ST. PHILIP, BARBADOS — The dining room of the Sunbury Plantation great house, its varnished mahogany table glittering with china, crystal, candles and silver, looks to be awaiting a banquet to celebrate a man of letters who has sailed in from the English mainland.
In the cellar of the stately 300-year-old home, hand-tooled leather saddles, wrought iron carriages, horseshoes and buggy whips speak to yesteryears of wealthy white planters being squired about the island.
What isn't preserved at Sunbury, the most popular tourist site in this former British colony, is the underbelly of its history. There is no trace of the gnarled black hands that cooked the feasts and polished the silver, drove the traps to cotillions and on social calls and worked the plantation.
Although descendants of slaves control the governments in the English-speaking Caribbean, prosper in business and define the image portrayed to the millions who visit the tropical splendor each year, the vestiges of three centuries of bondage are few, as if no one here wants to be reminded.
Doralene Lashley, 43, puts up her hands to halt the conversation when asked whether she or the plantation's two dozen other employees, most, like her, descended from enslaved Africans brought here during the colonial era, mind that so little of their forebears' labor and craftsmanship is acknowledged in heritage houses presented to visitors as replicas of the past.
"I personally try not to talk about it. 'This one did this and that one did that,' " Lashley, the catering manager, says distractedly as she checks on the serving trays for a luncheon. "Talking about the past just has a negative impact on the present."
In Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago and Turks and Caicos, all former British colonies, it has long been popular among small cliques of activists and scholars to swap suits and ties for the printed tunics and head wraps of West Africa. Some have adopted African names to reflect their ancestry or newly embraced Rastafarian lifestyles.
But it wasn't until last year's bicentennial of the 1807 abolition of the slave trade by Britain that a serious movement got underway to reflect on the era of slavery here and enshrine its artifacts and lessons in the historical touchstones of each island.
With support from the government, Barbados' small but evolving community of black history advocates staged commemorative and consciousness-raising events in 2007. A reenactment of the landing of the first European ship, the Orange Blossom, at Holetown drew modest crowds of activists and officialdom in March. The UNESCO Slavery Project erected a sign at the Newton Plantation's abandoned slave burial site, a one-acre patch behind sprawling sugar-cane fields and a fiberglass boat-building yard.
And at the Barbados Museum and Historical Society, 11 panels hanging in a back room tell the 400-year history of the brutal slave trade, from the cost in cowrie shells for a slave to the horrific Middle Passage that one in four didn't survive, to the proud militants such as Barbados' Bussa whose rebellions helped end slavery.
"There was almost a subconscious need to forget," Kevin Farmer, the curator for history and archaeology at Barbados Museum, says of the island's collective evasion of slavery milestones and memorials. "But forgetting is a means to amnesia and the ability for mistakes to be repeated all over again."
Some see the reluctance of Caribbean blacks to reflect on the slave era as a matter of pride, not shame.
Barbados has the highest standard of living in the Caribbean, and wealth is distributed more equitably here than in the other islands, notes Karl Watson, a history professor at the University of the West Indies. He wrote a commemorative 2007 journal on the island's development after the end of the slave trade, the British empire's first step toward emancipation that came to the islands 30 years later.
"It gives us a sense of accomplishment that very few of us are unable to keep our heads above water," Watson says. "It's a point of pride that has made us perhaps a little arrogant."
Local historians have begun to search for sites and artifacts that might be restored to recount the contributions of more than 100,000 Africans brought to Barbados in the 17th and 18th centuries and the generations born into slavery as the property of colonial planters.
A few "slave huts" are maintained at the site of a former plantation on the remote north coast. But the thatched-roof cottages actually were built by Irish servants after they had worked off their seven-year indentures, Farmer says.
He supports the Ministry of Tourism's nascent effort to find surviving chattel houses -- the small homes built by freed slaves that they dismantled and moved from plantation to plantation. He hopes the homes could anchor a future restored village that would be more representative of local history than the heritage mansions long ago shorn of their slave quarters.