 1505–1684 CHAPTER TWO SECTION 1 18 The Sea Venture CHAPTER TWO The Sea Venture DISASTER BROADCASTS BERMUDA’S RICHES W illiam Strachey and his fellow passengers believed they were forging an illustrious future for themselves and their nation as they set sail from Plymouth, England on June 2, 1609. Their proud fleet of seven ships, plus two smaller attending ships, or pinnaces, was on a mission of mercy, to be sent almost 4,000 miles across the Atlantic to deliver supplies and expertise to James Fort, Virginia, England’s struggling two-year-old colony on the James River, off Chesapeake Bay. The settlement, which became known as Jamestown, was facing starvation and the fleet carried England’s hope for its survival. For Strachey, the journey was also a personal quest: having recently Pottery and a candlestick from the Sea Venture wreck of 1609 Right: an early map of the wild Atlantic, Bermuda and the North American coast Fast Facts l Sea Venture was the flagship of a nine-vessel Sir George Somers 14 Chapter 2 “relief fleet” taking colonists and supplies to Jamestown from England. l Key figures on board were: Admiral Sir George Somers; Sir Thomas Gates, later governor of Virginia; Captain Sir Christopher Newport, who earlier had headed the voyage to establish Jamestown; and writer William Strachey, who became secretary of the Virginia colony. l All crew and passengers on board Sea Venture survived the wreck. l After grounding on Bermuda’s reefs, survivors salvaged what they could from the wreck, including food, tools, rigging and timber. l The story can be divided into three main parts: the struggle to survive the storm in July 1609; survivors’ squabbles and teamwork during their 10 months on Bermuda; and their journey to Jamestown in 1610, where they reunited with friends and family. The Sea Venture BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM BRIMSTONE MEDIA Summary This chapter describes one of the most dramatic events in Bermuda’s history—the wreck of the Sea Venture. The episode is significant for many reasons: because it led directly to official English settlement of Bermuda; because it spawned written accounts that provide us with vivid detail of 400-year-old events; because it inspired William Shakespeare, the world’s greatest playwright, to write The Tempest; because it led to Sea Venture’s survivors helping to rescue America’s birthplace, Jamestown, from starvation with fresh supplies from Bermuda. The chapter details the background, personalities, events and consequences of the Sea Venture story, including the survivors’ months on Bermuda, and their escape almost a year later to Virginia aboard two ships, Deliverance and Patience, they built with salvaged supplies and island cedar. SECTION 1 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Ask students which human qualities helped Sea Venture passengers and crew to survive their ordeal and continue their journey to Jamestown? Encourage discussion of both practical skills and personality traits many would have possessed which proved an asset to the group. Specifically, get the class to rate the leadership of Gates and Somers; what did they do right—or wrong? Which qualities did they display that would be valuable to politicians or corporate chiefs today? affluence allocated apparition bedraggled bucolic burgeoning ensconced futile ignominious illustrious imperial Class activity Unit project Invite students to read aloud Strachey’s description of the Sea Venture hurricane, followed by sections of Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest. Discuss similarities in the details, themes and drama of both writings and talk about how Shakespeare may have been inspired by the real-life wreck. Discuss which events have inspired movies, plays or books (films: Titanic, Schindler’s List; TV: Band of Brothers; books: Moby Dick). Ask students to base their own poem, song or short story on an actual event. Ask students to draw their own maps of Bermuda from memory, including details such as parish boundaries, towns, islands, channels and harbours. Now compare their work with Somers’s hand-drawn map. Discuss his details and drawings, what they tell about the castaways’ time in Bermuda, and similarities and differences with modern maps of the island. Research skills Instruct students to carry out their own research on the first English settlement in America at Jamestown, Virginia. When was it founded, for which reasons, and by whom? Ask them to describe the hardships and tragedies that affected the colony before the Sea Venture passengers arrived aboard Deliverance and Patience in 1610. What was Jamestown’s “Starving Time”? The Sea Venture incredulously insurrection jingoistic jury-rigged malcontent phalanx phenomenon portend propound smorgasbord versatile Enrichment Take a class fieldtrip to the Town of St. George and visit: l The replica of Deliverance at Ordnance Island, complete with an animatronic figure of William Strachey onboard. l The Hall of History at the National Museum of Bermuda at Dockyard. Examine Bermudian artist Graham Foster’s extraordinary mural depicting the history of Bermuda, including the Sea Venture saga. View artifacts recovered from the Sea Venture wreck site. Chapter 2 15 ISLE OF DEVILS 1505–1684 CHAPTER THREE SECTION 1 30 The First Settlers CHAPTER THREE The First Settlers SPAIN’S LOSS IS ENGLAND’S GAIN AS COLONISTS TAKE ROOT A good example As soon as wee had landed all our company, we went all to prayer, and gave thankes unto the Lord for our safe arrivall, and whilst we were at prayer, wee saw our three men come rowinge downe to us, the sight of whom did much revive us. They showed us a good example for they had planted corne, great store of wheate, beanes, peas, pompions, mellons, and tobacco; besides they had wrought upon timber in squaring and sawing of cedar trees, for they intended to build a small pinnace to carry them into Virginia, being almost out of hope and comfort of our coming. —A colonist aboard the Plough, 1612 A n intriguing flurry of correspondence between Felipe III (King Philip III), his Board of Trade in Seville, and the Council of War in Madrid revealed just how poorly informed Spain was about Bermuda early in the 17th Century. Word about the island had begun to spread throughout Europe. Given Pope Alexander VI’s 1493 Line of Demarcation decree that all unknown territory from 100 leagues west of the Cape Verde islands belonged to Spain, news that the English had claimed the mysterious Isle of Devils set off alarm bells in the Iberian peninsula. Afraid that a lucrative source of pearls and ambergris—not to mention a potential strategic naval base— were about to be lost forever to their rival, Spanish officials finally turned their focus to the island they had virtually ignored for a century. It would BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM Summary This chapter details the first years of official settlement in Bermuda—the arrival of English colonists aboard the Plough in 1612 and the development of the first town, St. George. Fortification was a major theme of the colony’s first years, due to the precarious nature of English (vs. Spanish) occupation of Bermuda. Challenges were tough: rats, crop failure, disease and the lack of expected riches like pearls and ambergris left investors bitter and the first Governor, Richard Moore, was replaced four years later, in 1616, by Daniel Tucker. Fast Facts l Sixty settlers sailed from England to start a colony at Bermuda in 1612. l The “Three Kings”—a trio of Sea Venture survivors who chose to stay in Bermuda rather than go to Virginia—greeted the new colonists. l Bermuda first came under the Virginia Company mandate, but in 1615 became the responsibility of the “Bermuda Company” (both groups were run by private London investors). l Initially, Bermuda was considered only a place of useful provisions for Jamestown, Virginia; when the colony gradually became profitable, investors saw it as valuable in its own right. l The first forts were built during these years. Many remain as important archaeological sites; l St. George began as a cluster of wooden homes and a church, but gradually a stone town evolved. The town and its forts became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000. 16 Chapter 3 The First Settlers SECTION 1 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Start a group discussion about what basic elements are needed to start a new colony or settlement. Include both tangible things (water, crops, huts, a school) to those lesstangible (a chain of command, a justice system). Get students to list suggestions in order of the most critical elements. Talk about the biggest challenges facing a fledgling society. assumption augment correspondence disgruntled farcical impinge increments instrumental interloping lackadaisical Class activity Create a newspaper chronicling daily life and highlights of Bermuda’s early settlers. Have students write stories about imagined events or characters from the first town. Or encourage students to choose a character of their own and write diary entries detailing a week in the first Bermuda settlement. Or film a mock-TV broadcast in which students are interviewed (in character) about their colonial lives by a contemporary ‘presenter.’ leverage lucrative porous quashed ricocheting rudimentary serendipity single-minded whetted vindicated Unit project Divide the class in half and ask one group to gather resources about early Jamestown, and the other on early St. George. Have them research and describe modes of construction, punishment, and currency, among other key elements, as well as the toughest challenges and biggest achievements in both colonies. Enrichment Research skills Have students find more information about why St. George was selected as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and what that honour means in practical terms to the town. Which are the related fortifications that belong to the designation? What are Bermuda’s responsibilities to the site? How many other such UNESCO-designated sites are there in the world? Ask the class to list and locate some of them on different continents, and describe their history and attributes. The First Settlers Take students on a fieldtrip to: l The World Heritage Centre at Penno’s Wharf, where audio-visual and interactive exhibits tell the story of Sea Venture and the East End, with a fascinating model of the town of St. George, and interpretive synopses of early life and traditions. l Fort St. Catherine has interactive exhibits on Bermuda’s fortifications and military history. Students can explore the fort, see military artifacts and get a sense of what it was like to be a soldier working in a Bermuda coastal fort. Chapter 3 17 ISLE OF DEVILS 1505–1684 CHAPTER FOUR SECTION 1 40 The Company Island CHAPTER FOUR The Company Island LAND, LAWS AND THE BIRTH OF SLAVERY T he Bermuda that faced Governor Daniel Tucker on his arrival in 1616 was an island rapidly degenerating into an idle, ratinfested place. Continual neglect by the six interim commissioners appointed by Governor Moore before his departure had left a fractious community lacking authority, industry or healthy crops. Work on the forts had fallen off since the first settlers’ industrious efforts, and the island’s future was now threatened by a community complacent amid debauchery and petty crime. Drastic changes were called for if the colony was ever to sustain itself, let alone turn a profit for the Adventurers. Captain Tucker, an energetic authoritarian who had spent five years running a plantation in Virginia, was known for his self-styled brand of dictatorial discipline—a quality the Bermuda Company felt was sorely needed to shake the island out of its BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM Summary Bermuda’s development as a 17th-century English colony continues in this chapter. The makeup and mandate of the Bermuda Company—and this group of investors’ strict control of the island—is key during this period. Daily life, currency, crime and punishment, parish divisions and the first legislative assembly are also detailed. Notably, the emergence of slavery in Bermuda is also dealt with here, including the first legal restrictions used to discriminate against black slaves and servants. The Bermuda Company seal # How they lived M ( ! $ +" ! ! " $"# "* & & #! ! & # # $" " & ! # " ! ! "# ! & "# # " # # " " ( & ! # +" % !( " " ! " ! "$ #! +" !"# ! " ## " # $# & $ ( % # ! # ! % ! $ # ! #" " # #" # " "" $ # & +" # ! "#" " #" # "# # " # ! & ! & " ! $ # # # $ $ # % !( # (+" ) %"# % "" " # "$ "& # # " " " "" % " ! " # & # # ( ! #" "$ # # & # " ! ! # # ! ! " "# ! "& ! # # # # "# # # " ! $ #$! +" %! ! " " ! "# !% # $ ! !# # +" "# & # " " ! &# ! ' ! ( " % " ! $ "$!! $ " #% " # "$ # # " ## !" ! & # # # ! "("# ! ! " ( ! % $" ' +" " $! ! #$! ! ! # "" "("# ! $ % ! # # # ( $ " & ( & (" # $ ! &# # & (" & " ! &# $! ( & ! "" " % $ " # # #% ! #$!( " ## !" ! $ " !% # % $! ! " # $!#" % ! Shopping list 40 dozens of shoes; 40 hundred hard soap; 12 barrels of powder; one tun of wine; 30 dozen of stockings; 5 dozen of hats —From a 1630s magazine ship bill of lading Fast Facts l Daniel Tucker, Bermuda’s second Governor, was responsible for galvanising settlers to plant crops, kill vermin, and protect vanishing species such as cedar trees and sea turtles. l Land surveyor Richard Norwood divided Bermuda up into “tribes” or parishes. l Innocent women were frequently hanged, tortured or imprisoned as “witches” in the 17th century. l Bermuda’s oldest stone building is the State House, just off Town Square in St. George. l By the 1620s, servants were being replaced by black slaves, brought to Bermuda from Africa via from the West Indies. l Native Americans were also brought to the island and sold as slaves; descendants can still be found, particularly in St. David’s. 18 Chapter 4 The Company Island SECTION 1 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Why did Bermuda enforce tough laws to control black people in the 17th century? Stimulate discussion by students on how these early restrictions on civil liberties came to totally deprive slaves of basic freedoms and dignity (lack of free speech, education, freedom to travel) over the next 200 years. How did society and slave-owners justify slavery, and how did misplaced beliefs and legal control make it easier for slavery to take place? audacity commission complacent degenerating dictatorial ensuing enticing fractious gubernatorial influential insolent interim meagre paradigm perpetual petty precursor retribution volatile zeal Unit project Class activity Assign each student one of the nine parishes. Direct them to create a poster or advertisement celebrating the highlights of their parish, including places of interest, national parks, beaches, folklore, schools, or particular flora or natural landmarks. Create a class collage on a large map of Bermuda, with groups depicting their parish space with found objects, photographs, and newspaper or brochure clippings, etc. Research skills How can British influence still be seen in modern Bermuda? Encourage students to detail the language, culture, legal and political systems of British territories. Have students look up and name former British colonies—and locate the other 13 British Overseas Territories (like Bermuda) that still exist. The Company Island Bermuda instituted some of the first environmental protection laws. Split the class into groups and make each responsible for choosing and researching a protected Bermuda plant or animal. Have each group deliver its findings in oral presentations, and discuss why conservation is important. Enrichment Take fieldtrips to St. George’s and: l Have students photograph or sketch the early town model at the World Heritage Centre, then walk around the town, and identify areas from the model. Compare with a modern street map. Discuss how the town developed. l Have students gather and research the history behind six unusual street names in St. George (e.g. Redcoat Lane, Needle and Thread Alley, Barber’s Alley, Shinbone Alley, Turkey Hill, Duke of Kent Street, Blacksmith’s Hill). Note: Exhibits upstairs in the WHC offer background on these and other place names. Chapter 4 19 SEA, SALT & SLAVERY 1684–1834 CHAPTER FIVE SECTION 2 52 Call of the Sea CHAPTER FIVE Call of the Sea A MIGHTY MARITIME TRADITION IS BORN Superior The superiority of our ships and sailors has long been universally known. —Governor William Browne, 1782 I n 1722, a dashing Scottish soldier in his late 30s arrived in Bermuda to take up the post of Governor. Colonel John Bruce Hope was a pragmatic and enthusiastic personality, who launched into his new duties with vigour and humour, but he is perhaps best remembered for his descriptive accounts to Whitehall about the habits and hardships of island life of the period. “Thirty to forty years ago,” he noted, “these islands abounded with oranges, lemons, dates, mulberries, pawpaws, plantains and pineapples in particular, in such quantities that they loaded their sloops with them. But the trees and plants which remain, after blasts and mildews, seldom bear any fruit and the tobacco has gone, having for successive years been eaten, while still green, by a worm in spite of all efforts. “The inhabitants live chiefly on fish which they are very dextrous in catching,” he wrote, adding of Bermuda’s population: “They generally reckon three women for one man on the islands, since vast numbers of men are carried away by shipwreck. In fair weather, the whole inhabitants are almost all out at fishing.” Bermuda had entered a new era in the wake of the Somers Island Company’s 1684 collapse, one focussed not on the land, but on everything maritime. England, pre-occupied with military concerns and the management of its larger, more profitable sugar-producing colonies in the West Indies and America, continued to send out governors but otherwise left Bermuda to its own devices—a situation the locals preferred to the decades of longdistance, monopolistic meddling by Company Adventurers. With the longtime ban on colonial trade and shipbuilding lifted, Bermuda’s inhabitants BRIMSTONE MEDIA Summary The first chapter of this section relates the start of a new era in Bermuda, following the 1684 collapse of the Somers Island Company (Bermuda Company). Instead of strict trade regulations and monopolies, Bermudians were now free to earn a living of their choice. Bans on shipbuilding and colonial trade were lifted, and both industries fuelled a maritimebased economy throughout the 1700s. Whaling, piloting, salt-raking and privateering were also common enterprises. The chapter includes breakouts on Bermudian pirates, the cedar tree (key to shipbuilding) and the Bermuda sloop. The Bermuda sloop: fast, rot-resistant and in great demand by mariners Fast Facts l England continued to send governors to Bermuda after 1684, but otherwise left administration of the island to Bermudians. l The island began to thrive economically, thanks to successful maritime industries such as shipbuilding, Atlantic trade and privateering. l Wars between European powers of the time opened the door for merchants to prey on enemy ships as privateers. l Maritime industries such as trading, ship-building and piloting brought together white Bermudians. and black free men and slaves in a common mission l The Bermuda sloop’s durability and design for speed made it one of the most sought-after sailing ships in the world. l This 150-year period (1684–1830s) of enterprise, innovation and stubborn independence shaped the Bermudian character for future centuries. 20 Chapter 5 Call of the Sea SECTION 2 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Historians consider the 1700s/early 1800s a period critical in shaping our national identity. Traits such as overcoming adversity, working together, and seizing opportunities to make wealth are some of the qualities that have defined Bermudians over the centuries. Engage the class in a discussion about what makes Bermudian people unique, and how some of the human qualities engendered during this era have translated into innovation and success as a country in later times (the boom times of the US Civil War, early tourism, negotiating the US baselands deal, international business, etc). autonomy barbarity bonafide carte blanche commodity differentiate dwindle foray hijinks idiosyncratic Class activity Celebrate Bermuda cedar! Grow Bermuda cedar saplings from cedarberries in the classroom, then plant them on school grounds or let students take them home to plant. Discuss ways in which cedar proved vital in Bermuda history—from the making of Deliverance and Patience to the construction of homes and furniture. Encourage students to bring in items of local cedar for display. Talk about the cedar blight (see Chapter 14), and how it changed Bermuda’s landscape. Research skills Invite students to select a key Atlantic port of the 1700s to research its history, economy and maritime connections with Bermuda during that period. Which goods drove the business of maritime trade? (Philadelphia, Boston, the Carolinas, Newfoundland, Halifax and West Indies ports can be explored.) Call of the Sea legitimate mobilisation monopolistic nefarious pragmatic press-ganged tenaciously topography viable vigour Unit project Assign students to study piloting, pirating, privateering, whaling, salt-raking, shipbuilding or Atlantic trading. Divide the class into groups and have students select different maritime industries to research. Instruct them to create a fictional character—a captain, a slave, a crewman—and describe in creative writing a day of his life during a particular voyage or incident. Have each student present their diary entry to the class. Enrichment l Sign up your class for a learning expedition aboard Spirit of Bermuda through the Bermuda Sloop Foundation (see www.bermudasloop.org). Its live-aboard coastal expeditions teach about Bermuda’s maritime heritage through a curriculumbased instructional programme. l Visit the National Museum of Bermuda, incorporating the Bermuda Maritime Museum (www.bmm.bm), where the island’s seafaring past can be explored through ship models and artifacts. Chapter 5 21 SEA, SALT & SLAVERY 1684–1834 CHAPTER SIX SECTION 2 64 Scourge of Slavery CHAPTER SIX Scourge of Slavery SCHOMBURG CENTER FOR RESEARCH IN BLACK CULTURE A PEOPLE’S FREEDOM DENIED FOR 200 YEARS Floggings and punishments on a West Indian plantation LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Summary This chapter examines slavery in Bermuda—how it started, where slaves came from, how slaves lived, industries they supported, how they rebelled, means of suppressing their freedom, and the myriad ways slavery forever changed Bermudian society. Included are sidebars on Sally Bassett, the Middle Passage, the daily life of slaves, education and punishment. This chapter continues the discussion of slavery begun in Chapter 4 and continued in Chapter 8’s focus on 1834 Emancipation (Freedom and Reform). Later chapters deal with the subsequent fight for equal rights, universal suffrage and socioeconomic conditions (Chapter 18 Growing Pains, and Chapter 19 Troubled Times). O n an otherwise uneventful day in 1800, a 12-year-old Devonshire girl saw her world disintegrate. Mary Prince, a slave, was sold. Her second owner—a woman who had kept Prince’s family as domestic help and companionship for her own daughter Betsey—died, and many of her belongings, including her slaves, were auctioned off. For Prince, it marked the end of childhood comforts and an abrupt farewell to the only home she had ever known. Separated from her grief-stricken mother, three sisters and two brothers at a public market, she was purchased for £57 by a cruel captain and his wife to work at their Spanish Point property—an excruciating experience that would torment her for the rest of her life. “My mistress set about instructing me in my tasks. She taught me to do all sorts of household work; to wash and bake, pick cotton and wool, and wash floors, and cook,” Prince would later recount. “And she taught me more things than these; she caused me to know the exact difference between the smart of the rope, the cart-whip and the cow-skin when applied to my naked body by her own cruel hand. There was scarcely any punishment more dreadful than the blows I received on my face and head from her hard heavy fist…To strip me naked, to hang me up by the wrists and lay my flesh open with the cow-skin, was an ordinary punishment for even a slight offence.” Little did her new owners know that history would record their brutality, and that Prince’s catalogue of harsh treatment—in Bermuda, Antigua, London and, perhaps most notably, in the Turks Islands salt pans—would ultimately aid her struggle to become a free woman. At 43, Prince gave a detailed account of her experiences to Britain’s Anti-Slavery Society, which published her life story in 1831. Along with many similar slave tales, Prince’s graphic narrative was used as ammunition in the Society’s lobby which two years later would win abolition of slavery in Britain, followed by Bermuda and other English colonies. In the 19th Century, Prince’s story, like others, created a whole new Fast Facts l By 1700, white English servants were mostly replaced by slaves as a source of cheap labour. l Strict laws enforced the life enslavement of black slaves in Bermuda. l The island’s slaves were largely natives of the West Indies, Central America and Africa, but generally were purchased in Caribbean markets. l Slaves worked as house servants, gardeners, shoemakers, fishermen, pilots, mechanics, sailors, whalers, farmers, field-hands and executioners. l Bermuda did not have a plantation culture because the island’s size did not allow for large sugarcane, cotton or tobacco cultivation. l Bermudian blacks, like slaves elsewhere, fought back by running away, poisoning owners, theft, sabotage, go-slows, uprisings and conspiracies. l Slave artifacts such as shackles and cowrie shells have been found on Bermuda’s reefs—remnants of wrecked slave ships of the Middle Passage. 