Boston in the Golden Age of Piracy
Make sure to check out Part 1 of Boston in the Golden Age of Piracy.
- A sympathetic profile of Black Sam Bellamy.
- In May 1999, National Geographic detailed how treasure hunters found the wreck of the Whidah and Black Sam’s lost gold.
- See artifacts and treasure from the Whidah at this Cape Cod museum.
- The story of John Julian, the former pirate who was sold as a slave.
- The record of John Fillmore’s astonishing arrival in Boston after defeating the pirate Captain John Phillips.
- John Fillmore’s own memoir is below.
- How the pirate Ned Low indirectly gave Ben Franklin his start in public life.
- More on after the dustup over Ned Low.
- A record of William Fly’s execution and gibbeting on Nixes Mate.
- Marcus Rediker on William Fly and the genealogy of pirate customs.
This Week in Boston History
- Delegates from the Micmac and St Johns tribes arrive in Watertown to negotiate the first treaty signed by the independent US, July 10, 1776.
- Babe Ruth makes his big league debut with the Red Sox, July 11, 1914.
- Patriots raid Long Island in Boston Harbor, burning hay and exchanging fire with British Regulars, July 12, 1775.
- Abigail Adams takes the entire family to be inoculated against smallpox, July 13, 1776. (More on smallpox inoculation in Episode 2.)
- The 11th Massachusetts Volunteers, known as the Minutemen of ’61, are discharged from the army after serving throughout the Civil War, July 14, 1865.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson addresses commencement at Harvard Divinity, July 15, 1838.
- The USS Constitution begins the legendary “Great Chase,” in which she will outrun a squadron of British warships, July 16, 1812.