[Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts by Frank Richard Stockton]@TWC D-Link book
Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts

CHAPTER XXII
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The Great Blackbeard comes upon the Stage So long as the people of the Carolinas were prosperous and able to capture and execute pirates who interfered with their trade the Atlantic sea-robbers kept away from their ports, but this prosperity did not last.

Indian wars broke out, and in the course of time the colonies became very much weakened and impoverished, and then it was that the harbor of Charles Town began to be again interesting to the pirates.
About this time one of the most famous of sea-robbers was harassing the Atlantic coast of North America, and from New England to the West Indies, he was known as the great pirate Blackbeard.

This man, whose real name was Thatch, was a most terrible fellow in appearance as well as action.

He wore a long, heavy, black beard, which it was his fancy to separate into tails, each one tied with a colored ribbon, and often tucked behind his ears.

Some of the writers of that day declared that the sight of this beard would create more terror in any port of the American seaboard than would the sudden appearance of a fiery comet.
Across his brawny breast he carried a sort of a sling in which hung not less than three pairs of pistols in leathern holsters, and these, in addition to his cutlass and a knife or two in his belt, made him a most formidable-looking fellow.
Some of the fanciful recreations of Blackbeard show him to have been a person of consistent purpose.


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