22 Chapter 6 Scourge of Slavery SECTION 2 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Discuss the economic roots of the Slave Trade with your class. Encourage debate over ways human greed has been a catalyst for gross misdeeds and inhumanity over the ages. Point out the advantages New World capitalists—including the island’s property owners—enjoyed by using slaves as cheap labour over indentured servants. How was slavery in Bermuda similar to slavery in the Americas, and how did it differ because of the island’s size and type of industries? abhorred benign camaraderie commonplace destitute disintegrate draconian escapades excruciating figuratively fraught illicit indictment infringements insidious manumission odious patronising permeated wrenching Unit project Class activity Create a display of a large map of the Atlantic, with Africa, America and Europe featured. Split students into three groups to research and present their findings on the “Trade Triangle”: 1) slave trading on Africa’s Gold Coast and the Middle Passage; 2) slavery on plantations of the Caribbean and Americas; 3) products slave labour sent back to Europe (American cotton and tobacco, West Indian sugar, Peruvian silver, etc). Encourage students to imagine they are a slave enroute from Africa to the Americas aboard a ship travelling the Middle Passage. In descriptive essays, have them write about the voyage from a slave’s point of view, including living conditions, punishments on board, sadness about leaving families behind, and fears about the future in unknown destinations. Enrichment l Tour the exhibit galleries—Trans-Atlantic Research skills Have students dig back in human history to find out how long slavery has existed and in which societies and cultures? Does human bondage and trafficking still occur? If so, how do economic motivations—of both the victims and abusers—play a part and how are responsible countries working to stamp out the problem? Get students to write a synopsis of their research, including a discussion of the moral issues involved. Scourge of Slavery Slave Trade and Slavery in Bermuda— inside Commissioner’s House, National Museum of Bermuda, which are stops along the African Diaspora Trail. Here the story of the 200-year slave trade is told through interpretive panels and artifacts from the museum’s collection. l Visit the statue depicting executed Bermudian slave Sally Bassett in the grounds of the Cabinet Building on Front Street. Have students sketch the sculpture or make their own art tribute to slaves. Chapter 6 23 SEA, SALT & SLAVERY 1684–1834 CHAPTER SEVEN SECTION 2 74 Wars and Defence CHAPTER SEVEN Wars and Defence BERMUDA BECOMES A BASTION OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE I n a letter to his mother from Bermuda in 1773, Philadelphia Quaker Thomas Coates described an island on the brink of famine. The situation had grown so dire, the government detained the ship on which Coates had sailed and confiscated its cargo of flour and rice, although that was a “mere mouthful” among so many people in need of food, he noted. No other provisions would arrive for more than a month. On January 23, a sloop made port with 200 barrels of flour and 1,500 bushels of corn, rations of less than a quart per family. “The poor people really bear the marks of hunger in their countenance as many of them cannot muster up more than will buy a peck or two, and in two or three days perhaps could buy more—but it’s all sold,” Coates remarked. “This is a great disadvantage they labour under. I suppose there’s one third of the families here have neither flour, corn or rice to make bread with, obliged to live on fish alone—when they can get it.” When America’s 13 colonies went to war with Britain, Bermudians felt the fallout in very physical terms. The American Revolutionary War (1775–83) was essentially a constitutional conflict which forged a new democratic philosophy and created the ‘United States.’ But the war also proved a milestone in Bermuda’s history, not least because it brought home to Bermudians in very serious terms the precarious nature of survival on an island so far removed from mainland food supplies. The geographical problem was exacerbated by the century’s evolving BERMUDA ARCHIVES Summary This chapter’s focus is the American Revolutionary War (1775–83), including the key role Bermudians played in the American victory against Britain, and Britain’s decision after losing its American ports to make Bermuda a major military outpost for its Atlantic operations. Themes deal with the divided loyalties (America vs. Britain) among Bermudians, the Gunpowder Theft, the island’s dependence on American trade for vital foodstuffs, and Britain’s decision to build the Royal Naval Dockyard in the early 1800s. The Boston Tea Party, the War of 1812 between America and Britain, and the Napoleonic wars between Britain and France are also discussed. Fort St. Catherine, an important fortification, was built over one of Bermuda’s earliest defences Fast Facts l America was Bermuda’s lifeline for food and supplies, due to thriving trade between them. l America’s war with Britain put this relationship in danger because Bermuda was a British colony. l Bermuda’s trump card was its proximity to America—and it had stores of gunpowder. l Bermudian loyalties were split: officially, the island was British, but privately, locals sympathised with America, due to family and trade ties. l The island’s Tucker family played key roles: Colonel Henry Tucker went to America’s Continental Congress to argue for supplies; his son, St. George Tucker, lived in Virginia and was an ardent supporter of America’s cause. l George Washington led America to victory and was elected the first US President in 1789. l Britain signed the Treaty of Paris with the new United States of America, ending war in 1783 but losing all its American east coast ports. 24 Chapter 7 Wars and Defence SECTION 2 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Bermuda’s strategic geographical position helped America in its War of Independence, but also provided a solution to Britain’s military needs in the war’s aftermath. Get students to suggest other instances in Bermuda’s past where we played a key role in the history of larger nations mostly because of our island’s convenient location (e.g. US Civil War, Second World War, Cold War). audacious bastion dire exacerbated imperialist impregnable irksome loathe opportunism penal Class activity Bermuda’s ties to America began back in Jamestown and continue to this day. Launch a class project in which students select and research different aspects of our island lifestyle and culture that are fuelled by or benefit from our close links to the United States (cuisine, travel, access to world-class health-care, universities, US tourists, currency, etc). perpetrators personae non gratae precarious pre-empted prescient retaliatory road-blocked soporific stifling villany Unit project Split the class in half and have students research either the structure of the US government or Bermuda’s government. Create detailed diagrams for class display to illustrate both systems of government (include executive, legislative and judicial branches of each). Compare and contrast the two diagrams as a class discussion. Research skills Enrichment What were the causes of the American Revolutionary War? Instruct students to research the background of the conflict and list the political and economic reasons America wanted to break away from Britain and create a separate nationhood of states. What was the “Boston Tea Party”? What was the Declaration of Independence and which basic rights did it assert? Have students name the 13 original US states and the first three US presidents. l Explore the Royal Naval Dockyard, its Wars and Defence historic buildings and outdoor spaces with students. Have them draw a plan of the area and find out what its buildings were originally intended for and how these facilities supported the Navy fleet for close to 150 years. l Tour the Royal Naval graveyards of Ireland Island, and get students to choose six tombstones each to record information about soldiers and sailors who died in Bermuda. Chapter 7 25 SEA, SALT & SLAVERY 1684–1834 CHAPTER EIGHT SECTION 2 86 Freedom and Reform CHAPTER EIGHT Freedom and Reform EMANCIPATION AND ITS AFTERMATH B anners, parades and church services throughout the island marked August 1, 1834 as a “new day” for Bermuda’s black population. It was Emancipation Day, bringing the long-awaited abolition of slavery. Bermuda’s population of almost 10,000 people included 3,600 slaves, as well as 1,200 free blacks, and both groups joined to celebrate the start of a new era. Joyful festivities, mostly religious gatherings of family and friends, began at midnight on July 31—the official end of more than 200 years of human bondage and indignity. After much bitter debate, the British Parliament had finally moved to abolish the slave trade in 1807, followed by slavery itself in Britain on August 29, 1833. The next year, a bill was passed to eradicate slavery in all British colonies. In Bermuda, two abolition acts were passed: the first, the Act to Abolish Slavery, made all slaves free; the other repealed 200 years of discriminatory laws against blacks. America’s Emancipation Proclamation was still 30 years away—Abraham Lincoln would not issue that decree until January 1, 1863, during the Civil War. An amendment to the Constitution two years later would finally end slavery in America. Elsewhere, Britain’s Caribbean colonies followed the mother country’s lead over the next few years, though Bermuda and Antigua were the only two territories which did away with slavery immediately. Others required black citizens to endure a six-year probationary period of ‘apprenticeship’ before winning full freedom, though this system ultimately collapsed. Mercenary motives led Bermudian slaveholders to support the immediate end BERMUDA ARCHIVES Summary Emancipation and its aftermath are the focus of this chapter. The legislative process of this event is explained, in context with similar developments in Britain and, later, America. Emancipation Day itself is described from various points of view. The subsequent challenges facing newly-freed blacks is also outlined, including the role of Friendly Societies. The state of education, for both white and black Bermudians, is also described. The chapter ends the book’s section on Bermuda’s maritime heyday, explaining that increased competition from Caribbean ports and the advent of steampower coupled to end Bermuda’s carrying trade and shipbuilding industry—and led to a new era with an economic focus on agriculture in the late 1800s. Fast Facts l The Slave Trade was abolished in 1807, but slavery itself continued until 1833 in Britain. l America did not abolish slavery until 1863, under President Abraham Lincoln. l Emancipation Day in Bermuda was August 1, 1834—now celebrated as the first day of the annual two-day Cup Match holiday. l Bermuda’s population of 10,000 in 1834 included 3,600 slaves and 1,200 free blacks. l The 1835 arrival of US brig Enterprise, was a demonstration of the different attitudes towards slavery in Bermuda vs. America. l Despite the abolition of slavery, Bermuda’s blacks had a long way to go to win equal rights. l Hamilton became Bermuda’s second capital in 1793, named for Governor Henry Hamilton. l The first edition of Bermuda’s first newspaper, the Bermuda Gazette & Weekly Advertiser, was published on January 17, 1784. 26 Chapter 8 Freedom and Reform SECTION 2 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Examine the moral issues of slavery with your class, considering the perspectives of both slaves and slave-owners. What did Emancipation achieve, and what more needed to happen to give blacks equal rights? Open a discussion about the decades that followed Emancipation, and the many examples of discrimination and segregation of Bermuda’s blacks into modern times. How are we still affected by slavery as a nation? How can such wounds be healed? amassed apprenticeship artisans assets behemoth conveyance grossly humanitarian indignity integrated mercenary mortifying muster pedagogy pluck probationary quagmire remuneration stipulations vindictive Unit project Class activity Split the class into three groups and re-enact a debate to bring alive the Enterprise incident. Have students research and argue the case of 1) the Enterprise’s American captain; 2) his human cargo of slave passengers, and 3) Bermudian authorities and supporters of the slaves who worked to free them through legislative means in a Bermuda court. Suggest that students play urban-planners and design their own version of Hamilton as a capital city. Instruct them to include all the major necessities for modern living (courts, police station, retail, offices, transport hubs, parks, etc), but in a street grid/layout of their own preference, each with a map key. Make a class display of all the different designs. Enrichment l Visit the Enterprise sculpture at Barr’s Bay, Research skills Ask students to read a biography or research the background of figures—black, white, slave or free—who worked for abolition in Europe or the Americas (Olaudah Equiano, William Wilberforce, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Frederick Douglass, Mary Prince). On which grounds did they oppose and argue against the institution of slavery? Get students to present a report to the class with their findings. Freedom and Reform Hamilton to see where the brigantine made port with its controversial slave cargo. l Go on a fieldtrip to the Bermuda Heritage Museum in the Town of St. George. Not only will students find the artifacts, folklore and history told there interesting, but the building is also relevant, as it belonged to the Grand United Order of Good Samaritans, one of the largest Friendly Societies that helped blacks after Emancipation. Chapter 8 27 BOOMTOWN TO BOERS 1834–1918 SECTION 3 CHAPTER NINE 100 From Sea to Soil CHAPTER NINE From Sea to Soil CONVICT LABOUR AND THE SHIFT TO AGRICULTURE A s he craned his neck to get a better glimpse of Bermuda from his crowded ship quarters, Irishman John Mitchel was feeling decidedly homesick. It was June 20, 1848, and the 33-year-old native of County Derry, with the rest of the vessel’s passengers, had spent the past several weeks journeying across the Atlantic. Even though he was immensely relieved to have finally reached land, Mitchel’s first impressions of the island, recorded in a detailed diary, were not exactly glowing. “Their houses are uniformly white, both walls and roof, but uncomfortable-looking for the want of chimneys; the cooking-house being usually a small detached building,” he remarked, painting a drab image of what appeared to him “an unkindly and foreign” land. “The rocks, wherever laid bare (except those long washed by the sea), are white or creamcoloured. The whole surface of all the islands is made up of hundreds of low hillocks, many of them covered with a pitiful scraggy brush of cedars; and cedars are their only tree,” he wrote. “The land not under wood is of a brownish green colour, and of a most naked and arid, hungry and thirsty visage. No wonder: for not one single stream, not one spring, rill or well, gushes, trickles or bubbles in all the 300 isles, with their 3,000 hills. The hills are too low, and the land too narrow, and all the rock is a porous calcerous concretion, which drinks up all the rain that falls on it, and would drink ten times as much, and be thirsty afterwards. Heavens! What a burned and blasted country.” But Mitchel and the other new arrivals were no ordinary visitors. Exiled to Bermuda from Britain, they were among the 9,000 convicts—from petty thieves to brutal murderers and political prisoners like Mitchel—sentenced THE BERMUDIAN Summary This chapter launches a new era in Bermuda history, spanning the mid-1800s to the turn of the century. It was a period of change, as Bermudians returned to the soil to develop an agricultural economy, to feed the island and create exports. Governor William Reid’s tenure shook up the island with fresh ideas and a push to bring in immigrant farmers from the Azores and other parts of Europe. Another major development was construction of the Royal Naval Dockyard, first by slaves and then by convict labourers sent from Britain. Two convict hulks surrounded by British warships at Dockyard Fast Facts l Bermuda became a quiet backwater in the mid- 1800s—food shortages and diseases like yellow fever were common and the economy slumped. l Britain, by contrast, was enjoying rapid progress in medicine, sanitation and agriculture during the Industrial Revolution. l Most foreign visitors in the mid-19th century were military officers posted to Bermuda. l A total of 9,000 convicts were shipped to Bermuda to work on the Dockyard between 1824–63. l Governor William Reid encouraged new ideas and technologies (Gibbs Hill Lighthouse, deeper marine channels and farming expertise). l The US was Bermuda’s main source of food at the time—a dangerous dependency. l Reid and his successor Charles Elliot convinced Bermuda’s parliament to fund immigrants from Europe who were skilled in farming methods. 28 Chapter 9 From Sea to Soil SECTION 3 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Innovative approaches and fresh ideas fuelled progress in the second half of the 1800s, including Bermuda, where Governor Reid encouraged Bermudians to think differently about the importance of farming. Spark a class discussion on similarly original and creative thinking of the past two or three decades that has changed life as people in Bermuda and elsewhere knew it. Point out the vast pace of innovation—notably in healthcare and technology—in just the 2000s. Ask them to imagine which developing trends might take root to alter the way we live in the next five years. anomaly backwater condescendingly consecutive craned deterrent drab dreary embodied empathy erudite instrumental invigorated lethargic motley monotony ominous perennial shambles tenure Unit project Encourage students to think up new inventions of their own. Have them first sketch their idea and describe it in a detailed essay, including reasons why it is needed in the world. Then ask them to collect materials to try to construct their invention and put together a classroom display of all ideas. Discuss the history of penal colonies, such as the one which existed for 40 years at Bermuda’s Dockyard. Why were prisoners exiled and how are they treated differently today? Have the class construct a large map of the world and pinpoint where different penal colonies were located and which countries used them. Split students into small groups to research different penal colonies and deliver written and oral reports to the rest of the class. Research skills Enrichment Invite students to find out more about the Industrial Revolution and how it transformed life in Britain, Europe, North America and the world. Have them choose a key invention and detail how it changed manufacturing, transportation, technology, or socio-economic conditions of the time. Which of these would have had the most impact on life in Bermuda in that era? l Tour Tom Wadson’s farm in Southampton Class activity From Sea to Soil Parish with students and learn how modernday Bermudians are involved in agriculture, including organic methods. l Pay a class visit to the Prisoners in Paradise exhibit at the National Museum of Bermuda at Dockyard, where artifacts made by convict labourers and Boer War prisoners are on display inside a converted munitions magazine. Chapter 9 29 BOOMTOWN TO BOERS 1834–1918 CHAPTER TEN SECTION 3 110 The Portuguese CHAPTER TEN Summary The focus of this chapter is the story of Bermuda’s Portuguese immigrants—where they came from, why they moved to Bermuda, and how their distinct culture has impacted Bermuda through its people, cuisine, religion, language and traditions. The text describes the beneficial economic impact immigrants had on Bermuda, thanks to their agricultural expertise. It also deals with the challenges Portuguese immigrants to Bermuda faced over the decades and the prejudices they had to overcome. The Portuguese IMMIGRANTS FORGE A THRIVING NEW COMMUNITY Naomi and Manuel DeCouto in 1924 with their children, a Portuguese-Bermudian family which emigrated to Fall River, Massachusetts. At right, Naomi’s parents, Bermuda immigrants Frank Medeiros Simon and his wife Antoinette COURTESY OF ROBERT PIRES COURTESY OF ROBERT PIRES I n the 1880s, a 30-year-old farmer named Frank Medeiros Simon traded life on one remote Atlantic island for another. Both islands were important whaling hubs, military outposts and ports of call for mariners. Yet in every other way, they were worlds apart. In São Miguel, the Azores, Simon bid farewell to his wife Antoinette and their five children and sailed west to Bermuda a thousand miles away. In a foreign culture where he neither spoke the language nor understood British customs, he got busy building a new life, one rooted in the harvests of Bermuda onions, potatoes and arrowroot. In 1890, a few years after his arrival, Simon sent for his family to join him and over the next two decades, they prospered and grew. Frank and Antoinette would have seven more sons and daughters, whose lives and those of their children and grandchildren were infused with common threads of community activism, intellectual thought and indefatigable industry. Today, the names of their descendants—Marshall, Mello, Pires, Souza, DeCouto, Barboza, Johnson, Correia, Martin—touch family roots throughout Bermuda’s Portuguese community. The names and circumstances may change, but Simon’s story is that of many ancestors of Portuguese-Bermudians. His journey followed the 1849 path of Bermuda’s first Portuguese immigrants and would be repeated thousands of times in the following century and a half as the story of Portuguese emigration unfolded. Like communities in the United States, Canada and elsewhere, Bermuda offered a better future for migrants fleeing poverty and persecution, but the island also desperately needed their agricultural and work skills and reaped the rewards. “The benefit I look forward to from your introducing a few European Fast Facts l Portuguese make up roughly a fifth, or 20 percent, of Bermuda’s population, but their influence on Bermuda heritage has been far-reaching. l The first 58 Portuguese immigrants arrived from Madeira on November 4, 1849 aboard Captain Benjamin Watlington’s brigantine Golden Rule. l Failing economies in Madeira, the Azores and Cape Verde prompted emigrants to start new lives in America, Canada or Bermuda. l Just two years after Portuguese immigrants arrived, agricultural productivity was increasing. l Attempts to bring in immigrant farmers from Sweden, Germany and Britain were unsuccessful. l Liberal immigration policies that allowed Portuguese to become naturalised Bermudians changed later in the 20th century when restrictive, often discriminatory measures were imposed by Bermuda’s Parliament. 