It gets busier in the town itself, where vehicles toot their horns as they manoeuvre past the shops and market that a young Kamala used to visit with her parents.
The town of 6,000 inhabitants is named after an Irish enslaver, Hamilton Brown, who is believed to have been an ancestor of Harris's paternal great-grandmother Christiana Brown, known in the family as Miss Chrishy.
Heading out of the market area, the road arrives at the Harris family estate in Orange Hill, where Harris's 86-year-old father, the distinguished economist Donald Harris, was born in 1938. The estate now has a quarry and some family homes. But it was once a place of adventure and delight for Harris, recalled her first cousin, Sherman Harris, as he pointed to the areas where they used to play together.
Only a few days younger than the vice-president, he remembers the Christmas holidays Harris and her younger sister, Maya, spent with their family in the Caribbean. "Maya was a little quiet, but Kamala was like a tomboy, running, jumping and leaping around the mountain areas. Miss Chrishy had to call her and tell her to 'get inside now, it's dinner time - come and stop the jumping over those places'," he said. "And she'd just do it for the better because her father encouraged her."
Even as a child, her cousin said, Harris asked questions that demonstrated "a deep level of intelligence and a mindset far above what we were accustomed to as little kids". When she could not get answers from her peers, she would turn to her dad, he said.
This story is from the October 28, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the October 28, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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