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Sierra Leone National Museum

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Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
Sierra Leone National Museum
The Cotton Tree is a Ceiba pentandra, also known commonly as a kapok tree, a historic symbol of Freetown, the capital city of Sierra Leone. According to legend, the Cotton Tree gained importance in 1792 when a group of former African American slaves, who had gained their freedom by fighting for the British during the American War of Independence, settled the site of modern Freetown. These Black Loyalist settlers, called Nova Scotians because they came from Nova Scotia after leaving the United States and before they decided to go back to Africa or, Navatians in Sierra Leone, founded Freetown on March 11th 1792.
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