30 Chapter 10 The Portuguese SECTION 3 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Discuss with students the forms of bias and prejudice that often greet new immigrants to any nation. Why do they think newcomers—to a country, to a classroom— are treated in this way? Ask students for examples they may have encountered or witnessed personally? Explain how the Portuguese Consul in Bermuda today acts as an advocate for Portuguese nationals and their families. denominations diaspora impoverished indefatigable indentured industrious infused integral intrinsic mainstay Class activity Unit project What has Portuguese culture given to Bermuda? Ask students to choose one element of Portuguese heritage and research how it has changed or added to Bermuda’s multicultural society. Students should gather photos/images and write a report on their chosen subject—which can vary from a food product to language, industry skills, a tradition or religious ceremony. Instruct students to interview and photograph a Portuguese-Bermudian or a Portuguese resident and write it up. Have them find out the individual’s personal and family history, their career details, and what their Portuguese heritage means to them. The subject can be a new or temporary resident or a descendent of a multigenerational Portuguese family. Research skills Enrichment Send students on a fact-finding mission, using books, contemporary interviews, and web resources to carry out a project on the Azores. Get them to look at the Azorean islands’ history, as well as their political and socio-economic conditions, and to note their similarities and differences to Bermuda. Plot a classroom map of the islands, their major towns and their distances to Europe, Bermuda and the Portuguese diaspora centres of North America, such as Toronto and New Bedford, Massachusetts. l Take students to visit the National The Portuguese manual naturalised patriarchal poignant progressive tracts underwrote vocations withering zenith Museum of Bermuda exhibit, The Azores & Bermuda at the Commissioner’s House in Dockyard. l Have your class attend a Portuguese festa such as the Holy Ghost Festival (Festa do Divino Espiritu Santo) or the Festival of the Christ of Miracles (Festa do Senhor Santo Christo dos Milagres) and record their impressions in artwork, photography or a journal. Get them to research the tradition’s origin and cultural meaning. Chapter 10 31 BOOMTOWN TO BOERS 1834–1918 CHAPTER ELEVEN SECTION 3 120 American Civil War CHAPTER ELEVEN American Civil War BLOCKADE-RUNNERS BRING FLEETING FORTUNE I BERMUDA NATIONAL TRUST Summary This chapter looks at one of the most thrilling episodes in Bermuda’s history—the island’s major role in the US Civil War (1861–65). It is important because of the war’s impact on Bermuda’s economy —turning the capital, St. George, into a boomtown for several years—and also because many Bermudians secretly aided the American rebels’ cause in the conflict. Britain was officially neutral, but many of its citizens also supported the South with shipments of weapons and war supplies because Southern states were the major supplier of cotton for British mills. Georgiana Gholson Walker, who braved the Union blockade to be with her husband in Bermuda n March 1863, a 29-year-old Southern belle set out on a brief journey that could have been considered either an act of commendable audacity or an incredibly foolish stunt. Six months pregnant and with her three young children in tow, Georgiana Gholson Walker boarded the blockade-runner Cornubia in Wilmington, North Carolina and set off in a bid to successfully dodge a fleet of enemy vessels and reach Bermuda. It was the middle of the American Civil War, and Walker’s husband, Major Norman Stewart Walker, had spent the past four months on the island in his new post as political agent for the besieged Confederacy. Desperate to see him again, she ignored the advice of friends and convinced the ship’s captain to take her on the daring escapade. “No one gave me one word of encouragement or hope,” she later wrote, “except that brave and blessed friend—my Father, who said, ‘My child, you are in the path of duty, I doubt not all will be well.’” No woman had ever run the Union blockade, but the plucky Petersburg, Virginia native, daughter of lawyer and politician George Saunders Gholson, was determined to try. The dangers were substantial. The captain “laid plainly before me the perils of the trip, saying that the last vessel which had gone out had just been captured, that the Northern Fleet was large and stationed for many miles out. I said nevertheless I should go,” she recalled in her journal. As the ship prepared to sail, the Confederate general in command in Wilmington came on board to urge her to reconsider, as did her good friend, the wife of Confederate president Jefferson Davis. She “besought me to consider my children, if not myself, and to return to Richmond.” But Walker was resolute, though privately she admitted “occasional misgivings as I looked upon my innocents and thought of the dangers to which I was going to expose them. But I had weighed the matter well and I believed it to be my duty.” Walker and her children—eight-year-old Carey, nicknamed “Lillie,” Norman Stewart, Jr., seven, and Georgie Gholson, two—boarded the ship on March 18 and with the captain and crew, waited for the safety of nightfall. Fast Facts l The US Civil War was also called the “American A cotton bale fire captured by artist Edward James 32 Chapter 11 War of Secession.” l At issue was the North’s push for abolition vs. the South’s dependence on slavery to support its agrarian economy (or, in broader terms, federal power over state rights). l History considers this the first modern war, with 2,400 battles more than 600,000 casualties. l Bermuda’s geographic position—between America’s South and Britain—was ideal as a depot for blockade-runners. Fast vessels smuggled war goods and luxury items past Yankee gunboats to rebel states, in return for cotton bales that in Bermuda were put on larger ships for Europe. l Cotton became the currency of the war—it was known as “White Gold.” l The war transformed Bermuda, as spies, captains, crews, merchants and political agents poured into St. George. American Civil War SECTION 3 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Initiate a class discussion about the rights of individuals vs. a group or central authority, and states vs. a federal government. How is individual autonomy achieved in a greater whole? Can it be peaceful? What types of laws or restrictions on individual rights are necessary in a democratic society? How have rebellions against authority or societal norms (staged by industrial organisations or environmental lobby groups, for example) achieved a greater good? When would it be acceptable to challenge convention? circumvent clandestine consternation cosmopolitan crucible dispirited dissipation duration exorbitant flagrant foreshadow innate lifeblood liquidate misgivings noncombatant profiteering proximity resolute strategists Unit project Divide the class in half, with one side tasked to learn about the South and the other about the North in the US Civil War. Have each group work together to research and itemize in detail the rationale for entering the conflict, and explain why they feel justified in waging a costly war. Stage a debate in class, with students working in two teams to use the researched information to make their points. Use Georgiana Walker’s diary as a starting point to discuss the power of journals as communication tools. Discuss as a class what her descriptions of Bermuda life in the 1860s say about the way people lived then and about her own character, traits and qualities. Invite students to record their own journal entries with descriptive writings about a family gathering, a school event, cherished or hurtful memories, etc. Encourage candid writing that records both emotional and scenic detail. Research skills Enrichment Have students conduct online and/or library research on US President Abraham Lincoln. They should gather biographical details, as well as information about Lincoln’s philosophical beliefs, including his stance against the institution of slavery. Instruct them to write an essay about Lincoln, highlighting his lifetime achievements and lasting legacy. l Go on a fieldtrip to the Bermuda National Class activity American Civil War Trust Museum at the Globe Hotel in St. George. Students will enjoy learning about the US Civil War through artifacts, film and interpretive panels in the museum’s exhibit, Rogues & Runners. The building itself was the Confederate headquarters and home of Major Norman Walker, who sent guns and supplies through Bermuda to the blockaded South. Chapter 11 33 BOOMTOWN TO BOERS 1834–1918 CHAPTER TWELVE SECTION 3 132 Tourism Takes Off CHAPTER TWELVE Tourism Takes Off NATURE’S FAIRYLAND COURTS THE RICH AND FAMOUS B BERMUDA ARCHIVES Summary This is a multi-themed chapter that deals with several large topics stretching from the late 1800s to 1918: the birth of tourism as an industry in Bermuda starting in the late Victorian era; the British strengthening of island forts and military facilities; Boer War prisoners in the first years of the 1900s; and the impact of the First World War (1914–18) and Bermudians who joined the Allied effort in Europe. Sidebars detail turn-of-thecentury Bermuda life, the advent of tennis, and the island’s attraction to celebrity writers. The enticing cover of the first official guidebook, 1914 ermuda is not the place for consumptives,” declared American visitor Julia Dorr. “But for the overworked and weary, for those who need rest and recreation and quiet amusement, for those who love the beauty of sea and sky better than noisy crowds and fashionable display, and can dispense with some accustomed conveniences for the sake of what they may gain in other ways, it is truly a paradise.” Dorr spent two months in the spring of 1883 on the island she would later describe as “Eden” in her book Bermuda: An Idyl of the Summer Islands, published the following year. In the memoir, Dorr described how she and her companion, “H.,” fled the late snows of New England for Bermuda aboard the New York steamer Orinoco after ignoring the advice of friends to tour Europe instead. “What a contrast to icy mountains and valleys of drifted snow!” she exclaimed on her first morning in Bermuda. “Before me were large prideof-India trees, laden with their long, pendulous racemes of pale lavender, each separate blossom having a drop of maroon at its heart…Beneath me were glowing beds of geraniums, callas, roses, Easter lilies, and the manyhued coleus…As far as the eye could reach was one stretch of unbroken bloom and verdure.” Dorr spent her bucolic holiday exploring the island on foot or by boat, admiring quaint gardens and pondering traditions such as limestone-quarrying. She attended events such as the Pembroke boys’ school sports day, and rhapsodised over the colours and climate of a place where people enjoyed a state of “perpetual summer.” She rode the ferry (a rowboat) across Hamilton Harbour, climbed Gibbs Hill Lighthouse, took a horse and carriage to St. George’s and visited Pembroke Church (St. John’s), home of the gravesite of Governor R. M. Laffan, who had died the previous year. “I found myself continually wondering how life looked, what the wide world was like, to eyes that had seen nothing but blue seas, blue skies…and the narrow spaces of this island group,” Dorr marvelled. “It would be Fast Facts l Media publicity over the 1883 visit of Princess Louise (Queen Victoria’s daughter) spurred more visitors to “winter” on the island. l Until the 1880s, Bermuda visitors consisted primarily of traders, military personnel and health-seekers; the concept of holidays emerged in the late 19th century. l Scientists, artists and writers were among the first true tourists. l Hotels, swimming pools and golfcourses were built, and the Bermuda government signed a weekly-arrival contract with steamship companies. l Tourism emerged as agricultural exports waned due to less-costly US produce. l A total of 4,000 South African Boer War prisoners were kept in camps in Bermuda from 1901–02. l Eighty Bermudians from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps and Bermuda Militia Artillery were among the First World War dead. Bermudian First World War soldiers 34 Chapter 12 Tourism Takes Off SECTION 3 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Read the book’s margin excerpts and text descriptions of Bermuda in the 1880s and the turn of the last century. Encourage students to note how different Bermuda was in that era, compared to today. Compare the types of activities tourists could enjoy, modes of transport, and what were considered “luxuries” at hotels and guesthouses. What types of services and experiences should a tourist destination offer its visitors? Get students to participate by giving examples of different types of tourism and what they prefer to do during their leisure time in Bermuda or when they travel. allegiance attributes consumptives descendants fortuitous humourist infrastructure insular internment mementoes Class activity Encourage students to imagine they are tour operators in Bermuda in contemporary times. How would they entertain visitors and what would they deem to be the island’s highlights—from their own point of view. Perhaps they would show visitors different aspects of Bermuda than typical tourist sites? Get students to write up their ideas and suggestions in a first-person essay and read it to the class. nascent paraphernalia parlay pestilence prolific recuperative re-invention rhapsodised sporadically vanguard Unit project Recreate the first decades of the 1900s in your classroom. Break the class into groups and have students find out about the fashions, cuisine, transport, music, heroes, celebrities, leisure activities, and cultural highlights of the time. Have them make drawings or posters and gather images or primary-source documents, such as poems or letters, and make a montage of life in Bermuda and abroad during those years. Enrichment l Tour Bermuda’s Defence Heritage—a large Research skills Have students find out more about the First World War, including its causes, the nations involved in the conflict, types of warfare, key battles—and how the war changed the 20th-century world. Tourism Takes Off audio-visual exhibit on island-based military and Bermuda’s war veterans on the lower floor of Commissioner’s House, at the National Museum of Bermuda. Students can watch video footage of vets remembering their wartime experiences, and see artifacts and weaponry used in defence and conflicts over the centuries. Chapter 12 35 VOTES, VISITORS & VICTORY 1918–1945 CHAPTER THIRTEEN SECTION 4 148 The Fight for Rights CHAPTER THIRTEEN The Fight for Rights WOMEN, BLACKS AND WORKERS DEMAND FAIR PLAY T Suffragettes protest outside Somerset police station as they auction an antique cedar table he large crowd which gathered outside Mangrove Bay police station on December 18, 1930 was abuzz with excitement. A week before Christmas, the usually quiet streets of Somerset rippled with high anticipation, as journalists, photographers and Bermudian men, women and children made their way to the West End, eager to see the outcome of a bizarre showdown—an ‘auction’ pitting a group of the island’s society women against Parliament itself. They would, indeed, witness an historic spectacle that Thursday morning, but one whose larger impact would not be felt for a further 14 years. While the day marked the climax of a single courageous act of civil disobedience, it would best be remembered in newspaper photos as symbolising the quartercentury-long crusade for women’s rights. At 10 o’clock, the streets erupted into equal parts cheers and boos as a horse-drawn bus arrived from Hamilton carrying a group of well-dressed THE BERMUDIAN Summary This chapter launches a new section covering the first half of the 20th century. It deals with the first of many social battles of the 1900s—the struggle for women’s rights. The cause of Bermuda’s suffragettes is explained in the context of similar lobby efforts by women in Britain. The setbacks suffered by Gladys Morrell and her supporters, and the legislative hurdles they eventually overcame, are detailed. Female suffrage in the context of its impact on black civil rights is also told, with universal adult suffrage dealt with in Chapter 18 (Growing Pains). The chapter also details West Indian immigration to Bermuda and the first newspapers. Fast Facts l Women were barred from voting in Bermuda by Bermudian suffragette leader Gladys Morrell 36 Chapter 13 archaic restrictions requiring property ownership (the laws were made to restrict blacks from voting). l British women won the vote in 1919, and their US counterparts in 1920. l As in many countries, women’s suffrage paved the way for universal suffrage, which in Bermuda did not occur until 1963. l Bermudian women began their lobby for voting rights in 1919 and succeeded when they finally won legislative approval in 1944. l Some blacks felt the women’s victory might actually hurt the black fight for suffrage by increasing white power in Parliament. l West Indians began emigrating to Bermuda in the 1890s and continued into the 20th century. l Two activists for black rights early in the century were Charles Monk and Marcus Garvey. The Fight for Rights SECTION 4 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Using the story of the suffragettes’ struggle, ask students how attitudes towards women have changed since the days of Gladys Morrell. What freedoms do women enjoy today—thanks to the fight for female rights? Have women achieved total equality with male peers—in Bermuda and the US? In Third World nations? If not, how can societies improve life for women? archaic assessment consolidated desegregation embattled floodgates imminent impetus intransigent jubilant Class activity Hold a West Indian celebration in your class. Encourage students to bring in Caribbean dishes for a potluck lunch, West Indian CDs, and regional poems, short stories or narratives to read aloud. Split the class into small groups and have each gather information about specific West Indian nations, their people, culture and traditions. Depict countries on a large map, showing their relative distance from Bermuda. militant non-commital oligarchy paltry paramount parochial permeated prejudice resurrected suffrage Unit project Create a class newspaper. Students should first form an editorial board, determining the paper’s various departments, and the stories they should carry. Have student writers and photographers gather content and editors review materials and design pages. Discuss factual reportage vs. opinion pieces and include both. Enrichment Research skills l Visit Bermuda & the West Indies, an Have students examine international figures who were catalysts for major social change. Have them delve into online and published sources, including primary-source materials, to contrast those who insisted on peaceful means to achieve reform (India’s father of nationhood Mahatma Gandhi, civil-rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King) and those who preferred more militant efforts for social protest (suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst, animal-rights activist Paul Watson). Which worked best in different nations and circumstances, and why? The Fight for Rights exhibit about Caribbean immigration to the island, at the Commissioner’s House, National Museum of Bermuda. Your class can check the display of surnames and trace them back to specific islands. l Visit the House of Assembly in Hamilton where, from November to June, students can watch Parliament in session as MPs debate national issues. Historic portraits, cedar furnishings and artifacts—including the Speaker’s silver-gilt mace atop the Clerk’s table—are on display. Chapter 13 37 VOTES, VISITORS & VICTORY 1918–1945 CHAPTER FOURTEEN SECTION 4 156 A Perfect Paradise CHAPTER FOURTEEN A Perfect Paradise PROTECTING OUR UNIQUE BUT FRAGILE ENVIRONMENT T BERMUDA BIOLOGICAL STATION FOR RESEARCH Summary Bermuda’s environmental history is an important part of our country’s heritage. This chapter focusses on key events in the natural history of the island, including the individual stories of rare and threatened species, along with the scientists and naturalists who played major roles. The evolution of the worldwide conservation movement and its impact on Bermuda is also treated, as well as international interest over the years in Bermuda’s unique biodiversity. Dr. William Beebe, left, and Otis Barton with the bathysphere he morning of June 6, 1930 dawned perfectly calm, the late spring gales of the previous days giving way to a silky stillness along Bermuda’s South Shore. Brooklyn-born biologist, explorer and author Dr. Charles William Beebe decided to take advantage of the good weather and, with his colleagues, struck out to sea early in an entourage that included the tugboat Gladisfen and a converted Royal Navy gunboat, the Ready. Leaving their East-End headquarters at Nonsuch Island, they chugged through the island-sprinkled Castle Roads channel, where the clifftop ruins of Richard Moore’s forts looked down on the flotilla. The timewarp wasn’t lost on Beebe, 52, who wondered what Moore might have said 300 years earlier, “if he could have watched our strange procession steaming past. In all likelihood, the steaming part would have mystified and interested him far more than our chief object.” The “chief object” of the day was to be a test run of the bathysphere, an odd-looking contraption that would make history in Bermuda’s waters by carrying Beebe and its inventor Otis Barton to record-breaking ocean depths which until then, had been strictly the realm of science fiction. Brought to Bermuda that year, the bathysphere was a steel pod attached to 3,500 feet of 7/8-inch steel cable that would be lowered and raised by a seventon steam winch that had been installed, along with boilers, on