Boston Herald

AHOY! NEW BOOTY FOUND

Text found on Blackbeard’s ship

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Dead men tell no tales, but there’s new evidence that somebody aboard the pirate Blackbeard’s flagship harbored books among the booty.

In an unusual find, researcher­s have found shreds of paper bearing legible printing that somehow survived three centuries underwater on the sunken vessel. And after more than a year of research that ranged as far as Scotland, they managed to identify them as fragments of a book about nautical voyages published in the early 1700s.

Conservato­rs for Blackbeard’s ship, the Queen Anne’s Revenge, found the 16 fragments of paper wedged inside the chamber for a breech-loading cannon, the largest piece being the size of a quarter. The Queen Anne’s Revenge had been a French slave ship when Blackbeard captured it in 1717 and renamed it. The vessel ran aground in Beaufort, in what was then the colony of North Carolina, in June 1718. Volunteers with the Royal Navy killed Blackbeard in Ocracoke Inlet that same year.

Thousands of artifacts have been recovered since Floridabas­ed research firm Intersal Inc. located the shipwreck off the North Carolina coast in 1996 but few, if any, are as surprising as pieces of paper. To find paper in a 300-year-old shipwreck in warm waters is “almost unheard of,” said Erik Farrell, a conservato­r at the QAR Conservati­on Lab in Greenville.

Eventually, the conservato­rs determined that the words “south” and “fathom” were in the text, suggesting a maritime or navigation­al book. But one word, Hilo, stood out because it was both capitalize­d and in italics, said Kimberly Kenyon, also a conservato­r at the lab.

They turned to Johanna Green, a specialist in the history of printed text at the University of Glasgow, who pointed them to the Spanish settlement of Ilo — or Hilo — on the coast of Peru. The fragments eventually were determined to be from a 1712 first edition of a book by Capt. Edward Cooke titled “A Voyage to the South Seas, and Round the World, Peform’d in the years 1708, 1709, 1710 and 1711.”

It’s impossible to say who aboard Blackbeard’s ship would have been reading the voyage narrative — a form popular in England in the 17th and 18th century — or whether it belonged to a pirate or some terrified captive. But some pirates were known to be literate, Kenyon said. “They were literate men,” he said. “People always assume pirates are ruffians from bad background­s, and that wasn’t always the case.”

 ?? ApphoToS ?? SHIVER ME TIMBERS: A piece of paper, right, has been recovered by researcher­s from a cannon on the ship of Blackbeard, above, in North Carolina.
ApphoToS SHIVER ME TIMBERS: A piece of paper, right, has been recovered by researcher­s from a cannon on the ship of Blackbeard, above, in North Carolina.
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