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Belmont, Belmont
Savanna-la-Mar, Westmoreland Parish, Jamaica
18.2264° N · -78.1732° W
Get DirectionsPeter Tosh — born Winston Hubert McIntosh in Belmont, Westmoreland on October 19, 1944 — grew up in this quiet rural parish before making his way to Kingston and co-founding the Wailers alongside Bob Marley and Bunny Wailer in the early 1960s. His role in shaping early Jamaican music was immense: a guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter of fierce individuality, Tosh's uncompromising political convictions and scorching delivery distinguished him as one of reggae's most powerful voices. After leaving the Wailers he built a formidable solo career, with records such as Legalise It and Equal Rights standing among the genre's finest.
Tosh was murdered in Kingston in September 1987, and his remains were returned to his birthplace in Belmont, where a mausoleum and memorial garden were established to honour him. The site sits in the rural heartland of Westmoreland Parish, and for many visitors it offers a moving counterpoint to the urban music heritage sites of Kingston — a reminder of the rural Jamaican roots from which so many of the island's defining artists emerged.
The memorial garden is open to visitors and is maintained by the local community and the Tosh family. Westmoreland is roughly a two-hour drive west of Kingston, so most visitors combine the trip with other sights in the parish. The site is quiet, reflective, and away from the tourist infrastructure of the north coast — an authentic pilgrimage point for fans of Tosh and Jamaican music.
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