Barbados

Dr. W.I. Hanson is a spiritual advisor, a healer, and many other things. It’s been over fifty years since I began my adventure. Barbados was one of the places I went, and I did a lot of healing and readings there. Many people were able to regain their health. I still go to Barbados every now and then, and I’ve done a couple more healings there.

Barbados is the Caribbean’s most easterly island, lying in the Lesser Antilles of the West Indies, in the Americas’ Caribbean region. It has a population of around 287,000 people and covers 432 km2 (167 sq mi) (2019 estimate). ([3] The capital and largest city in the country is Bridgetown.

Since the 13th century, the Kalinago people have lived on Barbados, as have many Amerindians before them. Spanish navigators took possession of the island in the late 15th century and claimed it for Castile’s crown.

It appeared on a Spanish map for the first time in 1511. The Portuguese Empire captured the island between 1532 and 1536, but abandoned it in 1620, leaving only wild boars as a source of food whenever visitors came to the island. On May 14, 1625, the English ship Olive Blossom arrived in Barbados, and its crew took control of the island in King James I’s name. After the first permanent inhabitants arrived from England in 1627, Barbados became an English colony, and then a British colony. With the help of enslaved Africans who worked on the island’s plantations at the time, the colony operated the business. The slave trade to Barbados lasted until 1807, when the Slave Trade Act outlawed it, and the island’s enslaved