the barge. With three window ports made of three-inch-thick fused quartz, a circular bolted door, and a diameter of four feet, nine inches, the bathysphere was designed to carry to record depths a maximum of two people—even a couple of six-footers, as Beebe and Barton happened to be. An hour later, 10 miles offshore amid mildly heaving swells, Beebe stopped the group. Here, where Bermuda’s sea floor fell away to more than a mile and a half, they would attempt their first manned descent. The half- Bermuda: a perfect paradise in which an earnest Naturalist may luxuriate. —The Canadian Naturalist and Geologist on Bermuda, 1857 Fast Facts l American scientists William Beebe and Otis Early Aquarium curator Louis L. A. Mowbray 38 Chapter 14 Barton reached a record depth of 3,028 feet (half a nautical mile) on August 15, 1934. l Bermuda’s location makes it an ideal laboratory because of its mild climate, unique marine habitat, 12,000-foot seas and coral reefs. l Louis L. A. Mowbray and his son, Louise S. Mowbray, were both keen environmentalists and curators of the Bermuda Aquarium. l Nineteenth-century Governor Sir J. H. Lefroy published the first scientific paper on Bermuda. l The Bermuda petrel or cahow was rediscovered on the Castle Harbour islands in January 1951. l The introduction of foreign species (casuarinas, Jamaican anole, kiskadee) upset the ecosystem. l Non-profit agencies BIOS, Bermuda Zoological Society, Bermuda Audubon Society, Bermuda National Trust work to preserve the environment and educate people about its importance. A Perfect Paradise SECTION 4 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Divide the class in half and stage a debate over the question: should the natural environment be protected by conservation legislation? Have students research facts to support either side of the issue and argue their separate points of view, with a focus on fact-filled reasoning and clear, persuasive communication. amorphous buzzwords conscientiously docile empirical endowment environmentalism fantastical grassroots infinitesimal iridescent microcosm munitions ornithology periodically repossessed sensitivity specimens treatise voracious Class activity On a fieldtrip, or even a tour of the school property, have students record numbers and types of different species they encounter, including both plants and animals. In the classroom, have them use a graphing device to illustrate the total number of every species seen, and compare and contrast the data. Hypothesise why some species are more common than others. Choose two separate habitats and note the differences. Unit project Research skills Enrichment Instruct students to consult local resources such as environmental group websites, the Natural History Museum, field guides or other published materials to learn about an endangered native or endemic plant or animal currently listed as a Bermuda Protected Species (see www.conservation.bm). The Bermuda skink, cedar, marine turtles, the cahow, eagle ray, longtail, seahorse, corals, palmetto, Bermuda scallop and bluebird are examples. What is the history of this piece of legislation and what penalties for abuse can it enforce? l Screen the documentary Rare Bird, by A Perfect Paradise Have your class create two large diagrams connecting flora and fauna elements to depict the food webs in Bermuda’s delicate ecosystem—one marine, the other terrestrial. Instruct students to select and research one species, then post their photos and a fact box on the diagram and deliver a report on each plant or creature to the class. Bermudian Lucinda Spurling about the cahow’s return from the edge of extinction. l Tour the Natural History Museum at Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo and learn about our geology and habitats. l Arrange a terrestrial or marine fieldtrip through Bermuda Zoological Society’s Education Department (www.bamz.org). l Visit the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS) to learn about research on climate change, pharmaceuticals and coral reefs (www.bios.edu). Chapter 14 39 VOTES, VISITORS & VICTORY 1918–1945 CHAPTER FIFTEEN SECTION 4 164 The New Tourism CHAPTER FIFTEEN The New Tourism ADVENT OF AIR TRAVEL AND LUXURY CRUISES A BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM Summary The development of the tourism industry between the First and Second World Wars is the focus of this chapter. It describes Bermuda’s gradual transformation through investment and development into a “mid-ocean playground” for the rich and famous. The advent of air travel is chronicled, as floatplane flights arrived in Bermuda from the US. Other modes of new transport included beloved steamships like the Queen of Bermuda and the Bermudian, and the ill-fated Bermuda Railway. A Furness Bermuda Line cruise brochure promises fun in the sun for shivering North Americans s the First World War neared its end, Bermuda’s tourism industry hit a major snag. Visitor numbers had been declining drastically, and in 1917, Canadian Steamship Lines decided not to renew the island’s regular service, citing high costs and the not insignificant dangers of sailing in war-troubled waters. Moreover, Bermudian, which had been kept on the New York-to-Bermuda route, was requisitioned in March that year as a British troop carrier. Suddenly, Bermuda had no way to export its agricultural goods or to bring in visitors. The island needed to attract another large shipping company. In the summer of 1919, the New York arm of British steamship company Furness Withy came to the rescue, promising to refit Bermudian in return for a five-year, $15,000 annual subsidy from the island government. The deal, signed in June, marked the beginning of a long and mutually fruitful relationship between the island and Furness that would continue until 1966. During that time, the shipping company acted as a partner in the business of Bermuda tourism, providing not only luxury liners such as Bermuda, Monarch of Bermuda and Queen of Bermuda to bring in thousands of visitors, but also investing in capital projects such as new hotels to modernise the island’s infrastructure. Above all, Furness helped generally to hone Bermuda’s image as an upscale resort—a “Mid-Ocean Playground”—that would attract the type of American visitor who would fuel the island’s economy throughout the 20th Century. By 1920, it was decided by government and subsidiary Furness Bermuda Line officials that the answer to Bermuda’s tourism question lay in giving America’s ruling classes what they wanted—an exclusive enclave where the mega-rich could rub shoulders while they wintered in Bermuda. All eyes eventually fell on Tucker’s Town, the quiet peninsula community overlooking Castle Harbour which had been named for Governor Daniel Tucker (whose early 17th-Century aim to relocate Bermuda’s capital there never went ahead). The plan envisioned a self-contained neighbourhood of more than 500 acres for America’s aristocracy, complete with golf-courses, tennis Fast Facts l Shipping company Furness Withy partnered with Bermuda to bring cruise passengers and invest in hotels and resort areas, including Tucker’s Town. l Black homeowners were forced to sell and move out of Tucker’s Town when it was developed in the 1920s for a golfcourse and country club. l Pioneering floatplane Pilot Radio arrived at Bermuda from New York on April 2, 1930. l A seaplane base was built at Darrell’s Island and Pan American Airways and Imperial Airways began flying passengers and mail from New York. l In 1920, Bermuda had 13,000 visitors; by 1937, that number had jumped to 82,000. l Celebrity visitors in the 1920s and ’30s included baseball hero Babe Ruth, scientist Albert Einstein and child actress Shirley Temple. l A total of 33 bridges linked Bermuda’s islands to build a railway in the 1920s. The railway ran for just 17 years before being dismantled in 1948. 40 Chapter 15 The New Tourism SECTION 4 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Open a discussion on the injustice of forcing black Bermudians to relinquish their homes and land so a resort could be built for rich tourists in Tucker’s Town. Compare their treatment to the way Native Americans and other indigenous peoples have been relocated from tribal lands in the name of progress. Encourage students to talk about why societies have made such decisions against minorities and less powerful citizens. Can such issues be resolved by money? aesthetic affable alleviate aristocracy bedlam dirigible emanate enclave epochal equable exclusive fervour firmament hone inaugural maverick subsidiary subsidy upscale whorls Unit project Class activity Split the class into small groups and have each conceive of a new branding for Bermuda as a tourism destination. Let students in each group design and create their own posters and advertisements “selling” the modern island to would-be visitors from overseas—using the marketing strategy they devised in a carefully planned campaign. Ask each group to explain their approach as if the rest of the class were their client (i.e. the Bermuda government). Have students trace a large map of Bermuda for display. Assign sections of the Railway Trail to small groups and have them plot the historic route of Bermuda’s train, including the stops and stations. Instruct the class to write descriptive essays about their section of the route, describing an imaginary journey they might take aboard the train in that area of Bermuda if it were still in service. Enrichment l Take the class on a fieldtrip to the Research skills Aviator Charles Lindbergh made history in May 1927 with his non-stop monoplane flight from New York to Paris—the first trans-Atlantic crossing at 3,600 miles. Ask students to find out more about the US Air Mail pilot who shot to fame and later became an author, explorer and inventor. What tragedy led the Lindbergh family to later leave America? The New Tourism Railway Museum, near Shelly Bay, and encourage students to interpret the train’s story through historic artifacts. Then walk along a nearby stretch of the tracks. l Pay a visit to the Commissioner’s House, National Museum of Bermuda, where the exhibit Destination Bermuda on the first floor tells the story of local tourism with artifacts such as cruise ship china and vintage advertisements and posters. Chapter 15 41 VOTES, VISITORS & VICTORY 1918–1945 CHAPTER SIXTEEN SECTION 4 178 Second World War CHAPTER SIXTEEN Second World War CONFLICT MAKES HEROES AT HOME AND ABROAD I t may sound ridiculous,” Bermudian Anthony “Toby” Smith wrote to his wife Faith from war-ravaged England in the 1940s, “but my work and efforts are helping—if ever so little. Some critics might say that I was wrong to leave you and the babies. My answer is they wouldn’t say it if they had heard the terrifying, anticipatory drone of enemy planes, the roar of anti-aircraft guns, the fluttering scream of bombs, the crash of bombs and the almost dead silence which follows. “And I would tell them that this isn’t that rather indefinite place, ‘the battlefield.’ These are the towns, villages, valleys, hills and roads of England, of people like you, women, children and old fellows. God be willing, I hope you and the children will never hear them like so many people of this country have.” Thanks to heroic islanders like Smith, and his counterparts from all over the world who joined the Allied forces of the Second World War, they never had to. Smith was among the first contingent of 21 Bermudians who volunteered for overseas service; the group of 17 Bermuda Volunteer Rifles Corps (BVRC) and four Bermuda Volunteer Engineers (BVE) boarded the troop ship Mataroa on June 24, 1940 and sailed out of St. George’s Harbour for England. Like many to follow, these soldiers would join the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment which saw action throughout Europe. Driven by duty and patriotism, Bermuda’s soldiers, sailors, pilots, engineers, doctors and nurses shared both the horror and exhilaration of a dark global conflict that split the world in a showdown viewed in the most basic of terms, between ‘good’ and ‘evil.’ It was a war waged for the first time with modern mechanised weaponry against ordinary citizens. And ordinary citizens like Smith realised the unprecedented bloodshed and barbarity could be stopped only by their own determination. “Do you suppose that German planes will stop murdering our people by our wishing it?” wrote Smith to his family. “No. I know you realise as well BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM Summary The Second World War (1939–45) and the dramatic changes it brought to Bermuda are the focus of this chapter. Bermuda’s strategic importance to world powers and the changing role of women are once again key themes. Included in the content are first-person accounts—by a Bermudian soldier and a pilot—details of the US baselands deal, the story of military missions against German U-boats off Bermuda, and descriptions of how local people lived with rations and restrictions during the war years. Major “Toby” Smith (standing, second right) and others from the first contingent of Bermudians, sail to war aboard the troop ship Mataroa in 1940 Fast Facts l The Second World War began when Hitler’s Bermudian RAF gunner Randolph Richardson 42 Chapter 16 troops invaded Poland in September 1939 and ended with Japan’s surrender in August 1945. l Some 500 local men joined British, American and Canadian forces to fight overseas and Bermudian women also joined wartime services. l A total of 36 Bermudians died in the war. l Britain agreed to lease Bermudian land to the US for naval and air bases. l Britain sent 1,200 censorettes to Bermuda to check mail and telecommunications for secrets being passed to Germany. l German and Austrian nationals were interned at Huntley Towers, Paget during the war years. l Local forces were split along racial lines—as desegregation of whites and blacks was yet to occur in Bermuda and America. l Tourism disappeared during the war, but Bermuda was busy with military activity. Second World War SECTION 4 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Discuss the advantages different parties gained in the US-British deal to lease land for naval and air stations in Bermuda. Why was the arrangement useful to America— what did they fear if Bermuda fell into Nazi hands? Why did Britain need US help? What were the immediate and long-term benefits for Bermuda? (Students should include key points such as protection by US bases; the economic boost from military personnel; a civilian airport post-war.) Were there disadvantages to the deal for Bermuda? annexed anticipatory artillery catapult civilian contraband convoys curtailed deciphering exhilaration fervent hunkered intercepted marauding placid proficient prospective reconnaissance tyranny vile Unit project Class activity As a class, read Bermudian pilot James Hartley Watlington’s account of being shot down over France in 1943. Discuss the descriptive detail he includes to bring a story from the past alive, even for modern readers. Ask students to create a fictional character from the Second World War—a censorette, the mother of a local family living on rations, a militiaman on duty at a battery— and write an account of a particular incident or day spent in Bermuda during the war from their point of view. Research skills Ask students to research the Battle of the Atlantic using online, film and/or library sources. They should find out about key battles, figures, vessels, combatants and the role of convoys in the struggle for supremacy in waters around Bermuda. Have students write up their findings in a 600-word essay. Second World War Have students track down stories of people in their communities—perhaps friends or relatives—who played a part in the war. Encourage them to find photos, medals, letters, diaries or other artifacts, then write that person’s wartime story. Have students describe their chosen individual to the class. Enrichment l Tour Bermuda’s Defence Heritage exhibit at the National Museum of Bermuda and listen to war veterans’ video testimonials, and see weaponry and artifacts. l Take students to the war memorial outside the Cabinet Office, Hamilton, and record names of Second World War dead. Do they have relatives among them or know families who do? l Visit St. David’s Battery and see the guns where Bermuda soldiers kept a lookout during the war years. Tour Southside, former home to US military forces before the US bases closed in 1995. Chapter 16 43 COMING OF AGE 1945–2011 CHAPTER SEVENTEEN SECTION 5 192 Progress in Peace CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Progress in Peace THE COMING OF CARS AND COLD WARRIORS C BERMUDA ARCHIVES Summary This chapter covers the post-war period of prosperity and progress in Bermuda following the Second World War. It traces developments such as the advent of commercial aviation, television, cars and household appliances on the island, plus the impact of American troops who had come to live and work on the US bases. Dockyard’s British Navy apprenticeship scheme, the height of the Cold War in the 1950s and ’60s, Bermuda’s part in the Space Race, and the arrival of international business are also detailed. Ambulances stand ready in post-war Bermuda ompany manager John Plowman was 34 years old when a revolution of sorts rolled through Bermuda in 1946. Automobiles, long forbidden on the island, were finally legal and available —and Bermudians raced to get their driving permits and buy one of the shiny first models to make their way out of Hamilton’s showrooms and on to the parishes’ newly-paved roads, attracting rubberneckers everywhere they went. Plowman, himself, was in a perfect position to witness the phenomenon; not only did he run Holmes Williams & Purvey, the island’s first car importer, but he was one of the first Bermudians to actually get behind the wheel of a car. “I bought a Hillman convertible in January 1947,” he later told The Bermudian. “Licence plate 5281. The numbers were supposed to finish at 5,501, because people thought there would be only 300 or so cars on the road.” Legislators assumed the cost of buying and licensing a car would restrict ownership, but such conservative predictions soon proved shortsighted. Bermudians fast developed an appetite for American-style consumerism that began to permeate island life in the post-war years. The Motor Car Act, passed by the Legislature in early 1946, allowed private cars and taxis, while limiting vehicle size and cars per household, and curbing their speed to 20 miles per hour. More than merely a status symbol, the car was a greater visible token of the victory of capitalism and democracy generally, as well as a catalyst for sweeping social, economic and political changes as the island emerged from its quiet, isolated past. Bermuda no longer could be considered an insignificant outpost or a colonial backwater. The war had changed the island and its people, and the world’s perception of them. Now Bermuda could enjoy the shared victory by Allied countries, its soldiers home from years of fighting, its national sentiment one of hope, energy and far-reaching ambition. The world at large was never to be the same again, and nor was Bermuda. Aside from the positive mood of its people, the island had transformed dramatically in physical ways, thanks to the advent of cars, commercial aviation Fast Facts l The sale of cars began in Bermuda after the Legislature passed the Motor Car Act in 1946. l The East End’s Kindley Air Force Base became a civilian airport—launching mass tourism. l In 1938, Bermuda’s population was 32,000; in 1970 it had jumped to 53,000. l Tourism recovered by the 1960s, with new hotels to accommodate air passengers, then hit high gear in the 1970s and ’80s. l The Royal Navy shut down its Dockyard operations in 1951. l Bermuda’s US bases acted as refuelling stations for American nuclear bombers in the Cold War; the US tracked Soviet submarines from the island. l The NASA station at Cooper’s Island played a key role in the Space Race, including the Apollo programme moon landings. l The first multi-national companies moved to Bermuda in the 1950s, paving the way for others. 44 Chapter 17 Progress in Peace SECTION 5 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Discuss the different political ideologies of democracy and communism, their similarities (goal of equality) vs. differences (the contrast in economic systems: group control vs. free enterprise). Encourage students to think about why communist economies have failed. Why has capitalism shown better results for its societies? Debate whether equality and incentive are compatible— or not. Is this why egalitarian societies have not succeeded? adjacent advent assassinated bloc classified conglomerate despondent eavesdrop emblematic esoteric genesis illegitimacy newfangled re-armament reinvigorated reverberate surveillance unprecedented vengeance vernacular Unit project Class activity Wil Onions was an architect of the 1940s and ’50s who celebrated the Bermuda vernacular. Assign students the task of choosing a traditional Bermudian building, photographing it, then deconstructing and describing its elements and their purpose in oral presentations to the rest of the class. Research skills Have students conduct research into the key events, political figures, idealogical differences and outcome of the Cold War, and the eventual breakup of the Soviet Union. Who joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), the Warsaw Pact or neither organisation? What was the “Iron Curtain” and what role did spies play in this era? Find out about the creation of the United Nations. Instruct students to map out today’s independent nations that once were Soviet states—and those that remain communist (Cuba, North Korea). Progress in Peace Have students go to the library or online to gather advertisements from the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s. Have them also collect current consumer ads for cars, jewellery, appliances and fashion. Discuss as a class, then have students write reports on how the ads demonstrate the evolution of marketing techniques—as well as the products themselves—over the decades. Students should consider how ads reflect different values and target certain audiences, and how today’s marketing appeals to more sophisticated buyers. How did sexism play a part in ads of the 1950s and ’60s? Has the role of women changed in modern advertising? Enrichment l To give a sense of the international emotion and events of the Space Race, in which Bermuda played a role, have the class watch Apollo 13, the 1995 movie based on the true story of the moon-bound mission that suffered near-tragic pitfalls. Chapter 17 45 COMING OF AGE 1945–2011 CHAPTER EIGHTEEN SECTION 5 204 Growing Pains CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Growing Pains HURDLES ON THE PATH TOWARDS EQUALITY O THE BERMUDIAN Summary This chapter details the turbulent civil-rights struggles of the late 1950s and ’60s as black Bermudians sought socioeconomic equality. The text describes milestones such as the Floral Pageant Day Riot of 1968, the Theatre Boycott of 1959, and the 1965 Belco Riot, set within the context of upheaval in western democracies and events such as Vietnam War protests, student uprisings and political assassinations. The work of civil-rights activist Dr. E. F. Gordon is detailed, along with that of UBP leader Sir Henry Tucker and the boycott’s Progressive Group. The chapter also deals with the growth of unions and labour strife in the 1960s. The Floral Pageant parade was an unlikely prelude to a riot Unsustainable In Bermuda —even though everyone is politically equal—it has too often been supposed that, to preserve an oldworld atmosphere