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Connecticut Pirates & Privateers:
Connecticut Pirates Privateers
Author: Wick Griswold
The waters, inlets and islands of Connecticut once swarmed with fabled corsairs like Captain Kidd and Blackbeard who may have buried their booty in Constitution State soil. In colonial times and through the nineteenth century, over one hundred privateers used the Connecticut River and waterways as a home port, influencing the geopolitics of the ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781626199217
ISBN-10: 1626199213
Publication Date: 8/24/2015
Pages: 128
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 1

3.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
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reviewed Connecticut Pirates & Privateers: on + 7 more book reviews
More privateers than pirates, these 20 vignettes, from a couple to a dozen pages each, all have a connection to Connecticut through the career of some person or vessel, or a specific locale or event. Popular legends about treasures are related without credulity. One of the longer pieces is a very nice summary of the complex history of Captain William Kidd. Another summarizes the log of a four-month voyage of the Stonington privateer Dolphin, 1762-63. Many of the shorter pieces are rather repetitious laundry lists of long series of brief encounters of different privateer cruises, but collectively they provide a complete overview of the privateer tradition everywhere during the Age of Sail. The author uses the jargon of that culture correctly but, except for a few photos, without explanations or definitions. You might want to consult a nautical glossary. The book is well written as a whole, despite several incorrect word choices, as âtrepidationsâ for âdepredationsâ (twice). You might want to consult a dictionary.The index will help the reader cross-reference the various articles, as the careers of both captains and ships often overlap in various ways.


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