British Guiana was the haven for migrant Barbadians 

Dear Editor,

I recall that during the 1980s I could visit Barbados regularly. Because of easily available air transport, I could visit on weekends the Jamaican woman who became my second wife. She was quite ‘light-skinned’ – to the extent that she got ready acceptance at restaurants, while I was unacceptably, too black, to be welcomed (by waiters who looked exactly like me). Interestingly, it was a time when the membership card of our Georgetown Club was accepted at counterpart facilities in Port of Spain, Trinidad, for example. But importantly current generations of Barbadians should learn of how close friends were Prime Ministers Errol Barrow and Forbes Burnham. They had special ‘fond names’ for each other – ‘Dipper’ and ‘Odo’ respectively. But up to when Clyde Walcott of West Indies Cricket fame finished his stint as Sports Adviser with Bookers Sugar Estates, non-white Barbadians had difficulty in accessing management level jobs in their country.

When eventually Clyde got the exceptional position of Personnel Director at the Barbados Shipping & Trading Company, he called me from across the ocean for professional support – in the offer of a related position. I declined however, albeit to the disappointment of a promised ‘other half’. For those who know too little, British Guiana was the haven for migrant Barbadians, many of whom grew to memorable prominence – one example being of the outstanding Pilgrims – consisting of: Mathematics Master of Queens College; Head of the Methodist Church; Guyana’s Diplomatic Representative to the United Kingdom; historic composer of ‘The Legend of Kaieteur’. Barbados lawyer C. R. Brown actually represented British Guiana in Regional Cricket competitions. ‘Of course there were plenty more – like the ‘Braithwaites’. Very humbly I memorialise Joseph Lynch, who worked in our ‘Interior’ – at Apoteri, where the Booker owned B.G. Balata Company bled balata.

It was during my Booker Cadetship in 1958 that I was flown up in a amphibian aircraft by pioneer aviator, Art Williams, which landed in the river from which I climbed to a point where I quite surprisingly discovered six tombs, one of which turned out to be that of my grandfather – Barbadian Joseph Lynch. His widow Esther, my grandmother, was also Barbadian, who would scold me at times threatening to send me back to an unintelligible ‘Black Rock’. Discovery of the tomb inspired a first journalistic effort which my employers facilitated by including my report in the then forthrightly publication titled ‘BOOKER NEWS, edited by a woman – the highly respected Winifred Gaskin. She not long after was appointed to be Minister of Education in the government of the day. P.S. How many (including Prime Minister Mia Motley) will recall that Barbados and Guyana shared joint diplomatic representation to the United Kingdom – in the person of our Sir Lionel Luckhoo.

Sincerely,

(Name and Address Withheld)