for American visitors, the coloured people must appear mainly as servants or hewers of wood. Socially and politically, this has proved unsustainable. —From a front-page story headlined “Riots in the Sun” in The Times of London, April 1968 n April 25, 1968, thousands of Bermudians and tourists packed into Hamilton to watch what had become a highly popular rite of spring—the Floral Pageant parade. Vying for choice vantage spots, many arrived as early as noon, three hours before the event was to start, and took their seats on the Front Street stands or sidewalks, some bringing picnic lunches to eat as they waited for the colourful spectacle. As the parade, in its 18th year and boasting 52 flower-bedecked floats, prepared to wind its way around the city, youngsters clambered up the branches of harbourfront trees for a better view and spectators lined balconies and windows. But what happened later that balmy Thursday was as far from the innocent gaiety of blossoms, pageant queens and community bonhomie as anyone could imagine. As darkness fell, gangs of rioters suddenly erupted within the crowded streets, hurling bottles and firebombs at helmeted police officers armed with truncheons and shields. Hundreds of youths charged through the city, overturning cars, shattering windows and setting storefronts ablaze. When it was all over, five officers had been beaten, 17 people arrested and a state of emergency, with dusk-to-dawn curfew, had been declared. Petals and glass intermingled on Hamilton’s tear-gassed avenues, an incongruous testimony to the fact that beneath Bermuda’s pretty façade, ugly truths could no longer be ignored. In hindsight, the so-called “Floral Pageant Day Riot” was dramatically symbolic, a clash of the island’s quaint past and rebellious present, of its economically and socially segregated black and white societies, of their respective fears and concerns—a flashpoint which would have far-reaching consequences for Bermudian culture. Its direct cause may have been linked to the barring of a black youth from a party held in a Front Street building that evening, but its true roots were far more widespread. The night represented a snapshot of racial tensions affecting not only the island, but the whole western world, particularly America. The 1960s and ’70s, for the most part, would prove a jarring passage into the latter decades of the century, and Fast Facts l The 1950s and ’60s brought racial desegregation, Picketing outside the Bermudiana Theatre as early as 1951 46 Chapter 18 universal suffrage, the political party system, the first elections, labour standards and workers’ rights. l Dr. E. F. Gordon headed the Bermuda Workers Association (BWA) which became the Bermuda Industrial Union (BIU). l Bermuda’s schools, churches and theatres divided blacks from whites; hotels and restaurants routinely turned away blacks and Jews. l Sir Edward T. Richards, a black teacher, became Bermuda’s first Premier under the new constitution of 1973. l The Theatre Boycott started on June 15, 1959 and overturned segregation within two weeks. l The Progressive Group’s 18 members concealed their identity for 30 years. l Universal adult suffrage followed in 1963. l The first general election was held on May 22, 1968; the UBP defeated the PLP 30–10. Growing Pains SECTION 5 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Open a discussion on race with your students. Does racism still exist in Bermuda? What are the roots of racism here and whom does it affect most? What steps do students think are needed to eradicate racism? Can they give examples of subtle or overt racism they’re encountered personally or through anecdotal evidence? What do they envision as a more equal society? blatant bonhomie civic faux pas firebrand jarring jockeyed libertarians metamorphosis posthumous Class activity Explore the labour movement. Have students conduct research to find out about key changes in labour law over the 20th century. What did labour unions in Bermuda and overseas achieve for workers? Have unions undergone demographic changes? Once students have finished gathering key information, stage a class debate, with two sides arguing for or against the statement: societies need unions to protect workers. Research skills Encourage students to carry out primary research. Have them identify a local person, either black or white, who lived through the social upheavals of the 1950s and ’60s. Students should interview their individual about biographical details, and what it was like to live in those years under raciallysegregated conditions. Ask them to write up what they learn in the interviewee’s voice as a first-person account based around the facts they gathered. Growing Pains provocative relegating resonance rhetoric rite solidarity throes unsustainable vehement vying Unit project Celebrate the heroes of the civil-rights movement both in Bermuda and overseas. Split the class into small groups and assign each a key figure (Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Dr. E. F. Gordon, Kingsley Tweed, Henry Tucker) who stood against racial inequality in their communities. Have students work in teams to put together written biographies of their individual and deliver presentations to the class. Enrichment l Screen for your class When Voices Rise, the award-winning documentary film by Bermudian Errol Williams about the 1959 Theatre Boycott and the individuals who drove the lobby effort. l Visit the Chesley Trott sculpture erected at Wesley Park, Hamilton that pays tribute to the successful civil-rights campaign by the Progressive Group. Point out where the Island Theatre once stood at Wesley and Church Streets. Chapter 18 47 COMING OF AGE 1945–2011 CHAPTER NINETEEN SECTION 5 214 Troubled Times CHAPTER NINETEEN Summary This chapter examines the turbulent 1970s and early ’80s, when social and racial unrest boiled over in the form of high-profile murders, capital punishment, riots and labour strikes. It was an era of national crisis that led to introspection and efforts to heal deep social wounds. Among the events covered are the 1973 assassinations of Sir Richard Sharples and his aide Hugh Sayers, the murders of Police Commissioner George Duckett and shopkeepers Victor Rego and Mark Doe, the hangings of convicted killers Erskine “Buck” Burrows and Larry Tacklyn, the subsequent 1977 riots, and the resulting royal commission of inquiry. Labour strife of the period is also detailed. Troubled Times TURBULENCE ROCKS A FRAUGHT ISLAND B The Royal Gazette, March 13, 1973 Rule of the gun In a small tight-knit community there is a natural tendency to avoid getting involved or implicating others. But I must ask anyone who knows anything about this crime to think most seriously about the implications for themselves and the community as a whole if the rule of the gun becomes the way of life on this island. —Acting Governor Ian Kinnear, The New York Times, March 11, 1973 ermudians awoke on the morning of Sunday, March 11, 1973 to shocking news. Governor Sir Richard Sharples and his aide-de-camp, Captain Hugh Sayers, had been assassinated the previous night in the grounds of Government House— shot dead while taking a late stroll through the gardens with the Governor’s great dane dog, Horsa, which was also killed. For all Bermuda’s simmering social and racial turmoil, such cold-blooded murders in their own community stunned islanders so unused to violent crime. “If we were uncertain about our diagnosis before, we are not now. A virulent cancer is threatening the life of Bermuda, and, without further delay or procrastination, it has got to be located and cut right out,” said an editorial in The Royal Gazette. “The assassination clearly indicates there is a direct move by power-seeking bandits to disrupt the life of this peaceful nation.” Less than six months into his Bermuda posting, the governor had been verbally attacked in budget debates only the previous day when PLP Parliamentarians labelled him “a symbol of Colonialism” and criticised government spending on his salary and staff. But generally, Sharples was an affable administrator who had been well-liked by Bermudians. On the night of his murder, when many police officers had been attending a police choir performance at the Southampton Princess Hotel, the governor hosted a small informal dinner party at Government House before taking his regular walk around the 15-acre property. He was gunned down shortly before midnight, within sight of the main door to the House; he and Sayers died within minutes of the attack. The double-slayings prompted the government to invoke a state of emergency—only the second in the island’s history, and just five years after the first, imposed after the 1968 Floral Pageant Day Riot. The crackdown also slapped an unprecedented 48-hour ban on people leaving Bermuda, as a full-scale hunt for the killers was launched by Scotland Yard, local police and the Bermuda Regiment. Headlines around the world—“Murder in Paradise,” “Guns in the Sun”—recorded the event with the kind of crude Fast Facts l Police Commissioner George Duckett, Governor Murdered: Governor Sir Richard Sharples and aide Hugh Sayers 48 Chapter 19 Sir Richard Sharples and shopkeepers Victor Rego and Mark Doe, were shot dead in 1972 and 1973. l Buck Burrows was convicted of murdering the Governor and Police Commissioner. Burrows and Larry Tacklyn were found guilty of killing Rego and Doe and were hanged in 1977. l Riots swept Hamilton the night of December 1; British soldiers restored order. l Many Bermudians felt blacks were not being treated equally by the island’s justice or education systems, in politics, or in social reform. l A royal inquiry, the Pitt Commission, identified unequal economic opportunities as a key cause of the ’77 riots. l The government and private sector promised to help heal social ills; aid was pledged to small businesses, more scholarships were created, and a hotel-training college was opened. Troubled Times SECTION 5 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Ask students to examine the chapter’s firstperson accounts—one by Governor Sir Richard Sharples, the other by accused murderer Buck Burrows. Have the class read the final paragraphs of Burrows’s letter and compare his viewpoint with the Governor’s observations about Bermuda, its people and the state of social peace or unrest. Ask students to postulate reasons for different views of the same society—and comment on what we can ascertain about each of the individuals through the tone and content of both passages. acquitted bicentennial capitulated crossfire citizenry curfew electoral fiscally flashpoint fraught Class activity Hold a class debate on the death penalty. Divide the class into three groups and stage a debate with two groups arguing either the pros or cons of capital punishment. Have the students all do research on both sides of the issue first. For the debate, have a third group act as judging panel. Later, get students to write an essay outlining their own personal point of view on the issue, using facts they researched as a basis for their arguments. haemorrhaging magnitude malign petition proverbial reminiscent sensationalism symptomatic traumatised virulent Unit project Explore the topic of racism, including systemic racism within public bodies, private companies, the media, or education, when standard policies or operating methods put certain ethnic groups at a disadvantage. Discuss how ignorance about race comes from knowing little about people who are different from us. Ask students to select a real person in Bermuda—of a race different to their own—and write their history. Enrichment l Take your class to the Magistrates and Research skills Encourage students to find out more about Bermuda’s stamps. Ask them to choose a topic (local heroes, pioneers, flora and fauna, architecture, commemorative anniversaries) and then gather actual examples or images of local stamps that reflect those themes. Have students explain stamp image details in an historical context. Troubled Times Supreme Courts and later have them draw a detailed structural diagram of the island’s judicial branches. l Visit the House of Assembly—when Parliament is in session if possible— showing students where MPs sit and how procedure is followed. l Our money went decimal in the 1970s. Visit the Bermuda Monetary Authority Museum in Victoria Street. Chapter 19 49 COMING OF AGE 1945–2011 CHAPTER TWENTY SECTION 5 224 Into the Future CHAPTER TWENTY Into the Future TERRORISM, TRAFFIC AND THE DOWNTURN OF TOURISM Oh my God! The second half of the building just fell. I’ve got to go. —Yvonne Morgan, at the Bermuda Department of Tourism office in midtown Manhattan, during a phone interview with The Royal Gazette, September 11, 2001 Ruins surrounding the World Trade Center after the twin towers fell s Bermuda residents sipped their morning coffee, delivered children to school or checked email in Hamilton offices on September 11, 2001, anyone near a television screen or computer terminal suddenly was riveted. Like citizens around the world with access to live news coverage, islanders watched in disbelief as a tragedy of enormous proportions gripped America. At 8:45 a.m. (Eastern Time), on what began as a balmy, late-summer Tuesday in Manhattan, an American Airlines flight hijacked by Islamic terrorists crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center. A quarter of an hour later, at 9:03 a.m., a second 767 passenger jet was slammed into the New York landmark’s south skyscraper. Witnessed from neighbouring downtown streets and captured on global TV, the disaster unfolded like a grotesque replay of a Hollywood blockbuster. Giant fireballs engulfed the twin 110-storey towers, trapping thousands in a deadly inferno before both buildings imploded over the next 90 minutes, and crumbled to the ground. The attacks—“acts of war,” in the words of US President George W. Bush—were part of a devastating onslaught that morning. In Washington DC, another airliner was plunged into the Pentagon, while in a failed fourth attack, a passenger jet crashed into a field outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Within a few hours, nearly 3,000 people would be listed as dead or missing—including two Bermudians, Rhondelle Bermudians Tankard and Boyd Gatton, who worked at the World Trade Center. The seemingly impenetrable Pentagon, Rhondelle Tankard the concrete embodiment of American military might, and Boyd Gatton lay torn open and on fire, while lower Manhattan’s died in the 9/11 skyline was irrevocably altered. For islanders, like terrorist attack THE ROYAL GAZETTE A I’ve got to go COURTESY OF TOM MARADAY Summary This final chapter wraps up the book in the modern era, with a focus mainly on the 1990s and 2000s and Bermuda’s evolution into a stable, prosperous global participant. The fallout from the 9/11 terror attacks, the challenge of sustainable development, the closure of US bases, the Digital Revolution, “Bermuda Inc.’s” reinsurance boom—set against the economic fragility of the island—are all covered. Text also details the political victories of the PLP and Bermuda’s ambivalence towards independence. Fast Facts l Two Bermudians were killed in the 9/11 attacks; Traffic: a by-product of economic boomtimes 50 Chapter 20 the tragedy changed the way we travel. l Examples of Bermudians becoming global citizens include studying overseas, fighting in conflicts like the Gulf War, joining Barack Obama’s campaign for the US Presidency, or winning success on the world stage—in entertainment, sports and many other fields. l Tourism peaked in the mid-1980s with 650,000 visitors per year; soaring costs on-island and competing destinations caused a subsequent slide. l The “New Economy” coincided with a boom in the island’s financial and insurance sectors. l Bermuda’s GDP—the average income per capita—is one of the highest in the world. l Bermuda’s first capital, the Town of St. George, became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000. l The PLP formed the government for the first time with its 1998 election win over the UBP. Into the Future SECTION 5 TEACHERS GUIDE Critical thinking Vocabulary Economists continue to call for diversification in Bermuda, because the island historically has depended heavily on only one industry at a time. Review the industries that have kept Bermuda afloat and successful over the centuries—then brainstorm possible new industries with your class. Encourage entrepreneurial thinking. How can Bermuda stay competitive, create jobs and hold down the deficit and cost of living? affliction blockbuster celluloid diminutive eclipsed embodiment expertise fundamental grotesque imploded Class activity Unit project Bermudians struggle with the question of nationhood and whether to become an independent country. Get students first to research the various viewpoints on Bermuda’s independence, then to choose a viewpoint and argue their reasons for it, using both factual evidence (estimated costs) and emotional reasoning (national pride, etc). Have students orally present their arguments to the rest of the class for discussion. Have students embark on a creative writing project linking different eras of Bermuda history. Instruct them to imagine they are a real character from our past—Juan de Bermúdez, E. F. Gordon, Sir George Somers, Mary Prince—who visits contemporary Bermuda. Have them write essays describing the individual’s observations and feelings about modern life on the island, and how it differs from their own period. Research skills Enrichment Compare Bermuda’s economy to other countries of the world. Have students carry out research to collect the island’s financial statistics—including industry percentage breakdowns, population and GDP in per capita terms. They should choose three other nations, compare their data with Bermuda’s, and come to conclusions in a written report about the reasons for Bermuda’s relative success—and whether current trends look to change or continue the status quo. l Take your class to the Bermuda Historical Into the Future inconsequential insularity irrevocably jurisdiction largesse luminaries offshore pandemic riveted saturation Society Museum at Par-la-Ville Park, Hamilton, Verdmont Museum, Smith’s Parish, or Tucker House, St. George’s. Encourage students to list artifacts that indicate how people lived in past eras. In class, get them to compare how different daily lives are today, thanks to new technologies. What has stayed the same? Question how artifacts are the legacy of personal history and get students to create their own time-capsule of relevant objects. Chapter 20 51 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES First-Person Accounts “In Their Own Words” sidebars (first-person accounts) are included in every chapter of Bermuda: Five Centuries. In total, there are 48 passages—their synopses are here on Pages 53–58. These reflect the voices of people who helped shape Bermuda history—or who witnessed or lived through an historic event. Some are foreigners’ observations of the island; others are Bermudians’ own reflections. meant/what was the most memorable part of what I saw or felt. l Fact vs. opinion: explore the issues of bias, contrasting points of view, hidden motivations and subjectivity with students. Educators can focus on and use these sections of the book in many different ways: l Exploring different types of writing: persuasive, descriptive, factual/informative, emotive, subjective vs. objective—have students find examples of each throughout the first-person texts. l Discussion theme: Is history different when l Compare and contrast varying viewpoints on the we actually live through an historic event and remember it during our lifetime? Have students think about personal reactions to memorable or significant events and the impact felt by themselves or other individuals who witnessed or lived through a particular moment in history. same event or point of history: Encourage critical thinking by students as they examine a writer’s motivations, background and purpose while analysing the information provided. l Reportage or observational writing: how to structure a first-hand account. Get students to describe an event using these key elements: what happened/how it made me feel/what I think it 52 l Conducting interviews: use first-person accounts to demonstrate how to structure an interview, encourage detailed responses and fact-check a subject’s memories. Have students conduct their own interviews modelling a theme reflected in first-person texts in the book. First-Person Accounts TEACHERS GUIDE Chapter 1 Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes Diary, 1515 Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas Writings, 1527 The Spanish author of La Historia General y Natural de las Indias, writes about passing by Bermuda, then known as “Garza” aboard the ship of his countryman, Juan de Bermúdez. Textbook Page 13 The Spanish historian describes a contract between the King of Spain and Azorean Hernando Camelo to colonise Bermuda before it was claimed by the English in the 17th century. Textbook Page 14 Chapter 2 Diego Ramirez Diary, 1603 Henry May Diary, 1594 The Spanish sea captain describes exploring Bermuda and drawing a map of the island after his vessel was thrown off course by a storm in 1603. Textbook Page 16 The English mariner writes about building a small escape barque of native cedar after the ship he is sailing on wrecks off Bermuda in 1593. Textbook Page 17 Chapter 3 William Strachey Published account, 1610 Silvanus Jordan Published account, 1610 The Royal Society Published records, 1660 Richard Norwood Published account, 1616 In a detailed account believed to have inspired Shakespeare to write The Tempest, the Sea Venture passenger tells of the hurricane that hits the flagship, and its wrecking at Bermuda. Textbook Pages 20–21 The Sea Venture crewman describes Bermuda as a bountiful paradise greeting the survivors of the shipwreck in 1609. Textbook Page 24 A vivid account of whaling in Bermuda quoting an unnamed “seaman” who describes a whale hunt and the products derived from it. Textbook Page 36 The English surveyor details an infestation of rats on early Bermuda. Textbook Page 39 First-Person Accounts 53 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Chapter 4 Joan de Rivera y Saabedra Letter, 1639 The scrivener to Spanish King Felipe IV describes the early colonists’ settlement in Bermuda, after La Viga, the ship he travelled on, wrecks off its shores. Textbook Page 48 Chapter 5 Philip Freneau Diary, 1778 The New Yorkborn poet describes Bermuda as a paradise, but its people as argumentative and uneducated, after he spent five weeks on the island. Textbook Page 56 Chapter 5 Continued Mary Prince Autobiography, 1831 The slave girl describes living and working conditions after being sent to labour in the salt works of the Turks Islands. Textbook Page 62 54 Edmund Ward Published account, 1840s James E. Forbes Newspaper account, January 8, 1825 The Canadian editor and printer highlights the agility of Bermudian vessels and the expertise of local pilots. Textbook Pages 58–59 A King’s pilot, he describes a 21-day ordeal at sea that begins with his trying to help guide a sailing vessel into port. Textbook Page 61 Chapter 6 Hezekiah Frith Letter, 1797 The Bermudian privateer tells how his ship, Hezekiah, is captured by the Spanish and held in Havana, Cuba. Textbook Page 63 Mary Prince Autobiography, 1831 Olaudah Equiano, Autobiography, 1789 In an emotive passage, the Bermudian details how she was separated from her mother and siblings and sold at auction in Hamilton. Textbook Page 66 The slave, author and abolitionist describes an incident involving cruel treatment of a man aboard the