August events, and a bit of Cup Match history! 
  
Greetings Friends!
Hopefully everyone enjoyed the Cup Match Holiday on Thursday and Friday of last week! And whether you are for Somerset or St. Georges, we hope it was a good one with family and friends. Congratulations to Somerset Cricket Club on their victory, and to both teams job well done.

Cup Match is about more than camping, parties and cricket, its about celebrating freedom and togetherness. Therefore although the holiday is over I'd like to share a bit of history on Cup Match with you this month, as well as let you know about a few exciting things coming up in August.

Don't forget you can also keep connected and up to date with what's happening by visiting our Facebook page - Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda and our NEW & IMPROVED website www.thewestend.bm 

What is Cup Match?

 

Cup Match is more than a celebration, more than boating, camping, parties and cricket. The following is an excerpt from a site dedicated to all things Cup Match called bermudacupmatch.com, and I think they sum it up wonderfully!  

 

"The forerunner to Cup Match was introduced after the abolition of slavery in Bermuda. Men from Somerset and St. George's met in friendly rivalry and held celebrations of Emancipation by holding annual picnics to mark the anniversary of the abolition of slavery. One of the highlights from the picnics was a friendly cricket match played between lodges from the east and west ends of the island. In 1901, during a cricket match between two major Friendly Societies, an agreement was made to play for an annual trophy. Members of the Friendly Societies and Lodges raised funds and in 1902 a silver cup that was played for annually was introduced. Cup Match was officially born.

 

In 1947 two official national public holidays were introduced and held annually on the Thursday and Friday closest to 1 August. The first holiday, Cup Match, was renamed Emancipation Day in 1999 and continued the tradition of remembering the end of slavery. The second holiday, Somers Day, commemorated the arrival of Admiral Sir George Somers who colonized Bermuda in 1609. The two-day holiday became the annual two days of cricket for the cup - the Bermuda Cup Match."

 

To read  the whole article or learn more about Cup Match click the link below to visit bermudacupmatch.com

 

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Heritage Matters

 

Dr.Edward Harris, Executive Director at the National Museum of Bermuda has written a series of books which are comprised of essays on the history of Bermuda entitled 'Heritage Matters'.

 

These books are wonderful and full of interesting historical facts, stories and photos.  Therefore, starting this month I will be sharing some of these essays with you; and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I did.

 

A huge thank you to Dr. Harris for allowing us to share his work, for providing the content, and for writing these incredible books which are both insightful and entertaining.

 

In honor of Cup Match, this month I'd like to share a chapter from 'Heritage Matters Volume 4' titled 'Bowling for the Champ'.   

 


 

HERITAGE MATTERS

 

Bowling for the Champ By Dr. Edward Harris, mbe

 

There is no talk, none so witty and brilliant, that is so good as cricket talk, when memory sharpens memory and the dead live again-the regretted, the unforgotten-and the old happy days of burned-out Junes revive. We shall not see them again.-Andrew Lane, for the 125th Anniversary of the Aberdeenshire Cricket Club in 1982.

 

I was fascinated by the professional players, and although I was too young to remember much more than his name, Alma Hunt was the first Bermudan to be employed by a Scottish Club when Aberdeenshire invited him to come to Scotland as long ago as 1934. Hunt enjoyed eight marvellous seasons at Mannofield and scored 8,190 runs.-Mel Edwards, "Mannofield: where the sun always shines", May 2003.

 

Remembrance is a matter of national as well as personal interest and commemorations are often designated for historical events and for persons of note. In daily life we celebrate notable occasions, such as birthdays and wedding anniversaries, to name but two. Part of the reason for official designations of remembrance comes from the fact that people are forgetful of the past, as the stresses and strains of daily life take centre stage, relegating history and its personages to the waiting wings. That tendency is exemplified in the motto, "Lest we forget", of the commemorations for the dead and veterans of the two great and later wars.

 

Shortly on November 11, "Armistice Day", will again be upon us and a national ceremony will take place in Hamilton, centred on the Cenotaph, one of the few, by the way, on which the names of the dead were never engraved. Armistice Day marked the end of hostilities in Europe in the First World War, of which perhaps all veterans have now passed from this earth. The numbers on parade in Hamilton from the Second World War will be less than last year, as time marches with its inevitable lockstep towards oblivion for all service personnel. Most successive generations have not been subjected to the rigours and perils of later wars, such as Korea and Vietnam, so to some extent many are bystanders on the Remembrance Day for our military heroes who went overseas, some to leave their bones in foreign fields.

 

This past Monday, the Bermuda Government inaugurated a new remembrance celebration, "National Heroes Day", with the first of the group being the late Dame Lois Brown Evans, DBE. Other deserving Bermudians, heroes and heroines, will presumably be added to such a list, although in the group of 126 dead from two world wars and Korea, we have a goodly number to add right away. Another candidate, perhaps without parallel in the Bermuda world of cricket and sport, is the subject of this article.

 

Remembrance is also partly synonymous with recording, for without a written history, there is no memory over time, as oral history is only good for a couple of generations, given the normal life span of our mental hard disks. Therefore in remembrance, historians are of vital importance, because as they write, they record the memories of the past. Historians also carry out research to investigate past peoples and events, so that the remembrance of the past can be reconstructed. Archaeologists, with their own particular and unique science, also recover the past by excavating sites where people lived. They translate the layers and features buried in the earth to a written archive, from which history is reconstructed, especially for past societies that left no information in language of their times and travails on earth.

