Our Military Heritage
Cannons like guns, came with the arrival of Europeans to the West Indies who brought these instruments to terrify the people into subjugation and a new way of life. For the Europeans, cannons were the tools of survival: for the people of the colonies they were symbols of oppression.
mounted in the forecourt of many of the nation's public and civic buildings these cannons are representative of an era inextricably linked to various phases of European occupation and colonization.
To date there are approximately thirty known cannons scattered throughout the country, with origins from England to Sebastopal.
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It is believed that this cannon was issued to the colony of British Guiana in 1916 to be used for coastal defense during the First World War. |
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This cannon which overlooks the Essequibo River was most likely cast in the late 17th or the early 18th century. |
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Used in the Napoleonic Wars this cannon was most likely cast in the late 18th or the early 19th century. |