Bermuda sloop on which Equiano spent four years as a crew member. Textbook Page 68 First-Person Accounts TEACHERS GUIDE Chapter 7 George Washington Letter, 1775 George Bruere Letter, 1775 The General writes this provisory letter appealing to Bermudians for aid—in the form of smuggled gunpowder—to help America win its independence from Britain. Textbook Page 76 The embattled Governor writes this letter to Lord Dartmouth describing the events of the “Gunpowder Theft.” Textbook Page 78 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 J. Holt Letter, 1834 Anonymous Letter, 1843 An American visitor chronicles his impressions of Emancipation Day and its aftermath of celebration in Bermuda in a letter to the New York Observer. Textbook Page 88 An unknown writer to the Inverness Courier details the islandwide despair of a yellow fever epidemic. Textbook Page 104 First-Person Accounts Edmund Ward Published accounts, 1775 In his chronicles of life in Bermuda, Ward describes subterfuge and divided loyalties as rival ships navigate restrictions imposed by the American War of Independence. Textbook Page 80 Tom Moore Letters, 1804 The Irish poet tells his mother he adores Bermuda’s natural beauty but thinks the people are homely to look at and provincial in their ways. Textbook Page 84 Chapter 10 John Harvey Darrell Published account, 1819 A Bermudian describes how joy at returning home after years away quickly turns to horror as he discovers Bermuda in the grip of yellow fever, and tries to find if his family has survived. Textbook Page 105 Sandra Rouja Interview, 2003 A modernday PortugueseBermudian recalls family folklore, and tells how her immigrant farmer grandfather proudly learned to write his own name. Textbook Page 118 55 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Charles Maxwell Allen Letters, 1861 T. L. Outerbridge Published account, 1864 Georgiana Gholson Walker Journal, 1863 Helen Fessenden Published account, 1870s The American Consul writes to his wife about antiYankee sentiment in Bermuda during the US Civil War; he says he has been accosted by Southern sympathisers. Textbook Page 124 The Bermudian captain describes his capture aboard blockade-runner Siren off North Carolina by Union warships in the US Civil War. Textbook Page 127 The wife of Confederate agent Norman Walker details lavish dinner parties, the back-and-forth of blockade runners to the South, and the fashions and chatter at a soirée with the Governor. Textbook Page 130 The wife of inventor Reginald Fessenden—father of transmission radio—remembers the way lime was manufactured in Bermuda using a traditional kiln. Textbook Page 137 Chapter 12 Continued August Carl Schulenburg Diary, 1901–02 A Boer War prisoner held in a Bermuda camp writes about being shipped to the island, and the daily routines of POW existence on Burt’s Island in the Great Sound. Textbook Pages 142–143 56 Chapter 13 Cassie White Diary, 1918 The Bermudian nurse recalls the horrors of the First World War battlefield in her work to help the wounded at a US Army Base Hospital in France. Textbook Page 145 Chapter 14 Charles Monk Published article, 1900 William Beebe Half Mile Down, 1934 The American pastor laments the plight of Jamaican workers at Dockyard in a frontpage Royal Gazette article that resulted in a libel conviction and a four-month jail term. Textbook Page 153 The New York scientist describes in his 1934 book the otherwordly creatures he sees from a bathysphere on his historic half-mile descent of the Bermuda seamount. Textbook Page 158 First-Person Accounts TEACHERS GUIDE Chapter 14 Continued John Matthew Jones Published account, 1859 The British naturalist describes seeing the aurora borealis during a research visit to Bermuda. Textbook Page 161 Chapter 15 David Wingate Interview, 2003 The Bermudian conservationist recalls how in 1951, as a schoolboy, he joined scientists Robert Cushman Murphy and Louis S. Mowbray at Nonsuch Island, where they rediscovered the Bermuda cahow. Textbook Page 162 Chapter 16 Anthony “Toby” Smith Letters, 1944 The Bermudian army major poignantly reminisces from war-torn Europe about meeting his wife and why he decided to leave his family to fight in the Second World War. Textbook Page 180 Bill Motts Published account, circa 1935 Jane Dublon Published account, 1931 The Queen of Bermuda’s navigation officer describes with humour and anecdote the popular annual Christmas cruise from New York to the island. Textbook Pages 170–171 An American visitor describes taking an inaugural ride aboard a Bermuda Railway train from Elbow Beach to Somerset on May 15, 1931. Textbook Page 176 Chapter 17 James Hartley Watlington Published account, 1943 The Bermudian pilot with the Royal Canadian Air Force describes being shot down over France. He remained on the run in France for more than a year. Textbook Pages 184–185 First-Person Accounts William Way Interview, 2003 Winston Churchill Letter, 1954 Way describes how NASA’s Bermuda station played a key part in space exploration. He tells of tense days of communications between astronauts and Florida’s Cape Canaveral during the 1970 Apollo 13 crisis. Textbook Page 200 Writing to US President Dwight Eisenhower after the Big Three conference in Bermuda, the British Prime Minister sums up their agreements on world issues, particularly taming the new “nuclear monster.” Textbook Page 203 57 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Chapter 17 Continued President Dwight Eisenhower Letter, 1954 Andrew Bermingham Interview, 2003 In a letter replying to Churchill, Eisenhower argues that worldwide discussion and promotion of peaceful uses of nuclear power are necessary deterrents to an atomic war. Textbook Page 203 The British-born police constable injured in the February 2, 1965 BELCo riot describes the day’s chaos and violence, when he was a 23-year-old member of the force. Textbook Pages 212–213 Chapter 19 Continued 58 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Sir Richard Sharples Interview, 1973 The Governor commends Bermudians for breaking down racial barriers, weeks before being assassinated during an evening walk at Government House, Bermuda Textbook Page 215 Erskine “Buck” Burrows Letter, 1976 Burrows confesses to killing Sir Richard Sharples and aide Hugh Sayers, Police Commissioner George Duckett, and two Hamilton shopkeepers. He was hanged the following year. Textbook Page 217 Chapter 20 Rick Richardson Interview, 2003 Nichole Tatem Interview, 2003 Noel Chiappa Interview, 2003 Shaun Goater Interview, 2003 The former ZBM reporter and ABC News correspondent describes covering the December 1977 riots. Textbook Pages 220–221 The 29-year-old Bermudian describes her escape from the World Trade Center in New York City after a terrorist attack on Tuesday, September 11, 2001. Textbook Page 225 The Bermudian MIT scientist speaks about his pioneering work during the birth of the Internet in the 1970s. Textbook Page 227 The Bermudian soccer star describes his impact on UK fans during his fifth season as a Manchester City striker. Textbook Page 228 First-Person Accounts TEACHERS GUIDE History-makers Thumbnail biographies of personalities featured in Bermuda: Five Centuries who helped shape the island’s history CHAPTER 1 Age of Discovery Juan de Bermúdez The Spaniard who first spotted Bermuda from his ship La Garza on a trans-Atlantic return voyage from the Americas to Europe in 1505. Diego Ramirez A Spanish sea captain who spent 22 days on Bermuda in 1603 after his ship was caught in a storm and lost its provisions. Christopher Columbus (1451–1506) The Italian explorer who sailed the Atlantic and found the Americas in 1492. This eventually led to Bermuda’s discovery and settlement. CHAPTER 2 The Sea Venture Sir George Somers (1554– 1610) The English admiral who led the Sea Venture expedition and successful escape to Jamestown who returned to Bermuda for supplies and died in 1610. William Shakespeare (1564–1616) English playwright and one of literature’s greatest influences; his final play, The Tempest, was inspired by the real-life story of Sea Venture. Sir Thomas Gates(1585– 1621) English nobleman aboard the Sea Venture who later became Governor of Virginia; the house he later had built in Jamestown used limestone brought from Bermuda. Elizabeth I (1533–1603) The last monarch of the Tudor dynasty gave her name to an era (Elizabethan) remembered for flourishing drama and maritime exploration. James I (1603–1625) The monarch supported exploratory expeditions and relief voyages such as the Sea Venture journey, and controlled Crown affairs during the birth of Bermuda’s colony. John Rolfe and Pocahontas Sea Venture survivor John Rolfe sailed on to Virginia, where he married the Native American princess Pocahontas. The couple had a son, Thomas. Pocahontas died of smallpox during a visit to England. Rolfe helped develop the tobacco crop at Jamestown. CHAPTER 4 The Company Island Daniel Tucker The island’s second Governor, a tough Virginia planter who took charge of creating a functioning government, killing rats, dividing land and ordering crop-planting. Captain Nathaniel Butler A progressive Governor who organised bridge-building to link Bermuda’s islands and pushed for environmental conservation. CHAPTER 5 Call of the Sea CHAPTER 3 The First Settlers William Strachey Writer and Sea Venture passenger who later became Secretary of Virginia; his descriptions of the adventure are believed to have inspired Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest. Richard Moore Bermuda’s first Governor, a carpenter who arrived in 1612 and spent the next two years spearheading construction of bridges, towers and forts. John Bowen and Nathaniel North Bermudians who became known in the late 17th century as pirates in the Far East. Bowen was Richard Norwood’s son-inlaw; North succeeded him as captain of the Speedy Return. Silvanus Jordan Sea Venture crewman who, like William Strachey, recorded details of the storm and arrival at Bermuda. Richard Norwood Scholar, teacher and surveyor who mapped out Bermuda’s first land (tribes) division on his famous 1618 map. Jemmy Darrell Bermudian slave who won his freedom after impressing Vice Admiral Sir George Murray with his ship-piloting skills in 1796. Key Figures Jacob Minors St. David’s-born descendant of Native American slaves, known as one of Bermuda’s best boat pilots; he died at age 84 in 1875. CHAPTER 6 Scourge of Slavery Mary Prince Bermudian slave who chronicled her life in an 1831 biography printed in Britain and used by the abolitionist movement to win support for abolishing slavery. Olaudah Equiano Prominent African author, merchant and explorer who purchased his freedom from slavery, then helped influence British lawmakers to abolish the Slave Trade in 1807. Sally Bassett Bermudian domestic slave known for rebelling against her owners through a poison plot in 1729 for which she was later burned at the stake at Crow Lane, Paget. Joshua Marsden Methodist clergyman who came from Newfoundland to Bermuda in 1808 to preach to blacks; he also opened a Sunday school for black children. CHAPTER 7 Wars and Defence George Washington (1732– 99) Military leader who appealed for Bermudian 59 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES support before leading America to victory in its Revolutionary War over Britain; he was elected the first US President. Colonel Henry Tucker Prominent St. George’s businessman who led a local delegation to appeal to the Continental Congress for an end to US food embargoes during the Revolutionary War; he was later implicated as a key figure in the 1775 Gunpowder Theft. St. George Tucker Son of Colonel Henry Tucker who lived in Virginia and was a vocal supporter of the American cause in its War of Independence. Governor George James Bruere Staunch British Governor during the Revolutionary War, when he was publicly embarrassed by Bermuda’s Gunpowder Theft to aid America’s war efforts. Lieutenant Thomas Hurd Royal Navy hydrographer who in 1792 surveyed Bermuda’s reefs, identified two anchorages suitable for Navy warships and proposed a dockyard at Sandys. Andrew Durnford British Army engineer sent to Bermuda to survey and upgrade Bermuda’s fortifications; he repaired defences and built four new forts in the East End. Thomas Moore Irish poet and bon vivant who wrote ballads and romantic poems to lady loves during his few months on the island working as Registrar of the Court of Vice-Admiralty. 60 CHAPTER 8 Freedom and Reform Governor Henry Hamilton (1788–94) Bermuda Governor who in 1790 gave his support and name to the new capital of Bermuda, which had previously been called “Pembroke Town.” CHAPTER 9 From Sea to Soil John Mitchel Irish political prisoner exiled as a convict to Bermuda in 1848; his book, Jail Journal, recorded his prison custody, including the 10 months he spent on he island. Governor William Reid The “Good Governor” known for his energy and push for new technology and foreign labour to revive agriculture; Reid Street was named for him. CHAPTER 10 The Portuguese Captain Benjamin Watlington Bermudian captain whose brigantine, Golden Rule, brought the first Portuguese immigrants to the island from Madeira in 1849. Monsignor Felipe Macedo Catholic priest who spoke out for the rights of Portuguese immigrants to Bermuda and their families, who were often victims of discrimination. CHAPTER 11 American Civil War Georgiana Walker Mother of four and wife of the South’s political agent in Bermuda; her diaries of island life during the US Civil War years provide captivating social and political details. Major Norman Stewart Walker Political agent for the Confederacy in Bermuda during the US Civil War; he and his family lived at the Globe Hotel on King’s Square, now a museum. Charles Maxwell Allen Embattled US Consul during the American Civil War, when Bermudian sympathies lay with the South rather than with Allen’s Northern unionists. President Abraham Lincoln (1809–65) US President who successfully led America through its bloody civil war and ended slavery in the US. He was shot dead by an assassin. John Tory Bourne St. George’s shipping agent who made a fortune during the boom times of the US Civil War, as the town became a transshipment hub for Southern cotton and military supplies. Joseph Hayne Rainey Former American slave who opened a barber shop in St. George’s during the US Civil War; he later became one of the first black members of the House of Representatives. Edward James Crown surveyor and prolific English water-colourist who spent 16 years in Bermuda; his works are best known for chronicling events and daily life during the US Civil War. Key Figures CHAPTER 12 Tourism Takes Off Princess Louise Queen Victoria’s fourth daughter, whose 1883 visit to Bermuda from Ottawa, Canada spurred new interest in tourism to the island, especially from the US. Mark Twain (1835–1910) American author and humourist whose real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens; he made frequent visits to Bermuda and lobbied against motor cars here. Mary Outerbridge Bermudian who introduced tennis to the US in 1874, when she took racquets, a net, balls and a rule book to New York and designed the first court, on Staten Island. CHAPTER 13 The Fight for Rights Gladys Morrell (1888–1969) Bermudian champion of local suffragettes, who led the decadeslong fight for local women’s right to vote—achieving that goal in 1944. Charles Vinton Monk Delaware-born pastor and journalist who fought for the rights of Jamaican workers at Dockyard and was briefly jailed for libel; he married Bermudian Fanny Parker. CHAPTER 14 A Perfect Paradise William Beebe Brooklyn-born biologist, explorer and author who made a record-making dive of a half nautical mile in a TEACHERS GUIDE bathysphere off Bermuda in 1934. Louis L. Mowbray (1877–1952) Pioneering Bermudian environmentalist who designed the Bermuda Aquarium in 1926 and became the facility’s first curator. Dr. David Wingate Bermudian conservationist renowned for his work to bring back Bermuda’s cahow population and restore Nonsuch Island as a “living museum” of endemic flora and fauna. Sir J. H. Lefroy Nineteenth-century Governor whose deep interest in science and nature saw him publish the first scientific treatise on the island and compile records that revealed the cahow’s existence. CHAPTER 15 The New Tourism Captain Lewis Yancey, William Alexander and Zeh Bouck Trio which in April, 1930 flew the first airplane, a Stinson cabin monoplane called Pilot Radio, between America and Bermuda. CHAPTER 16 Second World War Major Anthony “Toby” Smith Member of the Bermuda Volunteer Rifles Corps (BVRC) who joined the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment as an army instructor during the Second World War; he was killed in 1944 in Holland. Sir Winston Churchill (1874–1965) British Prime Minister revered for his oratory and leadership in the Second World War; he visited Bermuda in 1942 to thank the island for the US baselands deal. CHAPTER 17 Progress in Peace The Talbot Brothers Beloved Bermudian musical group and calypso performers of the 1950s made up of brothers Archie, Austin, Bryan, Ross and Roy, with their cousin Cromwell. Wilfred (Wil) Onions Architect who reinvigorated the traditions of Bermuda’s vernacular architecture; his best-known design was for Hamilton’s City Hall. CHAPTER 18 Growing Pains Martin Luther King Jr. (1929–68) American clergyman and black civil-rights hero known for his inspiring speeches and belief in peaceful protest; he was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. E. F. Gordon Trinidad-born physician, member of the Colonial Parliament and firebrand union leader who launched the fight for black civil rights in Bermuda in the 1940s and ’50s. The Progressive Group Secret society behind the successful, non-violent Theatre Boycott of 1959 that toppled racial barriers in Bermuda’s public institutions; they kept anonymous until 1989. Key Figures Sir Henry Tucker Prominent businessman and UBP founder who became the first Premier after 1968’s election under a new constitution and two-party system. W. L. Tucker First black Bermudian appointed to Parliament’s Executive Council before political parties; he helped push the campaign for universal adult suffrage to victory in 1963. Sir Edward Richards (1908–91) First black government leader, replacing Sir Henry Tucker as Premier and UBP head in the House of Assembly from 1971–73. Kingsley Tweed Street activist who helped turn the 1959 Theatre Boycott from a simple protest to a mass movement that helped overturn racial segregation in Bermuda’s public institutions. CHAPTER 19 Troubled Times Sir Richard Sharples British Governor assassin ated with his aide Captain Hugh Sayers while walking his Great Dane in the grounds of Government House the night of March 10, 1973. Erskine (Buck) Burrows and Larry Tacklyn Convicted murderers of a Hamilton shopkeeper and a bookkeeper; Burrows was also convicted of killing Police Commissioner George Duckett and Governor Sir Richard Sharples. Both Burrows and Tacklyn were hanged in December 1977. George Duckett Police Commissioner gunned down at his home, Bleak House, Devonshire, in September 1972. Gina Swainson Bermudian winner of the Miss World crown in 1979; a postage stamp and public holiday, “Gina Day,” were created in her honour. Ottiwell Simmons Labour union leader of the 1970s and ’80s who oversaw the Bermuda Industrial Union (BIU) during its biggest faceoff, a 21-day general strike in 1981. CHAPTER 20 Into the Future Rhondelle Tankard and Boyd Gatton Bermudians killed in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, New York City, on September 11, 2001. Pamela Gordon Daughter of civil-rights activist Dr. E. F. Gordon, she became Bermuda’s first female and its youngest Premier when she replaced Dr. David Saul as UBP leader in 1997 and served for a year until the party was defeated for the first time in a general election. Dame Jennifer Smith Premier of Bermuda from 1998–2003 after leading the Progressive Labour Party to an unprecedented election victory of 26 seats to 14. 61 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Image Study The hundreds of images from archives and private collections in Bermuda: Five Centuries provide myriad teaching opportunities for educators. l Critical analysis Visual materials are often rich in information and can be used by instructors to teach students to develop a keener sense of historical comprehension and critical thinking. Using photos, students can be encouraged to reflect, speculate, make fact-based assumptions, draw inferences, make generalisations, and reach conclusions based on evidence and details they see in images. What hunches do they have? What did they miss at first glance? Did they have to change their hypothesis after studying the image further? Inspire solid reasoning through careful data-gathering. Students should also be encouraged to empathise—to think about what the photographer or artist is trying to depict; Textbook Page 60 what emotions or actions the photographer has captured through his/her lens, what the mood of a particular picture or photo may be. Textbook Page 64 62 Textbook Page 136 Image Study TEACHERS GUIDE Textbook Page 16 Textbook Page 27 l Reach all learners As a core for certain lesson plans, the book’s blackand-white and colour photographs and illustrations provide visual historical source materials that can help visual learners and less-able readers better explore history, social studies and language arts. l Compare and contrast Certain images can be usefully compared to others in class discussion. Good examples shown above are the (Chapter 1 and 2) hand-drawn maps of Bermuda by Diego Ramirez (1603) and later Sir George Somers (1609–10), or Bermuda’s changing landscape of past eras compared with areas from the same vantage points today. Textbook Page 194 Textbook Page 151 Image Study 63 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES l Photojournalism Textbook Page 218 Many unstaged images can be used to explore the skills and effects of the craft of photojournalism, as well as to interpret the actual subject/event of their often-dramatic photos (Belco Riot, 1977 riots, PLP victory, 9/11). Textbook Page 212 Textbook Page 234 Textbook Page 224 Textbook Page 206 64 Image Study TEACHERS GUIDE Textbook Page 65 Textbook Page 37 Textbook Page 167 l Historical investigation skills Textbook Page 173 Students can learn to use such visual clues as fashions, car styles, modes of transport, or boat designs to accurately guess the dates of particular historical eras. Throughout the book, numerous images reflect evolving dress codes and transport methods in particular. l Timeline art Create an illustrated timeline to develop students’ chronological thinking skills. l Research skills The book’s Index can be used to identify images by keyword or theme; images are then trackable through italicised page numbers in the Index. All images carry a credit, indicating the source museum, photographer or owner. Image Study 65 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Connecting to the Curriculum While Bermuda: Five Centuries is a textbook geared primarily towards the teaching of Social Studies and History, its content can be integrated into lesson plans across the curriculum. Elements of the book’s chapters can be usefully applied in a wide arrange of study areas, bringing a Bermuda focus—and local relevance—to many different subjects. l Social Studies Textbook Page 139 Among the key topics dealt with in the book are: the island’s changing economy over the centuries; slavery and its ramifications; immigration; civilrights battles; women through the ages; Bermuda’s geopolitical role at different times; transportation; the structure of Bermuda’s government and judicial systems; Bermuda’s part in major wars; how Bermuda’s geography shaped its people, politics and history; roots of social conflict, etc. Textbook Page 109 Textbook Page 50 l Language Arts The book provides a wealth of concrete examples of different modes of writing, and its thematic content can be an easy springboard for numerous language arts projects and activities (many are suggested in the earlier chapter breakdowns). Examples of the range of writing modes depicted include: firstperson accounts, diaries, letters, speeches, and 66 narrative text. Teachers can use any part of the book to encourage creative writing, speech-writing, journal practice, plus persuasive, emotive or informative writing styles. Lessons can also examine objective vs. subjective tone, formal vs. colloquial style, storytelling, and language style and syntax through the ages. Vocabulary lists for each chapter are provided in the various sections of this guide. Curriculum TEACHERS GUIDE Textbook Page 164 Textbook Page 195 Textbook Page 132 l Media Studies The book takes a narrative, journalistic approach to Bermuda’s history and key elements can be incorporated into Media Studies classes. Throughout the book, teachers can use excerpts, quotes and first-person accounts to encourage students to examine the issue of bias and point of view, and objective reportage. Interviewing skills can be honed through the study of the book’s first-person accounts in the latter chapters. Classes can study examples of print advertisements and posters for comparison with contemporary media, as well as portraiture through the ages. The story of Bermuda’s first newspapers is told, as well as how media covered certain events. Numerous international publications, such as foreign newspaper articles, books and journals, TV and radio broadcasts are excerpted for study in large sidebars or margin breakouts in every chapter. Textbook Page 133 Curriculum 67 BERMUDA: FIVE CENTURIES Textbook Page 13 l Maths Textbook Page 18 Textbook Page 158 Mathematics instructors may find it useful to apply certain content in the book to their lesson plans, including: mapping; graphing of statistics such as population or immigration growth; percentage data such as population increases, tourism or industry growth, GDP growth, etc. Information on money/Bermuda currency (pounds vs. dollars), and decimal applications can also be incorporated. Demography, gender percentages, voting statistics, racial demographics, ranking events or their consequences in order, may also be useful tools for mathematical applications. l Science/Health Subjects of scientific interest in the book include: biodiversity and habitats, Bermuda’s seamount, temperature and climate, disease, navigation, inventions and new technologies. From observations of Bermuda wildlife by the first castaways to early conservation laws, Science students can explore the evolution of the conservation movement in Bermuda. The topic of the development of new technologies for survival and progress (Bermuda sloop, electricity, the Digital Age) can also be adapted to bring a local element to Science classes. 