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Columns : Sip Sip History - Bahamas Historical Society Last Updated: Feb 6, 2017 - 2:32:04 PM


"The Bahamas in American History" featured at next BHS talk on March 29th
Mar 26, 2012 - 6:15:56 PM

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Nassau, Bahamas - The Bahamas Historical Society with have Dr. Keith Tinker, author of "The Bahamas in American History" at their next talk on March 29th, 2012.

Keith Lamont Tinker is retired executive director of the National Museum of the Bahamas, former adjunct professor of Caribbean history at the College of the Bahamas, and author of Migration of Peoples from the Caribbean to the Bahamas (University Press of Florida, 2011).


The author draws on a wealth of tapped and untapped primary sources and presents a new perspective on the "Bahamian experience" that helped to define the self-proclaimed American credo of "Manifest Destiny."


Tinker's book explores the many complex historical connections between the UNited States of America and the Commonwealth of The Bahamas. Beginning with an overview of shared early Spanish colonization, the book is the first attempt to provide a comprehensive study of the impact of the sequential development of the United States on events in the emerging Bahamas, placing the heretofore marginalized history of the island nation firmly into the orbit of Atlantic historiographical literature.

Among other things, the books sheds light on the role played by the islands in a series of significant events in the U.S. history. These include the American Revolution, in which four of the initial official military actions of the fledgling U.S. Navy comprised repeated invasions of British-controlled Nassau, capital of the Bahamas; the American Civil War during which Nassau became on of the main bases for supply of vital goods and ammunition to the Confederacy; the intrigues of the Volstead Act, which legislated prohibition but also caused the temporary transformation of Bahama Islands into major transshipment centers for the smuggling of alcoholic beverages to a multitude of prohibition-defiant and "thirsty" Americans; and the significant role placed by Bahamian migrants in the creation of the city of Miami and other areas of south Florida.


The Bahamas Historical Society (BHS) is a non-profit organization dedicated to stimulating interest in Bahamian History and to the collection and preservation of material relating thereto. Its Headquarters, the former IODE Hall, was a gift from the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire (IODE). BHS is on Shirley Street and Elizabeth Avenue in Nassau. www.bahamashistoricalsociety. com






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