For A Cool $17K You Can Cruise Around The World
If you are retired or are planning to have about four months of the year free, there’s an exhilarating trip available to you. Another small requirement is that you have to be willing to spend a cool $17,000. Travel and Leisure has detailed a new cruise that goes around the world. It is a 116-day trip.
In case that is too steep for you, have no fear, there is also a 108-day option.
“Cunard Line, a historic British cruise line dating back to 1840, has just announced more than 300 new voyages for the 2025–2026 season — and that includes two world cruises with overnights in cities like Singapore and Sydney,” Travel and Leisure said.
If you are not familiar, Cunard is a luxury line that offers world voyages. “From 2024 we sail as a fleet of four Queens: Queen Mary 2, Queen Victoria, Queen Elizabeth, and the brand new Queen Anne,” Cunard explains.
Cruise All The Way Around The World
The 116-night trip is aboard the Queen Anne. It’s a new 3,000-passenger ship that is scheduled to launch this May. Then, at the start of 2026, the Queen Anne will embark on their world cruise to start the year 2026.
This leaves from Hamburg, Germany on January 6, 2026. It will hit ports in major cities around the world. You can expect stops the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Australia, South Africa, and the Canary Islands. It returns to Hamburg on May 2, 2026.
The starting cost here is about $16,000 per person.
If eight days less is more your speed, the 108-day around-the-world cruise option will be aboard the Queen Mary 2 ship. This leaves from Southampton on January 11, 2026.
The route appears to be different as well. Major cities you will travel to include a stop in New York and San Francisco. Here, you will hit the Suez Canal, New Zealand, and French Polynesia. It returns to South Hampton on April 30, 2026.
Surprisingly, this trip starts at $17,000 per person.
Regardless of which option you would choose Cunard Cruises says you will experience, “Well-appointed accommodations, fine dining, fabulous entertainment and outstanding service, it’s all included.”
6 Well-Known Landmarks Built And Designed By African Americans
Throughout the country, many buildings and iconic landmarks were built using the labor of enslaved people. The physical legacy of slavery can still be seen in the U.S. Capitol and the White House. The residences of former presidents, including George Washington’s Mount Vernon and James Madison’s Montpelier, and universities were built by slave labor. South Carolina’s Fort Sumter, where the Civil War began in 1861, and the Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine, Florida, are other landmarks that were constructed with slave labor.
“I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves.”
It’s been over 400 years since the first 20 enslaved people were brought to America. This was highlighted by former First Lady Michelle Obama in 2016. She said, “I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves.” She was talking about the White House. The first African American first lady delivered this speech at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.
Two of Washington, DC’s most well-known landmarks, the White House and the United States Capitol, were built in large part by enslaved African Americans. The National Archives holdings include wage rolls, promissory notes, and vouchers that document the work done by enslaved people on these two historic structures.
United States landmarks built by enslaved Black people.
According to the National Archives, enslaved people helped build the White House. The records have over 120 names of people listed as “Negro hire” who worked with white workers from the United States and Europe. Unfortunately, the record also states that the slave owners rather than the slaves were paid for their work. Building the White House took eight years to finish, with work beginning in 1792.
Business Insider reported that after its completion, presidents continued to use enslaved people to maintain the household. Additionally, seven presidents even brought their own enslaved people, including Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Andrew Jackson, and Zachary Taylor.
As we continue to celebrate Black history, take a look at some of the buildings designed and built by Black people.
Jeff Gorra is a Boston-based writer who has been with Beasley Media Group since the beginning of 2023. He writes about restaurants and food, as well as sports and rock music. His experience also includes show hosting and in-depth creative writing in rock and reggae dub music. Jeff’s an avid surfer, New York Giants, and Pearl Jam fan, however, if you make unforgettable pizza, he is sure to find you.