Your search within this document for 'muda' resulted in four matching pages.
1

“...colony of Virginia in 1609, he was separated from his companions in a terrific storm, and his vessel, the Sea Venture, being wedged between two rocks off what is now St. George’s Island became a total wreck. On July 28th the ship's company managed to land, and they remained on the islands until the following May, when they succeeded in reaching Virginia in ships of their own building. The circumstance that they found the colonists there almost starved prompted Somers to return for supplies to Ber- muda, which he described as " the most plentiful place that I ever came to for fish, hogs, and fowl.” Soon after his arrival, however, he died, and while his heart was buried where the town of St. George’s now stands, his body was taken to England and interred at Whitchurch in Dorsetshire. Bermuda was now most...”
2

“...George Hotel, on the Rose Hill property, once owned by Governor Tucker, $6.00 (£1 5s.) per day and up. Somerset. Summerside, $4.00 (16s. 8d.) per day. In summer, the Bermudiana, Hamilton, and Princess are closed, but the other hotels remain open and accept guests at slightly reduced rates. Bermuda’s tourist business being mainly with America, hotel rates are quoted in dollars. There are also throughout the colony numerous boarding houses, a list of which is given in folders published by the Ber- muda Trade Development Board. Furnished cottages and bungalows may be rented at from $300 to $3,000 for the season. COMMUNICATIONS. Bermuda can be reached occasionally from England direct in about ten days, from England via La Rochelle in sixteen days, from New York in less than forty- eight hours, and from Canada in four days (see Appendix I), and also by air (see Appendix II). The islands have admirable roads covering 109 miles, fifteen of which are under military control. The use of motor-cars is...”
3

“...ANTIGUA 199 settle the island, but was driven away by want of water, and “.was not colonised until 1632, when some English from St. Kitts under Edward, son of Sir Thomas Warner, established themselves there. During the Commonwealth it remained Royalist, and was included with Virginia, Barbados, and Ber- muda in the Imperial Act of 1650, which prohibited trade with those dependencies on account of their rebellious attitude towards the Home Government. Lord Francis Willoughby lessee of the patent left by Lord Carlisle to his son, visited thé Leeward Islands from Barbados in 1650, and encouraged the inhabitants to resist the Commonwealth. He was compelled to relinquish the government of the islands in 1652, but he reriimed in 1663 after the Restoration, and governed until 1600, when he was lost at sea. In 1666 French troops, re- inforced by Irish malcontents and Caribs, landed at Five Islands Bay and took possession of the island ; but in the following year it was ceded to England by the Treaty...”
4

“...INDEX 495 Siparia, 115, 140, 142 Sir Timothy’s Hill, 219 Sisal hemp, 60, 293 Skeate, Colonel, 288 Skinner, General, English Governor of Guadelope, . 3°3 Slavery, 6-8, 233, 309, 315, 361 Abolition of, 433 Smith, Jane Anne, 36 Smith, Rev. Mr., 228 Sociedad Colombo-Alemana de Transportes Aereos, 464 " S.P.G.”, the, 90 Sofaia, 301, 304 Solberg, 318, 320 Sombrero, 248 Sommelsdyke, Lord of, 413-4 Somers’ Islands. See Ber- muda Somers, Sir George, 42, 55, 56, 57 Somerset Island, 49 Soufrière, Guadeloupe, 299, 301 Soufrière, St. Lucia, 167, 175, 178 Soufrière, St. Vincent, 5, 6, 71, I92-5. 311 Soufrière, motor-launch, 170 Soufrières, Montserrat, the, 231. 233 " Southern Caribee Islands,’’ 151, 186 Southern Cross, 4 Southern Main Road, 131, 137, 138 South Sea Company, 7 South Soufrière, Montserrat, 233 South Staffordshire Regt. (the 38th), 288 South-west Bay, 67 Spanish American War, 327, 340,367 Spanish Hat," 248 Spanish Main, the, 396-412 Accommodation, 397 Communications, 398-9 Spanish Main,...”