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The pirates of the New England coast, 1630-1730

Chapter 39: FOOTNOTES
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About This Book

This work surveys a century of piracy along the New England coastline, assembling court records, newspapers, eyewitness narratives, and contemporary histories to profile raids, captures, trials, and escapes. It combines narrative episodes of individual pirate ventures with analysis of pirate cruising grounds, shipboard life, and legal responses by colonial authorities. Chapters compile personal accounts, trial proceedings, and illustrative maps and engravings, while appendices reproduce commissions, dying speeches, and other primary documents to illuminate how maritime crime affected coastal communities and commerce.

FOOTNOTES

[154] Formerly the “Mary,” 80 tons, owned by Joseph Dolliber of Marblehead and captured at Port Roseway, Nova Scotia.

[155] An account of the Pirates, with divers of their Speeches, etc., Boston, 1723.

[156] New England Courant, July 22, 1723 (postscript).

[157] An account of the Pirates, with divers of their Speeches, etc., Boston, 1723.

[158] A great storm occurred on July 29, 1723, during which the pirate sloop, then at anchor at New York, was forced to cut down her mast and afterwards was driven out to sea and lost. New England Courant, Aug. 12, 1723 (postscript).

[159] Johnson, History of the Pirates, London, 1726.