St. Claire, Antigua and Barbuda

The doctor's daughter, Rita Raeburn, said that a copse of enormous old tamarind trees served as a marker for a slave burial place.

The British Parliament gave the St. Clare estate a legacy award of £10,041 for freeing 62 slaves after slavery was abolished in 1833.

A plaque that reads, "St. Clare originally known as The Body Plantation of Colonel Roland Williams and his heirs from 1680-1842," is located above one of the outbuildings.

huge bells similar to these were used to call the laborers when the area was being surveyed by Edward St. Clare in 1772.

It displays the entire layout, including the position of the sugar mill and other structures as well as the number of fields, acres, and roads.