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Bob Marley Museum/Former Home — Kingston, Jamaica

Bob Marley Museum/Former Home

56 Hope Rd, New Kingston
Kingston, Jamaica

18.0197° N · -76.7795° W

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What happened here?

56 Hope Road in Kingston is the house where Bob Marley lived and worked during the most creatively explosive years of his life. He acquired the property in 1974 from Island Records founder Chris Blackwell, and it became the headquarters of his Tuff Gong record label as well as his home. It was here that songs like 'No Woman No Cry' and 'Three Little Birds' were written, where the Wailers rehearsed, and where the community of West Kingston that had shaped Marley gathered around him even as his fame became global.

In December 1976, the house was the site of a near-fatal assassination attempt two days before the Smile Jamaica Concert. Gunmen entered the property and shot Marley, his wife Rita, and his manager Don Taylor. Marley survived and performed at the concert two days later, pulling back his shirt to show the crowd his wounds. The bullet holes remain visible in the walls of the house today.

Marley died of cancer in May 1981 at age 36. His wife Rita converted the property into the Bob Marley Museum in 1986, and it was declared a Protected National Heritage Site in 2001. Guided tours take visitors through the house, the recording studio, the garden, and the room where Marley slept — all preserved largely as he left them. It is the most visited tourist attraction in Jamaica.

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