Radio Bimshire Presents

New episodes: House on James Street

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Before Sarah Ann Gill became a National Hero, she was a free woman in Bridgetown — navigating a society built on the brutal logic of slavery. In this episode, we step into her world to explore the precarious, complex lives of free coloured women in early 19th-century Barbados. The late historian Professor Pedro Welch unpacked the strategies these women — tavern owners, property holders, and political actors—used to carve out autonomy in a discriminatory society. From the political courage of Alexander Gill’s 1811 petition to the extraordinary, behind-the-scenes influence of Betty Goodwin in the Governor’s residence, we examine how wealth, negotiation, and survival paved the way for Sarah Ann Gill’s future defiance. House on James Street - a radio documentary series only on Radio Bimshire - explores the contradictions of love, power, and property — and set the stage for the moment one house on James Street would change history. Produced and presented by Julius Gittens

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jakson New episodes: House on James Street kansikuva

New episodes: House on James Street

Before Sarah Ann Gill became a National Hero, she was a free woman in Bridgetown — navigating a society built on the brutal logic of slavery. In this episode, we step into her world to explore the precarious, complex lives of free coloured women in early 19th-century Barbados. The late historian Professor Pedro Welch unpacked the strategies these women — tavern owners, property holders, and political actors—used to carve out autonomy in a discriminatory society. From the political courage of Alexander Gill’s 1811 petition to the extraordinary, behind-the-scenes influence of Betty Goodwin in the Governor’s residence, we examine how wealth, negotiation, and survival paved the way for Sarah Ann Gill’s future defiance. House on James Street - a radio documentary series only on Radio Bimshire - explores the contradictions of love, power, and property — and set the stage for the moment one house on James Street would change history. Produced and presented by Julius Gittens

Eilen1 min
jakson Sounds of Freedom III - Esther Phillips - 1 - “Choice Young Negro” kansikuva

Sounds of Freedom III - Esther Phillips - 1 - “Choice Young Negro”

Sounds of Freedom is a journey through the soundscape of emancipation, memory, and hope. In episode one from a new season, host Shayla Murrell sits with Barbadian poet, teacher, and editor Esther Phillips, Barbados’ first Poet Laureate, to explore the making and meaning of her poem “Choice Young Negro”. Drawing on a chilling 1979 instruction manual written by plantation owner Henry Drax for the running of Drax Hall Estate, the conversation unpacks how enslaved Africans were reduced to “units” of labour and profit — and how poetry can turn that language back on itself. Esther’s poem responds to Drax’s demand for “choice young Negroes” by restoring the enslaved as sons, daughters, and freedom fighters from the Coromantee people, whose strength and resistance haunted the sugar empire that tried to break them. Through archive, verse, and voice, this episode situates Drax Hall within the wider history of Caribbean slavery, where historians estimate that close to 30,000 enslaved Africans died on Drax plantations in Barbados and Jamaica. Hear how those lives still echo in Barbados today — not as a mere footnote to empire, but as a living call to remember, reckon, and imagine freedom anew.

Eilen6 min
jakson This Barbadian Life - 09 - "The Birth Women" kansikuva

This Barbadian Life - 09 - "The Birth Women"

In this special International Midwifery Day edition of This Barbadian Life, we honour the Barbadian “birth women” – the lay midwives who walked cane tracks and village roads at all hours to catch babies long before there were labour wards and diplomas. Registered midwife Michelle Marshall guides us from the apprenticeship days of granny and auntie, through the 1937 riots and the Moyne Commission, into today’s accredited midwifery programmes at the Barbados Community College. Along the way, she recalls home births by kerosene lamp, folk practices like sealing house cracks against “lining cold”, and the quiet, transcultural wisdom passed from one generation of Caribbean women to the next. This episode sits at the crossroads of African-Caribbean tradition and a formal health system that slowly expanded in the 20th century. It celebrates the midwives – women and men – who continue to hold families’ hopes in their hands, blending ancestral knowledge with modern medicine in delivery rooms across Barbados. This Barbadian Life – real voices, true stories, only in Barbados - is presented by Shayla Murrell for Radio Bimshire - the voice of the National Library Service of Barbados

Eilen10 min