Classroom lesson · Nelson's Dockyard · 🇦🇬 Antigua and Barbuda

Nelson's Dockyard

A perfectly preserved 18th-century sailing harbour - now a UNESCO World Heritage Site

Colourful restored Georgian buildings lining the harbour at Nelson's Dockyard

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Nelson's Dockyard is an old harbour on the south coast of Antigua that was built hundreds of years ago for tall sailing ships. Today it is one of the best-preserved working dockyards from that era anywhere in the world, and it has been given the special title of UNESCO World Heritage Site. Sailors still tie up their yachts there today!

Tell me more

English Harbour, where the dockyard sits, is almost completely enclosed by hills on every side. This makes it one of the safest natural harbours in the Caribbean - ships could shelter there from strong winds without being tossed about. Sailors knew exactly where to find calm water.

The old stone buildings are still standing and have been carefully restored. You can see the sail loft where huge canvas sails were repaired, the copper and lumber store, and the old officers' quarters. Many of these buildings are now museums, restaurants, and small hotels, so you can walk right inside them and imagine what life was like on a tall ship.

The dockyard is named after a famous naval officer, Admiral Horatio Nelson, who was stationed there as a young man. It sits inside a national park full of trails, ruins, and lookout points on the surrounding hills - including the famous Shirley Heights, where you can see the whole harbour spread out below.

Every April, some of the most beautiful sailing yachts in the world gather here for Antigua Sailing Week. The race ends right in front of the dockyard, so watching from the historic quayside feels like stepping back and forward in time at once.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What does it mean for a place to be a UNESCO World Heritage Site? Why might the world decide that some places are too important to lose?
  2. 02How do old buildings tell us stories about how people lived in the past? What can you learn just by looking at a building?
  3. 03Nelson's Dockyard is a working harbour - old and new sailing boats use it. Can you think of other places where old and modern things exist side by side?
  4. 04If you could restore one old building in your own town, what would you want it to become?
Try this

Classroom activity

Look up a picture of Nelson's Dockyard. Then design your own 'heritage harbour' - draw a bird's-eye plan showing the quayside, buildings, and boats. Label what each building is used for today and what it might have been used for 250 years ago.