HISTORICAL PLACES OF GUYANA IN GOOGLE EARTH
HISTORICAL PLACES OF GUYANA IN GOOGLE EARTH
1. SEVEN PONDS,GEORGETOWN 6°48'20.46N 58° 8'45.81W
2. GEORGETOWN LIGHTHOUSE 6°49'25.34N 58° 9'51.53W
3. LOT 4,PORT MOURANT COMPOUND 6°14'54.84N 57°20'49.45W
4. PALIAMENT BUILDING 6°48'31.13N 58° 9'59.87W
5. GUYANA PROVIDENCE STADIUM 6°45'27.83N 58°10'41.09W
6. OGLE HOUSE 6°49'12.48N 58° 5'50.34W
7. DUTCH FORT ZEELANDIA,FORT ISLAND 6°45'57.42N 58°31'8.59W
8. ST.GEORGE'S CATHEDRAL 6°48'45.75N 58° 9'49.10W
9. CHILDREN'S MILLENNIUM MONUMENT 6°49'22.08N 58° 9'10.52W
10. GUYANA NATIONAL LIBRARY 6°48'49.60N 58° 9'52.74W
11. KAITEUR FALLS (226 m – 741 ft) 5°10'34.61N 59°28'53.01W
12. BANK OF GUYANA-GEORGETOWN 6°48'47.83N 58° 9'55.14W
13. SHELL BEACH 8°16'13.26N 59°33'0.16W
14. UMANA YANA,GEORGETOWN 6°49'28.28N 58° 9'45.25W
Georgetown Botanical Gardens
Walk with me through the Botanical Gardens in Georgetown, Guyana
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Mysterious front end loader sits on the lawns of the 1763 Monument & no one knows who owns it
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Guyana Governor General Sir David James Gardiner Rose
Guyana's First Native Born Governor General, Sir. David James Gardiner Rose GCMG CVO MBE OE.
Killed on 10th November 1969 when a scaffolding fell off a building and onto his motorcade, whilst on his way the take leave of Her Majesty the Queen, Elizabeth II.
He was slated to become Guyana's first President. Died too soon!!!
Company spreads holiday cheers in Buxton
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Kalpana Patowary in Monument Garden | Church Street Guyana.
Visual Arts exhibition on at Castellani House
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guyana 058
Enmore Martyrs Monument dedicated to workers who were slain during a 1948 labor dispute.
In Georgetown, Guyana
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MARIJUANA ARRESTS OVER THE WEEKEND
Pandama Creek
Pandama Creek. This was done on an Emancipation Day jaunt with Bonny and Charmaine. Aug 01, '16.
Newly constructed Umana Yana opens
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Biggest Statue In Guyana
Driving CaneField Leguana and came across the biggest statue In Guyana. People talk about unnecessary spendings, Yet totally overlooked this! Then there was a weird ceremony nearby with people apparently praising a cow calf!????♂️ This just shows that nobody pays heed to what the scriptures actually says, In so many places...Here’s just a few;
Bhagavat Gita 7:19-21: All those who do idol worship, All those who worship demigods are materialistic people.
Yajur Veda 3:32: ...Of that God you cannot make any images.
Yajur Veda 32:3: God is formless and bodiless
Yajur Veda 40:8: All those who worship the uncreated things, they are in darkness, and you'll enter more into darkness if you worship the created things.
But of course you’ll come up with the perfect justifications as to why It’s ok to go again the writings of your own scripture. And yes...I’m fully aware that the truth Is destined to cause offenses. I’m sure there’s going to me all sort of aggressions below, Expressing the true you????
Commemoration Ceremony for the 30th death anniversary of Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham, O.E., S.C
President David A. Granger remembers Guyana's first Executive President, Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham, O.E., S.C, on the 30th anniversary of his passing. A brief commemorative ceremony was held at the Mausoleum, Seven Ponds Place of Heroes in the Botanical Garden.
S2 E16 | Aerial Video of Georgetown at Jubilee Park 2
Aerial footage of Georgetown from Jubilee Park. Hadfield Street Lodge is located to the south, The Botanical Gardens is located to the north. The 1763 monument is located to the west.
Jim Jones - Jonestown Solidarity (Fall 1977) Side A
The two parts of this tape were likely recorded about the same time, in late 1977 or early 1978. The first part consists of the closing moments of a nighttime community meeting in Jonestown; the second consists of two radio programs recorded at Jonestown to be broadcast in Georgetown.
The tape opens with Jim Jones reminding his followers of how much strength and unity they have, and how their commitment to the community – and more especially to him – continues to make them strong. They have stood up to pressure before – he evokes the memory of the Six Day Siege in the fall of 1977 – and they have won on their demands. Still, he feels the need for them to remind the world, that if he dies, a bloodbath will follow. But he’s healthy tonight, he tells them, and they don’t have to worry about him dying anytime soon.
He is not afraid to die. He certainly isn’t worried about being shot by an enemy firing at him from the jungle – he could have been taken down any number of times, if that fit into their plans – but instead, he speaks of the harassing nature of the conspiracy, how they try to drain the energy from the community and himself, how they hope that they will eventually turn against him.
While he isn’t afraid of death, he does ask the residents about their own fears – an inquiry which seems to have started earlier that evening, if not at a previous meeting – and implores them to be honest about their feelings. There will be no discipline, no recriminations towards anyone who acknowledges the fear. “We want to help you,” he says several times.
He also asks who misses the United States and why. There is apparently a larger response to this question, as people express their desire to see their relatives. Even Jones’ reminder that some of their relatives are Temple enemies doesn’t seem to be enough, and he amends the query to “how many miss nothing more than loved ones? Anything else you miss?”
The second part consists of two radio programs recorded for broadcast in Georgetown. In the first, several seniors talk about the shortcomings of retirement homes and care facilities in the United States, and what they have in Jonestown. Jones joins the conversation in progress with a reminder that their efforts to take care of seniors in Jonestown have the blessing of the Guyanese government – the broadcasts are, after all, intended for a Guyanese audience – and Temple spokesperson Michael Prokes, who hosts the radio program, describes the activities that the seniors have, ranging from gardening and sewing, to volunteering in the school and medical clinic, to “just doing whatever they want to do.”
In the second radio program, Jones talks to Prokes about the conspiracy against them and expresses surprise that a church which does so much good, which has helped so many people, and which has the support of such a wide section of American society – including several names that he lists – could be subject to so much harassment. Prokes asks whether “this conspiracy was initiated against us because we tried to live as socialist in a capitalist society,” to which Jones replies that “[if] a group is practicing socialism 5000 miles away, if it is a model and succeeding, … that is a threat to certain reactionary elements in the United States.” As before, this aspect of the commentary is directed to the Guyanese audience.
Jones completes his description of the Jonestown community with a recitation of how it is contributing to the welfare of the population of the country’s Northwest District, by donating “thousands of pounds of rice weekly for some time now … and thousands of pounds of fish on other occasions.” It has also adopted several Guyanese children, and offers medical services to its neighbors.
The broadcast ends with a performance of several songs by Jonestown’s school-age children.
I almost impaled Moe's wife... (Fishing 2/4)
Bear Mountain Fishing Trip
Businessman reviews security arrangements after yet another robbery at his store
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Flood Waters Hit Corentyne Villages . News for 12th July, 2019
The town of Rose Hall and the village of Belvedere located on the Corentyne are currently under water over two days now.