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Most Jamaicans are aware of the impact to the world of Marcus Garvey, Mary Seacole, Una Marson, Bob Marley, Usain Bolt,  Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce, Peter Tosh and many others.  However, I wish to draw our attention to the Roll of Honour  for the following Jamaicans:

COUBA CORNWALLIS:  From Port Royal and who was responsible for restoring English Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson to perfect health, when he  spent 30 months in  Jamaica. When Nelson returned from Nicaragua in the 1780s he was too ill to journey to England and Couba administered a ” rub up “. Nelson lived in Cooper’s Hill, Red Hills and the house is now a site of memory. Nelson returned to Jamaica with Prince William later King William the Fourth and who signed the Apprenticeship Act in 1834. When King William told his wife Queen Adelaide (after whom a street in Spanish Town is named) about Couba ,she sent a dress for her.  Couba  said the dress was too beautiful to be worn; they buried her in it.

SAMUEL BARBER: From Old Harbour in St. Catherine.  He was Assistant to Dr. Samuel Johnson who compiled the first dictionary of  the English language  in 1735.When Dr. Johnson died,  he left a substantial pension for Samuel Barber. I had the honour of meeting a trustee  of the Johnson /Barber Foundation  at a heritage conference in Portland some years ago.

LEONARD HOWELL: From Red Hills ,Crooked River P.O. Clarendon. He was foremost in the Rastafarian Movement in the 1930s. After his return  from the United States of America  he lived in Trinityville  St. Thomas and then Pinacle, Sligoville St. Catherine.   Rastafarianism is the world’s newest Religion  and the  musical contribution  is impatient of debate.

Dr.HAROLD MOODY: 8 October 1882- 24 April 1947 was born in Kingston, attended Wolmer’s Secondary  School, worshipped at North Street Congregational Church (now United Church)  and migrated to England  in 1904 to study medicine at King’s  College .Although he qualified with distinction  as a doctor in 1910, it was difficult to get a job because of his colour. At one hospital a matron refused to have a black person.

In 1931, Dr. Moody established a movement, the “League of Coloured Peoples” with support from the Quakers and started his own practice. The League included, Una Marson from Santa Cruz and whose father was the Minister at Sharon Baptist Church. She attended Hampton High School.  Other members of the group included Jomo Kenyatta future Kenyan President and C.L.R. James of Trinidad and Tobago .Dr. Moody’ s brother  Ludlow was a famous doctor in Kingston and was first married to Vera the sister of National  Hero  Right Excellent   Norman  Washington Manley.  He donated the land for Wolmer’s Preparatory School. 

MRS. BARBARA BLAKE HANNA:  She was the first black reporter at the British  Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) fifty years ago.  She was subjected to racism and after 9 months on the job her contract was not renewed.  The BBC established an award in her name to recognize up and coming journalists . She paved the way for reporters like   Sir. Trevor McDonald from Trinidad and Tobago.

” NOW WE KNOW”.

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