68 Textbook Page 161 Curriculum TEACHERS GUIDE Textbook Page 35 Textbook Page 106 l Drama The fascinating stories, characters and themes found in Bermuda’s history can be employed in many different ways in Drama classes. Teachers can use the book to stage fictional conversations or skits, role-playing, the study of history as an oral tradition, debating, speech-giving, oral performances of essays, journal accounts, or fictionalised creative writing. l Art/Photography The book’s hundreds of photos and illustrations can be a rich source of specific material and creative ideas for Art/Photography classes. Teachers can use visual sources to plan lessons on map-making, drawing to scale, use of perspective, portraiture, stilllife drawing, multi-ethnic art (African, West Indian, Portuguese influences), military artists, slave artifacts (beads, Chapters 6, 8), convict and POW artworks (figurines, tools, Chapters 9, 12), art as a form of reportage before the era of photography (Edward James, Chapter 11), posters, advertisements, etc. Certain chapters lend themselves as a springboard to lesson plans incorporating dioramas, murals, models or collages to learn or reinforce key Curriculum Textbook Page 69 historical points. The book also contains images in a variety of media for teaching students about the varied use of engraving, black-and-white and colour photography, and oil and watercolour painting. 69 REAL-WORLD RESOURCES FIELDTRIPS Plan fieldtrips to these historic Bermuda sites Bermuda is full of museums and heritage sites that can enhance students’ understanding of the island’s history. You can help them explore our history throughout the parishes. At many of these places, statues, tributes, artifacts and information give pupils a real sense of how past Bermudians lived, the objects they used at home and work, exact sites where historic events occurred, plus more details about all the milestones, characters and topics you read about in these pages. Plan a fieldtrip and go and see for yourself ! Heritage groups’ websites often contain useful additional information which teachers can use. Here are a few of Bermuda’s best historical sites, along with contact and website information to help instructors organize group visits: ST. GEORGE’S World Heritage Centre Penno’s Wharf, St. George The St. George’s Foundation, 297-8043, www.tsgf.bm This interactive museum offers a walk-through tour of Bermuda’s history on its ground floor, with historic dioramas (the Sea Venture wreck, whalers, sea turtles and cahows), plus the voices of people from our past. See a superbly created town model depicting St. George when it was just a basic settlement. The gallery also contains areas for younger students—lift-the-flap facts and historic dress-ups (pirate, soldier, old-time Bermudian maid). A “Time Tree” with milestones leads upstairs, where students can spend time exploring the history of the East End in greater detail in a large hall of interactive and video installations. Included are spotlights on historic St. Georgians, archaeology, the US military bases, the origin of street names, and the rich maritime culture of St. David’s. Educational films about Bermuda and St. George’s are also screened in the centre; ask for details on 70 various available titles and schedules. The building itself is an historic warehouse, and interpretive panels explain its colourful past. Ducking Stool & Stocks King’s Square, St. George Corporation of St. George, 297-1532 Visit a weekly re-enactment of a “ducking,” in which actors play men and women of the past getting punished for misdeeds like gossiping or stealing. Students can also play the culprit by putting their arms, legs and heads through cedar stocks and pillories at the town square. Deliverance replica Ordnance Island, St. George The St. George’s Foundation, 297-8043, www.tsgf.bm This replica of “The ship that saved Jamestown” has been restored as a walk-aboard museum. It brings to life the story of the first shipwrecked English colonists in 1609 and their escape to Virginia aboard Deliverance, one of two vessels they built of Bermuda cedar. Walk on its decks and go below to see living conditions and details of their remarkable story of survival—and how their Bermuda supplies helped rescue starving relatives and colleagues in America’s birthplace. The focus of entertainment for students will be the animatronic figure of passenger and writer William Strachey, who “speaks” about the wreck and fateful voyage. Strachey’s accounts later inspired William Shakespeare to write his last play, The Tempest. Students will also get a very tangible sense of how cramped, fragile and devoid of modern comforts vessels of the time were. St. George’s Historical Society & Museum Featherbed Alley, St. George, 297-0423 Take students up the “welcoming arms” of this tiny FIELDTRIPS museum to see rooms full of old-time possessions showing how people lived before TV, cell phones or email. Downstairs is the historic printery, where Bermuda’s first newspaper was made. Bermuda Heritage Museum Samaritans Lodge, corner of Duke of York and Water Streets, St. George, 297-4126 One of the stops on the African Diaspora Trail, this museum is a tribute to black history. Inside, you’ll see artifacts and information telling the story of slavery, the gombey tradition, the origins of Cup Match, and the civil-rights struggles of the 1950s and ’60s, including the groundbreaking Theatre Boycott. Even the museum building is historically important: it is a 19th-century lodge that once belonged to one of the Friendly Societies. Rogues & Runners, Bermuda National Trust Museum Globe Hotel, King’s Square, St. George, 297-1423 Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Revisit the drama and intrigue of the US Civil War—and Bermuda’s role in the conflict—at this small but fascinating museum. Students can learn about spies, smugglers and blockade-runners, and see artifacts from the 1861–65 war that brought wealth and people to sleepy St. George. St. Peter’s Church Duke of York Street, St. George, 297-0216 This is one of Bermuda’s most famous buildings, mostly because it is the oldest continually-used Anglican Church site in the New World. Have students examine its cedarwork, silver artifacts and interesting plaques commemorating town citizens of the past. The graveyards are also worth exploring. Murdered Governor Sir Richard Sharples lies here, along with notable townfolk. The slave graveyard on the west side of the church holds the bodies of local slaves and freed blacks, buried there at a time of segregation. TEACHERS GUIDE State House King Street & Princess Street, St. George Dating to 1622, the rebuilt State House is Bermuda’s oldest stone building. It’s believed some of the island’s first West Indian slaves may have helped build it. Over the years, it had many roles, including a meeting place for government, a courthouse for witch trials, and a store for gunpowder. Every year, a token rent of one peppercorn is paid for the building by Bermuda’s oldest Masonic lodge. Take students to witness the colourful Peppercorn Ceremony, held every April, attended by the Governor and Bermuda Regiment in King’s Square. Tucker House Museum Water Street at Barber’s Alley, St. George Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Students can step back in time at this former Bermuda house that once belonged to Henry Tucker, president of the Governor’s Council. The 18th-century merchant’s home takes visitors back to the time of candlelit rooms, brick ovens and four-poster beds. There are quilts, cradles and kitchen utensils. Don’t miss the lower floor, where archaeologists discovered artifacts below the cellar floor: these are on display. The building’s kitchen is where freed slave Joseph Rainey operated a barbershop—giving the nearby alleyway its name. Somers Garden York Street, St. George This pretty park is where Sir George Somers’s heart was buried after he returned to Bermuda for supplies in 1610 and died on the island. Although his body was returned to England, tradition ensured his heart remained in Bermuda. A stone monument in the park’s centre commemorates the town’s namesake. (Sculptor Desmond Fountain’s bronze of Sir George stands a short walk away, on Ordnance Island.) A good place to soak up history while stopping for a lunch break while on a fieldtrip to the town. 71 REAL-WORLD RESOURCES Fort St. Catherine Coot Pond Road, St. Catherine’s Point, 297-1920 Parks Department, 236-5902 Peek over the ramparts of Fort St. Catherine, and you’ll see the same stretch of ocean the first castaways saw when they escaped the shipwrecked Sea Venture. The vessel’s wreck lies just offshore from this fort, which is one of the island’s best-kept. Inside you can learn about early Bermuda and how soldiers lived and worked in the fort. You will also see swords, cannon and other weapons—and audiovisual and interactive exhibits on Bermuda’s forts. Martello Tower Ferry Reach National Park Parks Department, 236-5902 This egg-shaped structure is part of the chain of forts belonging to the UNESCO World Heritage Site. A drawbridge leads over a ditch into the tower, where two floors of exhibits tell the story of its importance as a first line of defence against attack on the first capital. Two levels include an ammunition magazine and quarters for soldiers from the British garrison. Mounted on top is an authentic gun on a reproduction revolving carriage. The Tower is kept closed in some seasons, but special visits can be arranged through the Parks Department. Carter House Southside Avenue, St. David’s St. David’s Historical Society, 293-5960 The oldest dwelling on St. David’s Island, believed to date from 1640, is today a quaint museum that tells the story of area characters, traditions, heroes and history. Artifacts linked to whaling, piloting, fishing, boatbuilding and farming are on display. The cottage itself is a perfect example for students of Bermudian vernacular architecture—with welcoming arms, buttresses, sloping roofline and cedar beams. It was built by Christopher Carter, one of three Sea Venture survivors who stayed in Bermuda when the other colonists continued to Virginia. 72 FIELDTRIPS St. David’s Battery Great Head National Park, St. David’s Parks Department, 236-5902 Local soldiers manned this battery during the Second World War, when Bermuda was an important base for the Allies. Large gun emplacements, with huge guns, sit above magazines and storerooms. A bronze memorial to Bermudians lost at sea, created by sculptor Bill “Mussey” Ming, can also be seen here. Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS) Biological Lane, Ferry Reach, 297-1880, www.bios.edu You can see global research right here in Bermuda. At BIOS, local and international scientists investigate everything from ocean health, coral reefs, genomes, global warming and ways the sea may one day provide materials for vital medicines. Tours for school groups can be organised. HAMILTON PARISH Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo (BAMZ) Flatts Bridge Bermuda Zoological Society, www.bamz.org BZS Education Officer Joseph Furbert, edofficer.bzs@gov.bm, 293-2727, ext. 2142 Students can learn about endangered species of Bermuda and the world—and find out what they can do to help the environment. Scientists, teachers and other staff at Bermuda Zoological Society offer marine and terrestrial fieldtrips, along with science classes that link to the national curriculum. Fieldtrips can be organised to give students a closeup look at coral reefs, caves, habitats, invasive species, frogs and toads, seabirds and other endangered species. At the Zoo, students can tour the islands of the world through exhibits spotlighting the Caribbean, Australasia and Madagascar. At Local Tails, students can walk through Bermuda’s habitats, from seashore to forest, and learn about skinks, butterflies and other species. In the Aquarium, they will see real coral reefs and all the marine life these FIELDTRIPS support, from seahorses to sharks. The Natural History Museum explains how Bermuda was formed and what makes our fragile island unique. Crystal Cave & Fantasy Cave Wilkinson Avenue, 293-0640 These eye-popping caverns were discovered by two boys who lost a cricket ball in the early 1900s. No-one ever found the ball—but the caves offer their own natural treasures. Descend scores of limestone steps cut 80 feet down into the earth, where you will see stalagmites, stalactites and other wonderfully-shaped crystalline formations, and an underground lagoon which you can cross by a floating trail of pontoon bridges. SMITH’S PARISH Spittal Pond Nature Reserve South Shore Road Parks Department, 236-5902; Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Trails make this scenic 64-acre site accessible to students and all visitors. Climb up to Portuguese Rock and see where castaways carved markings after their shipwreck in the Age of Discovery—years before English colonists arrived at Bermuda. Follow the trail to the rocky shoreline, and you’ll come to Jeffrey’s Cave, where legend says a slave hid after escaping in the early 1800s. Science students can spot numerous local and migratory birds that use this park as a nesting or resting spot, including herons, egrets, grebes and various species of duck. Verdmont Collector’s Hill Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Inside this historic house high on a hill, students can see how people lived in the 18th and 19th centuries. There’s a formal “parlour” and a nursery contains a rocking horse and a Victorian dollhouse. Slaves helped build the house in the early 1700s and many lived and worked there until Emancipation. TEACHERS GUIDE DEVONSHIRE PARISH Old Devonshire Church Middle Road, 236-4906 This whitewashed limestone landmark remains a parish church. It was built in 1716 on the site of a 17th-century wooden structure that was destroyed in a hurricane. Inside the current church, you will see a cedar pulpit and pews; outside are the historic tombs of parish residents. PAGET PARISH Paget Marsh Lovers Lane, off South Road Bermuda Audubon Society, 292-1920, www.audubon.bm; Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Follow the pontoon bridge into the heart of this 25-acre wetland. Signs describe the flora and fauna you may see along the way. Wax myrtles, red mangroves and Bermuda sedge are anchored in the peat marsh, home also to night herons, great egrets, kingfishers, moorhens and yellow-throat warblers. At trail’s end stand centuries-old cedars and palmetto palms—just as the first settlers might have seen them. Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art Botanical Gardens, South Road 236-2950, www.bermudamasterworks.com Set in a beautiful park, this modern museum has regularly changing exhibitions that explore Bermuda’s history and culture. Works by local and foreign artists are housed here, including a stunning collection of works by celebrities such as Winslow Homer, Georgia O’Keeffe and Albert Gleizes. The Masterworks Foundation’s education department does a good job of interpreting the collection for student groups. Masterworks has worked for a quarter-century to bring home Bermuda paintings by famous artists who visited the island and were inspired by its beauty. 73 REAL-WORLD RESOURCES PEMBROKE PARISH Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute (BUEI) 40 Crow Lane, East Broadway, Pembroke 292-7219, www.buei.org School groups can explore the world’s last frontier— the ocean—at this museum. Its structure allows students to pretend to voyage to the seafloor in a simulated submersible ride. On the main floor, visitors can see old-fashioned diving gear, climb into a model of William Beebe’s bathesphere, view an incredible shell collection and experiment with interactive exhibits that show how Bermuda was formed by a volcano. Downstairs are shipwreck artifacts, including beautiful bottles, gold and a replica of the Spanish emerald cross found by Bermudian diver Teddy Tucker. Fun exhibitry includes a shark cage that lets students feel what it’s like to be pushed around by great whites! FIELDTRIPS furniture, hurricane lamps, palmetto seats, chandeliers, even Hog Money. There are also displays on Bermuda police, war veterans and beautiful cedar artifacts carved by Boer War prisoners. In the main entrance hall is the only known portrait of Sir George Somers and models of Sea Venture, Deliverance and Patience. Bermuda Monetary Authority Museum 43 Victoria Street, City of Hamilton 295-5278, www.bma.bm See Bermuda’s first money and learn how notes and coins are made. On display are beautiful examples of shillings and pence, dollars and cents—see how Bermuda currency has changed and how national symbols like flowers and animals are incorporated by note artists. Commemorative coins pay tribute to endangered species like sea turtles. Learn how secret thread, holograms and other built-in security devices on our banknotes help fight counterfeiters. Historic Statues in the City of Hamilton l Sally Bassett (Cabinet Office grounds, Front Street): A 2009 bronze memorial made by Carlos W. Dowling to the Bermudian slave remembered for rebelling against white slave-owners with a poison plot for which she was burned at the stake at Crow Lane in 1729. l Theatre Boycott (Wesley Street Park, southwest corner of City Hall carpark): Created by Bermudian sculptor Chesley Trott, this bronze installation was created in 2009 as a tribute to the Progressive Group and its supporters, who helped tear down Bermuda race barriers with their widespread lobby effort in 1959. l Enterprise (Barr’s Bay Park, Pitts Bay Road): Located at the site where slave passengers aboard the ship Enterprise landed on Bermuda, this sculpture honours the Enterprise passengers for whom Bermudians fought—and won—a legal case for their freedom in 1835. l Mark Twain (XL Capital, Bermudiana Road, and Butterfield Bank, Reid Street): two statues remember the American humourist and author who spent much time in Bermuda in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Bermuda Historical Society Museum Queen Street at Par-la-Ville Park, City of Hamilton 295-2487 If students wonder what a living room from the 1800s looked like, or how bygone Bermudians set their dining tables, here’s a place full of tangible answers. This little museum, divided into household rooms, is full of artifacts that show how people used to live—items such as silver spoons, teacups, cedar Bermuda Sloop Foundation Victoria Place lower ground/courtyard 31 Victoria Street, City of Hamilton 737-5667, info@bermudasloop.org www.bermudasloop.org Students and teachers get hands-on learning— about Bermuda, the sea and our maritime heritage—through the foundation’s popular education programme. Among courses offered are: 74 FIELDTRIPS five-day coastal cruising Middle School Learning Expeditions (ages 12 to 14), which teach basic sail-training, along with skills such as publicspeaking, written expression, problem-solving, and deductive reasoning; Coastal Skiller Expeditions for students 13-plus during mid-term vacations and summer months; and Overseas Skiller Expeditions for ages 14 to 25 years. WARWICK PARISH Cobb’s Hill Methodist Church Moonlight Lane, Cobb’s Hill Road 236-8586 This little church was “built by slaves in moonlight” at a time when black Bermudians were banned from worshipping in white churches. Its steeple and tiny sanctuary date back to 1827. The church’s quaint cedar beams and limestone also make it a testament to Bermuda’s architectural heritage. SOUTHAMPTON PARISH Gibbs Hill Lighthouse Lighthouse Hill, 238-8069 Visit Governor Reid’s legacy, and climb the 185 steps to the top of this cast-iron structure—built as a navigational marker for approaching ships. The landmark’s lamp, first lit in 1846, can be seen 26 miles away. Lighthouse-keepers used to run the lighthouse, but now the lamp works electronically. Even though ships now rely on GPS systems, modern mariners still appreciate the lighthouse for shoreline navigation. SANDYS PARISH National Museum of Bermuda, incorporating the Bermuda Maritime Museum Royal Naval Dockyard 234-1333, www.bmm.bm Bermuda’s biggest fort is today its largest museum, containing thousands of artifacts—from Spanish galleon treasure to slave shackles found on shipwrecks. Boat models, priceless Bermuda maps, and TEACHERS GUIDE nautical gear from every age are displayed. Exhibits in the buildings, including Commissioner’s House (with perhaps the island’s best views from its verandahs), tell the stories of convicts who built Dockyard, Boer War prisoners, the Royal Navy and US military, Portuguese and West Indies connections, slavery—and lots more. A stunning mural by Bermudian artist Graham Foster traces 500 years of Bermuda history—a student guide to the mural is given out free to all visiting groups. And an impressive exhibit about Bermuda’s defence heritage tells of the island’s defences and of local men and women who gave their lives in the two World Wars. Recently expanded to include the nearby Casemates property, the museum will in time offer many more buildings of exhibits; for now, have students walk along the re-opened northern ramparts, the original military access to the Keep that now links the two areas again. Royal Naval Cemetery Ireland Island, Bermuda National Trust, 236-6483, www.bnt.bm Graveyard dating to the early 19th century contains intriguing headstones honouring the lives of naval officers, crewmen, civilians and their families with touching inscriptions. Fort Scaur Scaur Hill, Parks Department, 236-5902 Look through a telescope from this hilltop to see as far as Fort St. Catherine and St. David’s Lighthouse. The fort, erected in the 1870s, is a good example of local defences. It was built to guard the crossing at Somerset Bridge to prevent enemy armies from reaching Dockyard (which never happened). Look at the ramparts, cannon and gun placements, surrounded by a defensive ditch. 