 

Historians and archaeologists of all types work to champion the past, to bring to life the days of our ancestors, some of whom were heroes and heroines. Those recorders are essential to the business of remembrance and they are driven to produce the evidence of the past, lest we forget. One such person, who once worked for "The Bermuda Recorder", is Ira Philip, who has written numerous articles and authored a number of books, for over half a century. As many historians do, in his latest book, Mr. Philip is "bowling for the champ", as he sets out the life and achievements of possibly Bermuda's finest cricket player, the late Alma "Champ" Hunt, MBE, OBE, JP, a man of Somerset and also of the far distant Mannofield in Scotland.

 

Such was the influence of the Champ on the home of the Aberdeenshire Cricket Club, and it on him, that when Hunt returned to Bermuda in 1947, he named his house "Mannofield". Today it is the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Coelho, who when asked where the house sign was replied: "After we bought the house from the Champ, he came back for the "Mannofield" sign, which was on the front door!"

 

Alma Victor Hunt was born in Somerset on 1 October 1910 and lived to the fine old age of 89, although he "scored his first century, playing against grown men" at the age of 12. With his nine siblings, the family of Solomon and Maria Hunt could almost field its own cricket team and several of his brothers preceded Champ in the game. At the age of 16, he entered his first Cup Match and was destined to become the best all rounder that the game had ever seen. A few years later, he went to play in the West Indies, but was denied a place on that team to go for a Test Match in Britain, probably due to the prejudice of some of the West Indies officials against Bermuda. Then in an unprecedented move, Hunt was hired by the Aberdeenshire Cricket Club to play for it in Scotland, which he did for six years before World War Two and for two years thereafter, retiring home to Bermuda at the age of 37 in 1947, where he and his bride, Elmira, raised a family of two, Beverly and Alma Jr.

 

In an Editorial in The Royal Gazette entitled "The Champ" on 25 March 1976, it was recorded that: "Champ Hunt is to Bermuda what Dr. W.G. Grace was to England; what Don Bradman was to Australia; what K.S. Duleepsinghi was to India; what the three W's of Walcott, Weekes and Worrell were to the West Indies. He will go down in cricketing history as a legendary figure, who, not only through playing ability, but through dignified conduct, administrative prowess, determination and perseverance achieved that which, when he first started out on the long haul, would have seemed impossible."


 

 The book, Champ! The One and Only Alma Hunt by Ira Philip, MBE, JP, is now available at bookstores.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photos show:

1. Alma Victor Hunt as a teenaged player at Cup Match.

2. Hunt in action at the Aberdeenshire Cricket Club in 1934.

3. Champ Hunt dressed against the Scottish climate.

4. The Champ with the 1941 Cup Match scoreboard; the other six players accounted for the other 25 runs.

5. A favourite with young and old, Champ makes an autograph.

6. "Mannofield", Hunt's Pembroke home and inset, the field today.

 


 

Dr. Edward Harris, mbe, jp, fsa, Bermudian, as mentioned is the Executive Director of the Bermuda Maritime Museum. This article represents his opinions and not necessarily those of persons associated with the Museum. Comments can be sent to drharris@logic.bm or by telephone to 332-5480.

  

Complimentary Weekly Events Are Still On, Catch them while you can!

 

Click the link below to see the events calendar on our NEW and improved website! 

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Below are some photos from the Paint Your Own Tile Event For The Dockyard Mural - which we hope to start creating this winter, thanks to everyone who has participated in this event and left their mark here in Dockyard.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Snorkel Park

As previously mentioned and noted on the Events Calendar, Snorkel Park has two complimentary events going on weekly this summer, here is their flier for those two events as well as their up coming Back To School Party and Club Aqua happenings.  

 

                 

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Other upcoming Events 
Many people may recall the first 'Family Festival' that took place here in the Royal Naval Dockyard back in spring of this year. It was created by the newly formed Committee Of Five, in an effort to fill the void of the annual Agricultural Exhibition being cancelled.  This event had vendors, music/entertainment and games on the lawn next to the Clocktower Mall and a whole activities center in the Victualling Yard (shown in the picture below). There was everything from a Zip Line to laser tag and bouncy castles for the kids. The event was such a success that we plan on having many more Family Festivals in the Royal Naval Dockyard, with the next one set to take place on August 15th and 16th.  The Committee Of Five aim to enhance the event, and are preparing to add more teen friendly games and activities to the second Festival.

 

 

In addition, we are attempting to have a weekly activities center put on by the Committee Of Five in the Victualling Yard during the summer months (weather depended of course). The first attempt was rained out a few weeks ago, but surprisingly many families still came out and played in the rain, making it a water day until everything had to be packed up. We will let everyone know when the next Sunday 'Play land' will take place.


 

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On August 28th there will be an Inmate Craft Market put on by the department of Corrections from 9am to 3pm. This is not a new initiative and has been quite successful in the past, providing an array of benefits to both the inmates and the community in general. 

 

For more information on this event and photos from a previous Inmate Craft Market, click the link below to view a lovely write up from 2011 published by the Royal Gazette.


 

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Sincerest thanks once again for staying connected with us and taking a look at some of our history, culture and events happening this month here in the Royal Naval Dockyard.

I look forward to sharing more with you next month, until then let's make history happen and create memories that will last a lifetime! 
 
 
Rebekah Cabrall
WEDCo