Connect with us

Local

A Grand Celebration At This Year’s Independence Parade

Pomp, pageantry, and national pride will be the order of the day when the annual Independence Day Parade is held on Saturday, November 30, at Kensington Oval, starting at 8:00 a.m.

Thousands are expected to pack the stands to witness the precision of approximately 890 people in the 22 armed and unarmed units and organisations, as they march to the strains of the Massed Band in slow and quick time on the parade square.

The parade will be under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Julia Dabreo. This is the third time in history that the parade is under the command of a female. The  first being retired Lieutenant Colonel Atheline Branch, followed by retired Major Wendy Yearwood.

This year’s celebrations will be extra special as the date falls on the 100th Anniversary of the birth of Shirley Chisholm – an African American with Barbadian roots, who was the first black woman to be elected to the United States Congress and the first African American woman to seek the Democratic Presidential Nomination in 1972.

In her honour, there will be a video presentation chronicling her life, followed by a short address by the United States Congressional Representative, Hakeem Jeffries.

As an added spectacle to the event, there will be a special display by the Barbados Cadet Corps, in recognition of the organisation’s 120th Anniversary.

The President of Barbados, Her Excellency, The Most Honourable Dame Sandra Mason, will inspect the armed and unarmed units and organisations on parade.

The event will also include an address by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, and the presentation of National Honours and Awards, public service leadership awards, and leadership badges.

There will also be a cultural performance, a 21-gun salute to the nation, the recitation of the pledge by two primary school students from St. Christopher and St. Bartholomew Primary Schools, prayers and cheers to Barbados, and the presidential salute. 

At the end of the ceremony, the troops will march from Kensington Oval, proceed along Fontabelle onto Lower Broad Street, Upper Broad Street, and then to National Heroes Square, where Prime Minister Mottley and Members of Parliament will receive the salute. (PR/GIS)

Local

SPECIAL POLLING DAY NOTICE

Continue Reading

Local

FundAccess To Host Legal Clinic Workshop from May 13th

Entrepreneurs will soon get another opportunity to learn about critical legal matters that are key to the operation of their businesses.

FundAccess will be hosting The Legal Clinic Workshop, which will commence on Tuesday, May 13, and continue each Tuesday, until May 27from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.

The workshop will be facilitated by Attorney-at-law Ondene Kirton and participants will discuss Understanding Business Legal Structures; Contracts & Agreements; Employment Law & Compliance; and Examination of the Various Laws Relating to Small Business.

During those sessions, the participants will be exposed to sole proprietorship, partnerships, corporations – pro and cons; how to choose the right legal structure for a business; the importance of contracts in business operations; avoiding common contract pitfalls; and employee rights & employer responsibilities, among others.  Some of the pieces of legislation to be examined include the Employment Rights Act and National Insurance and Social Security Act.

Interested persons may attend the workshop in person at FundAccess’ Pinfold Street, Bridgetown location, or online via the Zoom Platform. To register, click on the following link: https://bit.ly/3Fu09Jv.

Continue Reading

Local

Centenarian Built On Firm Foundation Set By Grandmother

“Trust God first” is the mantra of one of Barbados’ newest centenarians, Athelstan Browne, who celebrated his 100th birthday on April 29, 2025, at his home in Montrose, Christ Church, surrounded by family and friends.

One of his specially invited guests was President of Barbados, Her Excellency, The Most Honourable Dame Sandra Mason.

Mr. Browne shared that he grew up “not knowing a mummy” as his mother passed away at age 23, when he was two years old, and his brother was only one year old.

Crediting his grandmother for his upbringing, Mr. Brown remarked: “I had a real good, good grandmother that raised two of us, and everything we learn before we went to school, she taught us.”

Pointing to a humble yet deeply religious upbringing, Mr. Browne said: “I and my brother slept on the floor.  Our grandmother spread things down there, and she just put the pillow under our head.” 

He recalled that they had to sing the hymn “Under the Blood” before going to bed, and first thing in the morning before they had breakfast, which usually consisted of “a cup of tea and two biscuits”.  Adding that the hymn was “our song”, Mr. Browne sang the hymn from memory. 

Stressing that his grandmother was a great provider, he noted: “My grandmother had land, and she would work the land…. We would eat raw potato, raw okras, (green) peas, cucumbers…. The only thing we did not eat was raw yams and eddoes.”

Mr. Browne continues to enjoy his ground provisions “with a little rice”, as he likes his rice with green peas, and if available, chicken boiled with the rice.  “I am a fish man,” he remarked, eating it either fried or with a “stew sauce”.

Continuing to nurture his Christian beliefs, he joined the Mount Ararat United Holy Church (currently in Dayrell’s Road, Christ Church) in 1967, at age 33, and has continued there ever since. 

Once the Superintendent of the Sunday School at the church, Mr. Browne is still instrumental in providing leadership to the youth there.  “I have a crowd of young people at church that love me…especially when I have to talk to them…. It is what they should hear and what they should have,” he said.

The centenarian was raised in Montrose, Christ Church, and attended the Christ Church Boys’ School (now Milton Lynch Primary School).  After leaving school, Mr. Browne initially took to agriculture but then worked cutting soft stone in two quarries in Christ Church. 

In 1947, at the age of 22, he decided to join the US Farm Labour Programme and took the first Pan American Airlines flight out of Barbados. Over 10 years later, Mr. Browne returned to Barbados and married Monica Browne (deceased). Together, they built the house where he currently resides. 

Returning to his roots in agriculture, the centenarian worked at the Ridge Plantation, Christ Church, until retirement. He also planted and reaped ground produce at home, as well as planted and cut canes.

Mr. Browne, who is generally in good health and has a sharp memory, still works around the home and enjoys reading, which he does without glasses. He also keeps in touch with his family in New York and North Carolina, and will do some travelling, but he is always ready to return home.

After toasting the centenarian, Her Excellency remarked: “You are in the midst of a lot of love, and I am sure you are going to enjoy the rest of your birthday.  I am really happy to have met you.  I am grateful for the work that you still continue to do with our young people because a lot of them lack direction, and we, nowadays, don’t take enough time to sit down and speak with them…. We don’t remind them that they are important, that they are somebody.”

Mr. Browne responded: “You got to make them understand what … the Lord expects of them… We have to acknowledge the Lord.”

Mr. Browne has two children, 10 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. (PR/GIS)

Caption: President of Barbados, Her Excellency, The Most Honourable Dame Sandra Mason, and Barbados’ newest centenarian Athelstan Browne take a walk outside during his birthday celebrations in Montrose, Christ Church

Continue Reading

Trending

© 2025 Advomag. Developed by RX Creative Powering bold brands, clean design, and digital creativity that gets results.