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Main Guard House
One of the Barbados Tourism Encyclopedia's "Seven Wonders Of Barbados" © Michael Whittaker, Former General Manager, Silver Sands Resort
The Caribbean is still full of secrets. One recently revealed
is that Barbados has the world's rarest collection of 17th century English iron
cannon.
Not too long ago it was decided to create a National Ordnance Collection of all the old guns on the
island and to date more than 400 have been unearthed.
"The island is littered
with old cannon", said Major Michael Hartland, who is the driving force
behind this collection's acquisition. "We have found them in gardens, cellars,
on beaches, embedded in the sides of buildings and buried under fortifications",
he informed me as I sat in his roomy office which is located in the historic
Main Guard House which sits in the Garrison Savannah. It's an elegant Georgian
building (Circa 1802) with a graceful clocktower and is now the headquarters
of the Garrison Committee of which Hartland is the secretary.
He went on to tell me that the reason there were so many guns on the island
was that during the 17th & 18th centuries Barbados was an important military
base which the British used to protect their interests in the southern Caribbean.
When a nucleus of cannon
had been collected, Charles Trollope, an English apple farmer (who also happens
to be a world authority on ordnance), was invited to come to Barbados and catalogue
the collection. He arrived armed with copies of the Royal Armory archives now
stored in the Tower of London. The British, like the Spanish with their bullion,
kept meticulous records of all cannon shipped to and from the West Indies. To
everyone's surprise, a treasure trove of ordnance was revealed. More than half
the cannon were cast in the 17th century. The oldest cannon found was cast in
1620 and the youngest, dated 1870 is one of the rarest: called the Victoria
Gun (in photo) is the first rifled muzzle loader made in England. Not
all the cannon found were English, with Dutch, Spanish and Swedish cannon coming
to light.
"Let me show you the
gem of the collection", said Hartland leading me out onto the broad verandah
which surrounds the Guard House. Here covered with a green tarpaulin was yet
another gun. As I helped him unwrap it he told me it was the rarest cannon of
its kind ... a Commonwealth Cannon. Only one other is known to exist and it
can be found in the Tower of London. What makes it so rare? Following the death
of Oliver Cromwell, King Charles II instructed that all cannon with Cromwell's
Coat of Arms embellished on them be struck off so that all official traces of
Cromwell's rule (he had executed Charles II's father) would be removed. It is
a cannon of extreme historical importance.
Twenty-six of the most important
pieces in the collection are mounted in front of the Main Guard House and make
a fine photographic display.
For further information on the National Ordnance
Collection of Barbados, you may also contact:
Major Michael Hartland
The Main Guard House,The Garrison,St. Michael, Barbados
Tel: (246) 426-8982 Fax: (246) 429-6663
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