Exhibits works of art about Bermuda, featuring artists such as Georgia O'Keefe, Jack Bush and Winslow Homer.
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Exhibits works of art about Bermuda, featuring artists such as Georgia O'Keefe, Jack Bush and Winslow Homer.
Inside the world of secret underground tunnels, shipwrecked explorers and hidden treasure.
For kids and their parents: multimedia exhibits about underwater exploration such as The Dive, a seven minute ride that simulates deep sea diving.
Seals, turtles, fish, monkeys, birds, and the first living coral reef exhibit in the world: this complex offers a fairly complete survey of the natural wonders found in the Caribbean.
The mother Anglican church in Bermuda, known not only for its religious, historical, and social importance, but also for its beautiful architecture.
Home to Bermuda's House of Assembly and the Supreme Court, this building is most interesting for its neo-classical architecture and watchtower commemorating Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee.
Postcard-perfect church with a tiny graveyard and beautiful views of the southern coast.
Life in colonial Bermuda: museum collection includes a letter from George Washington and an 18th century kitchen, and is housed in a building built in 1700.
Small ship built in 1610 to carry some shipwrecked explorers to Virginia; now a tourist attraction featuring a tape recorded guide and a witch-torturing device from the 17th century.
Tourists and art buffs can choose from a large array of prints and paintings by local artists.
Located in the center of St. George parish, this square contains stocks, a pillory and a whipping post, replicas of those used to punish criminals over 400 years ago.
More than 100 planes and ships have mysteriously vanished while travelling through this notorious spot - will you be next?
Some guys get all the luck: the Premier of Bermuda officially resides in this beautiful building.
Learn to blow glass like a pro, or else just wander around this gallery and marvel at some of the most beautiful glassware on the island.
This island, named 'nonsuch' for its unparalleled beauty and remote location, is now a nature reserve, home to rare tropical plants and animals.
This is the place where decisions are made: this government building also houses a fine collection of Bermuda cedar furniture.
Although most of the body of this wooden schooner has rotted away, there is still much of the ship's cargo left to explore, making it one of the most popular dive sites on the island.
Once a Spanish luxury liner, now a playground for fish and adventurous scuba divers.