75 MULTIMEDIA RESOURCES GENERAL REFERENCE Articles & Essays Granatstein, J. L., and Hillmer, Norman, “Canada’s Century, The 25 Events That Shaped the Country,” Maclean’s, July 1, 1999 Hitchens, Christopher, “Why Americans Are Not Taught History,” Harper’s, November 1998 Kirn, Walter, “Lewis and Clark, The Journey That Changed America Forever,” Time, July 8, 2002 Books Bernard, Bruce, Century, One Hundred Years of Human Progress, Regression, Suffering and Hope (London, Phaidon Press, 2000) Bryans, Robin, Azores (London, Faber & Faber, 1963) Chisholm, Jane, Timelines of World History (Usborne, 2002) Evans, Harold, The American Century (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1998) Farndon, John, Concise Encyclopedia (New York, DK Publishing, 1999) Garner, Joe, We Interrupt This Broadcast, The Events That Stopped Our Lives…from the Hindenburg Explosion to the Death of John F. Kennedy Jr. (Illinois, Sourcebooks, Inc., second edition, 2000) Jennings, Peter and Brewster, Todd, Century (New York, Doubleday, 1998) The New American Desk Encyclopedia (New York, Meridian, 1987) The Norton Anthology of English Literature, third edition (New York, W. W. Norton & Company, 1975) The Random House Timetables of History (New York, Random House, 1991) The Riverside Shakespeare (Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1974) Schama, Simon, A History of Britain, At the Edge of the World? 3500 B.C.–1603 A.D. (New York, Hyperion/talk miramax books, 2000) BERMUDA REFERENCE Newspapers, Periodicals & Journals Bermuda Journal of Archaeology and Maritime History, Volumes 1–13, 1989–2003 Bermuda Historical Quarterly, Volumes 1–39, 1944–83 Henderson, Dwight Franklin (ed.), The Private Journal of Georgiana Gholson Walker 1862– 1865, With Selections from the Post-War Years, 1865–1876 (Confederate Publishing Company, 1963) Market Solutions 2003, Bermuda: The World’s Risk Capital, Insurance Advisory Committee (Bermuda, 2003) 76 RESOURCES The Royal Gazette, Bermuda Sun, The Mid-Ocean News, The Workers Voice, The Bermudian, Bermudian Business, Bermuda, RG magazine, MARITimes (various issues) Film Bermuda: Five Centuries, six-part series, Panatel VDS Ltd. for the Bermuda Millennium Committee, 1999 The Lion and the Mouse, documentary on Bermuda links with America, Lucinda Spurling, narrated by Michael Douglas, Afflare Films, 2009 Rare Bird, documentary on Bermuda cahow, Lucinda Spurling, Afflare Films, 2009 Where the Whales Sing, documentary about humpback whales in Bermuda waters, Andrew Stevenson, Humpback Whale Research Project, 2009 When Voices Rise…, Williams, Errol, 2002 Articles & Essays Allen, Frederick Lewis, “Bermuda, 1938,” Harper’s Monthly, No. 1,055, April 1938 The Association of Bermuda Affairs, “An Analysis of Bermuda’s Social Problems (the limited franchise, segregation and discrimination),” 1953 Barreiro-Meiro, Roberto, “Las Islas Bermudas y Juan Bermúdez,” Instituto Histórico de Marina, Madrid, 1970 Forster, Tony, “The Day the Captive Was Born,” The Fred Reiss Foundation, 2002 Higginbottom, Dennis J., “The Development of the Bermuda Reinsurance Market,” Journal of Reinsurance, Spring 2002 Jarvis, Michael J., “Cedars, Sloops and Slaves: The Development of the Bermuda Shipbuilding Industry 1680–1750,” thesis presented to the Faculty of the Department of History, The College of William & Mary, 1992 Lavela, Bean Jolene, “West Indians in Our Midst, A Brief Study of Our West IndianBermudian Heritage,” The Bermudian, May 1992 Mardis, Allen, “Richard Moore, Carpenter,” Virginia Magazine of History & Biography, October 1984 Maxwell, Clarence V. H., “Race and Servitude: The Birth of a Social and Political Order in Bermuda, 1619–1669,” BJAMH, Vol. 11, 1999 McCombe, Leonard and Skadding, George (photogs.), “Bermuda Makes Modern History,” Life, Volume 35, No. 24, December 14, 1953 Strock, George (photog.), “Old Bermuda, Honeymoon Isles Become US Defense Bastion,” Life, August 18, 1941 Surowiecki, James, “Tax Cheat, Inc.,” The New Yorker, April 22 & 29, 2002 Taft, William Howard, “The Islands of Bermuda, A British Colony with a Unique Record in Popular Government,” National Geographic, Volume 41, January–June 1922 Ziral, James, “The Seduction of Black America,” The Bermudian, May 1997 Books Aspinall, Algernon, The Pocket Guide to the West Indies (London, Sifton, Praed & Co., 1923) Beebe, William, Adventuring with Beebe, Selections from the Writings of William Beebe (New York/Boston/Toronto, Duell, Sloan and Pearce/Little Brown, 1955) Bell, Frank R., Beautiful Bermuda: The Standard Guide to Bermuda (New York, Beautiful Bermuda Publishing Co., ninth edition, 1946) Benbow, Colin H., Gladys Morrell and the Women’s Suffrage Movement in Bermuda (Bermuda, The Writers’ Machine, 1994) Benbow, Colin H., Boer Prisoners of War in Bermuda (Bermuda, Bermuda Historical Society, third edition, 1994) Bermuda Islands Guide: The Complete Map and Information Guide to Bermuda (Bermuda, Clarion Enterprises, 1982) Bermuda National Trust, Bermuda’s Architectural Heritage: Devonshire (Bermuda, 1995) Bermuda National Trust, Bermuda’s Architectural Heritage: St. George’s (Bermuda, 1998) Bermuda National Trust, Bermuda’s Architectural Heritage: Sandys (Bermuda, 1999) Bermuda National Trust, Bermuda’s Architectural Heritage: Paget (Bermuda, 2010) Bermuda Trade Development Board, Residence in Bermuda, 1936 Bernhard, Virginia, Slaves and Slaveholders in Bermuda, 1616–1782 (Columbia, Missouri, University of Missouri Press, 1999) Blagg, G. Daniel, Bermuda Atlas & Gazetteer (Dover, Delaware, Dover Litho Publishing Company, 1997) Boyle, Peter G. (ed.), The Churchill-Eisenhower Correspondence 1953–1955 (Chapel Hill, North Carolina, The University of North Carolina Press, 1990) Britton, Nathaniel Lord, Flora of Bermuda (New York, Scribner & Sons, 1918) Butler, Dale (ed.), L. Frederick Wade: His Legacy (Bermuda, The Writers’ Machine, 1997) Calnan, Patricia, The Masterworks Bermudiana Collection (Bermuda, The Bermudian Publishing Company, 1994) Cox, John (ed.), Life in Old Bermuda (Bermuda, John Cox, 1998) Crombie, Roger, Conyers Dill & Pearman: A RESOURCES History (Bermuda, Walsingham Press, 1998) Darrell, Owen H., Sir George Somers: Links Bermuda With Lyme Regis (Bermuda, Owen H. Darrell, 1997) Deichmann, Catherine Lynch, Rogues & Runners: Bermuda and the American Civil War (Bermuda, Bermuda National Trust, 2002) Dorr, Julia C. R., Bermuda: An Idyl of the Summer Islands (New York, Charles Scribner, 1884) Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. (ed.), The Classic Slave Narratives (New York, Mentor, 1987) Grearson, Don, USS Bermuda, The Rise and Fall of an American Base (Great Dog Publishing, 2009) Godet, Nan and Harris, Edward C., Pillars of the Bridge: The establishment of the United States bases on Bermuda during the Second World War (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 1991) Hallett, A. C. Hollis, Bermuda Under the Somers Islands Company, Civil Records 1612–1684 (Volume 1, 1612–1669) (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 2004) Harris, Edward C., Bermuda Forts, 1612–1957 (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 1997) Harris, Edward C., Great Guns of Bermuda, A Guide to the Principal Forts of the Bermuda Islands (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, second printing, 1992) Harris, Edward C., Heritage Matters: Essays on the history of Bermuda (Volumes 1, 2 and 3) (National Museum of Bermuda Press, 2007, 2008, 2010) Hayward, Stuart J., Gomez, Vicki Holt and Sterrer, Wolfgang, Bermuda’s Delicate Balance (Bermuda, Bermuda National Trust, 1982) Hayward, Walter B., Bermuda Past and Present (New York, Dodd, Mead & Company, 1910) Heyl, Edith Stowe Godfrey (ed.), Bermuda Through the Camera of James B. Heyl 1868– 1897 (Glasgow, Robert MacLehose and Company, 1951) Hodgson, Eva N., Second Class Citizens, First Class Men (Bermuda, The Writers’ Machine, third edition, 1997) Hunter, Barbara Harries, The People of Bermuda: Beyond the Crossroads (Bermuda, Barbara Harries Hunter, 1993) Ingham, Jennifer M., Defence Not Defiance: A History of the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (Bermuda, Jennifer M. Ingham, 1992) Ives, Vernon (ed.), The Rich Papers, Letters From Bermuda, 1615–1646 (Bermuda, Bermuda National Trust, 1984) Jarvis, Michael, In the Eye of All Trade: Bermuda, Bermudians, and the Maritime Atlantic World, 1680-1783 (University of North Carolina Press, 2010) Jones, John Matthew, The Naturalist in Bermuda. TEACHERS GUIDE A Sketch of the Geology, Zoology and Botany (London, Reeves & Turner, 1859) Jones, Rosemary, Bermuda: Five Centuries for Young People (Panatel, 2009) Jourdan, Silvanus, The Discovery of the Barmudas (London, 1610) (facsimile edition) Kennedy, Jean, Isle of Devils, Bermuda Under the Somers Island Company 1609–1685 (Glasgow, William Collins Sons & Co., 1971) Kerr, Wilfred Brenton, Bermuda and the American Revolution: 1760–1783 (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 1995) (facsimile edition) Klein, Herbert S., The Atlantic Slave Trade (New York, Cambridge University Press, 1999) Lefroy, Major General Sir John Henry, Memorials of the Discovery and Early Settlement of the Bermudas or Somers Islands (1511–1687) (Volumes I and II) (Bermuda, reprinted by the Bermuda Historical Society and the Bermuda National Trust, 1981) Lucas, Ron, Bermuda Reef Portraits (Bermuda Zoological Society 2009) McCallan, E. A., Life on Old St. David’s, Bermuda (Bermuda, Bermuda Historical Society, second edition, 1986) McDowall, Duncan, Another World: Bermuda and the Rise of Modern Tourism (London, MacMillan Education Ltd., 1999) Mudd, Patricia Marirea, Portuguese Bermudians, Early History and Reference Guide 1849–1949 (Louisville, Kentucky, Historical Research Publishers, 1991) Packwood, Cyril Outerbridge, Chained on the Rock (Bermuda, The Island Press, 1975) Philip, Ira, Freedom Fighters: From Monk to Mazumbo (London, Akira Press, 1987) Plowman, Piers and Card, Stephen J., Queen of Bermuda and the Furness Bermuda Line (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 2002) Raymond, Jocelyn Motyer, Saturday’s Children: A Journey from Darkness into Light, Bermuda, 1850 (Bermuda, Arrowroot Press, 1994) Robinson, Kenneth E., Heritage, Including an Account of Bermudian Builders, Pilots and Petitioners of the Early Post-Abolition Period 1834–1849 (London, MacMillan Education Ltd., The Berkeley Educational Society, 1979) Rushe, George, Bermuda: As a Matter of Fact (Bermuda, George Rushe, fifth edition, 1988) Simons, Tamell (photog.), Date With Destiny, A Photographic History (Bermuda, Baobab Publishing, 1999) Smith, James E., Slavery in Bermuda (New York, Vantage Press, 1976) Stark, James H., Stark’s Illustrated Bermuda Guide (Boston, James H. Stark, 1902) Stranack, Ian, The Andrew and the Onions, The Story of the Royal Navy in Bermuda 1795–1975 (Bermuda, Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, 1990) Strode, Hudson, The Story of Bermuda (New York, Harrison Smith & Robert Haas, 1932) Thomas, Martin J., The Natural History of Bermuda (Bermuda, Bermuda Zoological Society, 2004) Thomas, Martin J., A Naturalist’s Field Guide to Bermuda (Bermuda Zoological Society, 2010) Trimingham, R.W., Under the Calabash Tree: 150 Years of the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club (Bermuda, The Bermudian Publishing Company, 1996) Tucker, Terry, Bermuda’s Story (Bermuda, Bermuda Bookstores, 1959) Tucker, Terry, Bermuda: Unintended Destination 1609–1610 (Bermuda, The Island Press, second printing, 1982) Verrill, Addison E., The Bermuda Islands (New York, Addison Verrill, 1902) Wells, Carveth, Bermuda in Three Colours (New York, Robert M. McBride & Company, 1935) Wilkinson, Henry C., The Adventurers of Bermuda (London, Oxford University Press, 1933) Wilkinson, Henry C., Bermuda in the Old Empire (London, Oxford University Press, 1950) Wilkinson, Henry C., Bermuda From Sail to Steam, A History of the Island From 1784 to 1901 (Volumes I & II) (London, Oxford University Press, 1973) Williams, Malcolm E., Sousa, Peter T. and Harris, Edward C., Coins of Bermuda (Bermuda, Bermuda Monetary Authority, 1997) Williams, Ronald John, Bermudiana (New York/Toronto, Rinehart & Company, 1946) Winchester, Simon, Outposts: Journeys to the surviving relics of the British Empire (Great Britain, Sceptre, 1988) Woodward, Hobson, A Brave Vessel: The True Tale of the Castaways Who Rescued Jamestown and Inspired Shakespeare’s The Tempest (Viking, 2009) Woolcock, Peter, Woppened 14, The Year in Review: 2001–2002, Cartoons for The Royal Gazette (Bermuda, The Royal Gazette, 2002) Writers’ Machine, The, Mazumbo, 1994 Zuill, William, Bermuda Sampler, 1815–1850 (Suffolk, England, Richard Clay & Sons, 1937) Zuill, William, Horsewhips in High Places: The Turbulent Decade 1819–29 (Bermuda, The Hamilton Press, 1976) Zuill, W. S., The Story of Bermuda and Her People (London, MacMillan Caribbean, MacMillan Publishers, second edition, 1983) Websites www.bermudabiographies.bm 77 WORLD BERMUDA TIMELINE 1505–1684 1505 Spaniard Juan de Bermúdez discovers island on a homeward journey from New World 1511 Bermuda makes its world debut on woodcut map in Peter Martyr’s Legatio Babylonica 1525 Spain sends Estevão Gomez to survey island; no map survives 1603 Spaniard Diego Ramirez lands on Bermuda, detailing a land of plenty 1609 England claims Bermuda after Sea Venture wrecks en route to Jamestown 1612 The first English settlers, with Governor Richard Moore, arrive aboard the Plough 1505 Spanish carrying slaves from Africa to the West Indies 1515 Ottoman Turks build Empire, to include Egypt, North Africa and most of Middle East 1520 Coffee and chocolate become key New-World exports to Europe 1607 Captain John Smith founds the first colony at James Fort, Virginia 1610 Astronomer Galileo publishes his telescope discoveries about Venus 1611 King James Bible is published in England WORLD BERMUDA TIMELINE 1684–1834 1690 The island’s population numbers 5,889, of whom 4,152 are white and 1,737 black 1700 The Bermuda ‘fleet’ counts 60 sloops, six brigantines and at least 400 two-masted boats 1712 Bermudians use more limestone to build houses after heavy hurricanes strike island 1755 Bermuda sells 130,000 bushels of salt a year to North America at height of salt trade 1761 The island is struck by serious slave revolt and smallpox epidemic 1775 Thieves steal gunpowder from St. George’s for George Washington’s armies 1692 Witch trials captivate the community of Salem, Massachusetts 1695 The Ashanti kingdom expands and prospers on West Africa’s Gold Coast 1700 Bach, Händel and Vivaldi bring Baroque music to its height in Europe 1759 Britain defeats French forces in Quebec, Canada 1770 Captain James Cook gets to Australia after exploring the South Pacific 1783 Britain and America sign peace accord, making official the United States of America BERMUDA 1849 Fifty-eight men, women and children from Madeira are first Portuguese immigrants 1851 Record crop shipment to New York includes onions, tomatoes and arrowroot 1871 Causeway links St. George’s to the main island, replacing ferry 1879 First police force is created: nine full-time officers and 21 part-time parish constables 1883 The visit of Princess Louise marks celebrity launch of Bermuda tourism 1887 Telephone service is installed between Hamilton and St. George’s WORLD TIMELINE 1834–1918 1840 Britain issues first postage stamp, the Penny Black, a prelude to postal service 1860 David Livingstone explores Africa’s Zambezi River 1861 Breakaway of southern states launches four-year American Civil War 1865 North wins US Civil War; slavery is abolished; Abraham Lincoln assassinated 1877 European powers race to colonise inner Africa, seeking new markets and resources 1878 British scientist Joseph Swan invents the lightbulb WORLD BERMUDA TIMELINE 1918–1945 1919 Island’s first union, Bermuda Union of Teachers, established 1923 Last objector evicted from Tucker’s Town as construction of mega-homes and golf-course begins 1930 Bermuda’s first radio station opens, broadcast from Front Street store 1931 Inaugural Hamilton-to-Somerset journey of the Bermuda Railway 1934 Severn Bridge finally links St. David’s to St. George’s parish 1937 Imperial Airways offers first commercial flights, to Port Washington, New York 1918 British women over the age of 30 win right to vote; world flu epidemic kills 20 million 1920 Manufacture and sale of alcohol banned in US under Prohibition 1927 US releases first “talkie” (movie with soundtrack), The Jazz Singer 1929 Mahatma Gandhi leads campaign of nonviolent resistance for Indian independence 1930 USSR dictator Josef Stalin crushes peasant farmers under harsh regime 1934 Chinese Communists led by Mao Zedong plot to take over their country WORLD BERMUDA TIMELINE 1945–2005 1946 Law is changed to allow motor cars for public use in Bermuda 1951 The Royal Naval Dockyard closes 1955 Islanders tune in to first TV station broadcasting from US base 1959 Cinema boycott spurs desegregation in churches, hotels, restaurants 1968 UBP wins first general election contested by political parties 1970 Currency goes decimal, replacing pounds and shillings with dollars and cents 1946 Nazi leaders on trial for war crimes in Nuremburg, Germany 1947 UN agrees to split Palestine into Arab and Jewish states, a move fought by Arabs 1953 Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tensing conquer the top of the world, Mount Everest 1955 Europe’s Communist states sign military treaty, the Warsaw Pact 1962 Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago become independent; Barbados follows four years later 1969 US astronaut Neil Armstrong takes first steps on moon; 600 million watch via live TV 1620 House of Assembly holds first session, a step towards self-government 1650 Scores of English immigrants cross the Atlantic to Bermuda and America 1668 Bermuda captain discovers Turks Islands; colonists to make fortunes from salt 1684 Rigid trading laws end as Bermuda becomes an English Crown Colony 1616 European powers open trading posts along West Africa’s Gold Coast 1618 The Thirty Years’ War, between Catholics and Protestants, embroils Europe 1620 Pilgrims set sail from Plymouth, England for Massachusetts on the Mayflower 1625 The Dutch establish New Amsterdam (site of New York today) 1654 First sugarcane plantations develop in the Caribbean, to be worked by slave labour 1690 The Mogul Empire reaches its zenith, controlling Afghanistan and parts of India 1784 The premier issue of The Bermuda Gazette, the island’s first newspaper, is published 1809 Navy begins work to construct ‘Fortress Bermuda’ at the Royal Naval Dockyard 1815 General Assembly meets in new capital, Hamilton, for the first time 1823 English and Irish convicts are shipped as cheap labour to Dockyard 1825 Church of England establishes school system for black Bermudians 1834 Two abolition acts take effect on August 1, ending 200 years of slavery 1796 Smallpox vaccine is introduced to England 1805 Britain regains supremacy at sea, defeating Napoleon in the Battle of Trafalgar 1807 British abolish the slave trade, but slavery stays legal for nearly 30 years 1825 England’s first passenger railroad opens; steam-driven locomotives become common 1832 American Samuel Morse invents the electric telegraph, used to send Morse code 1837 Queen V ictoria’s reign begins, launching an era of progress and innovation 1894 West Indians begin migrating to Bermuda, after sugar economy collapses 1897 Berkeley Institute opens on Court Street as first multi-racial school 1901 Island’s population now numbers 17,535; of whom 3,000 are West Indians 1902 Two-day Somerset vs. St. George’s cricket matches starts Cup Match tradition 1904 Bermuda Electric Light Power Company supplies first street lamps 1915 BVRC soldiers leave for war-torn France, followed by BMA troops 1890 Battle of Wounded Knee marks the final massacre of Native Americans in US 1899 The Boer War (to 1902); prisoners sent for internment in Bermuda the following year 1906 Coca-Cola goes international; within 20 years Coke is world’s best-known brand 1909 Plastic is invented in the US; first used for billiard balls and buttons 1917 Czar Nicholas overthrown by Lenin-led Communists in Russian Revolution 1918 Allied forces win First World War after bloody fouryear conflict 1939 Bermuda troops prepare to join Allies in war against Germany 1940 Britain announces deal to lease Bermuda land to America for military bases 1941 Bermuda Workers Association, later Bermuda Industrial Union, is founded 1942 US pilots and Royal Navy fleets make Bermuda HQ for attacking German U-boats 1944 Bermuda’s land-owning women win 20-year campaign for right to vote 1945 Islanders celebrate Victory in Europe (VE) Day on May 8 with public holiday 1939 Hitler’s troops invade Poland on September 1, triggering Second World War 1940 Penicillin is discovered and the Xerox photocopier invented 1941 Japan captures Singapore, Malaya, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Burma and Indonesia 1941 US enters war after Japanese attack on fleet at Pearl Harbour, Hawaii 1945 US drops atomic bomb on Hiroshima, killing 80,000; war ends 1945 United Nations founded to avoid future wars through mediation 1973 Governor Sir Richard Sharples and aide Hugh Sayers are assassinated at Government House 1977 Street riots protest the hangings of killers Larry Tacklyn and Erskine Burrows 1987 Tourism reaches an all-time record of almost 630,000 visitors a year 1998 First PLP government wins landslide election victory 2001 Bermudians killed in New York’s 9/11 attack; security tightened around island 2011 Gang shootings, overdevelopment, costly healthcare and education standards top island concerns BERMUDA 1970 First “jumbo” jet flies from New York to London 1982 Scientists identify the AIDS virus, and discover a hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica 1990 Apartheid ends in South Africa and jailed black leader Nelson Mandela goes free 1991 The World Wide Web, created by British scientist Tim Berners-Lee, makes its public debut 2003 US captures Iraq dictator Saddam Hussein, who denies building ‘weapons of mass destruction’ 2008 AfricanAmerican Barack Obama becomes the 44th President of the United States WORLD BERMUDA 1617 Mathematician Richard Norwood surveys the island for shareholders WORLD BERMUDA WORLD BERMUDA WORLD BERMUDA WORLD 1616 Bermudian expedition to West Indies collects slaves to replace English labourers Bermuda FIVE CENTURIES Teachers Guide