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Rose Hall is a Jamaican Georgian plantation house now run as a historic house museum. It is located in Montego Bay , Jamaica with a panoramic view of the coast. Thought to be one of the country's most impressive plantation great houses , it had fallen into ruins by the 1960s, but was then restored.
Grove Hill House, Montego Bay; Harrison House, Montego Bay; Montpelier railway station, Jamaica; No. 1 King Street, Montego Bay; No. 2 Orange Street and No. 6 Corner Lane; Roehampton Great House; Rose Hall Great House; Town House, Montego Bay; Churches, cemeteries & tombs. Salter's Hill Baptist Church – ruin; St. James Parish Church
Rose Hall. This is a list of plantation great houses in Jamaica.These houses were built in the 18th and 19th centuries when sugar cane made Jamaica the wealthiest colony in the West Indies. [1] Sugar plantations in the Caribbean were worked by enslaved African people [2] until the aboltion of slavery in 1833.
James Robertson's map of Jamaica, published in 1804 based on a survey of 1796–99, identified 814 sugar plantations and around 2,500 pens or non-sugar plantations. [ 3 ] Cornwall County
When the Spanish occupied Jamaica, Montego Bay was an export point for lard, which was obtained from wild hogs in the forests. In many of the early maps of Jamaica, Montego Bay was listed as "Bahia de Manteca" (Lard Bay). The parish was given the name "St. James" in honour of King James II by Sir Thomas Modyford, the island's first English ...
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Geoffrey S. Yates, Assistant Archivist at the Jamaica Archives in about 1965, claimed that the false story started with an account by Rev. Hope Masterton Waddell of the strangling of Mrs. Palmer at the adjacent Palmyra Estate in 1830, [1] although the passage in Waddell's memoirs simply includes a footnote claiming: "The estate furnished scenes and characters for Dr. Moore's novel Zeluco.
The Jamaica National Heritage Trust is responsible for the promotion, preservation, and development of Jamaica's material cultural heritage (buildings, monuments, bridges, etc.).