A Tour of Cupid's Cay 2007

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Gloria Tassie grew up on the Cay, and remembers when the main floor of this building was a library and the upper floors was home to the Catholic priests.

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This old building housed the first bar, and now "Ronnies" is the only bar.

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These steps, opposite "Ronnies" lead to Flora's house, and further down the road, these steps are all that is left of Mr. John Johnson's house, where Suzanne Nelus grew up. The house was torn down about fifteen years ago.

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Marie gets ready at the Harbour Inn, where you can still get a great meal or have Edith and Sauna Knowles cater any special event. Further down the road, you can see the renovations done by Tod and Sydney to their Cupid's Cay home.

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The teacher's house, and where Shirley was raised. The blue doors of Reverend Pinders humble home,

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and Reverend Pinder's church. The plaque shows the location of the US government's Consulate building.

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This is the old Masonic Lodge, and as children, we were told scary stories about what went on inside. All the kids would run by so fast! This part of the Cay is known as the Westin. Looking down the road to the Easter end of the Cay.

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These are the steps to the house I grew up in, just behind the old junkanoo shack, now the home of Annette Cherie.

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The well kept Methodist Church and the recently renovated Recovery Center,

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This building housed the clinic while the one in Governor's Harbour was being repaired. One of the well kept homes at the east end of the Cay

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The original dock on the Cay, where the mail boats came and I used to love fishing here.

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The old jailhouse

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Marshall's house and Jack's house, where Lawrence was born

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Nigel Bethel and Shirlene Pinder

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Oh, this was Mammie's shop, where you could get the best, juicy hamburgers and of course, the most recently renovated building, Bristol Wines and Spirits, where I work. The blue rounded door was where the fire wagon was kept, the middle building was the stables for the horses that pulled the wagon and the third building was a small clothing shop, where many remember the purchase of their first pair of shoes.

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