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GALLERY XII · OBJECT HALL

People of the Golden Age

The men and women whose names outlived them. Walk the cases — press a lit plate to look closer.

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Object 1 · Gallery XII

Blackbeard

Edward Teach, known as Blackbeard (c.1680–1718), was a Bristol-born privateer-turned-pirate who commanded the Queen Anne's Revenge off the Carolina coast. His theatrical brutality, strategic blockade of Charleston, and dramatic final battle established him as the Golden Age's most infamous figure.

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Object 2 · Gallery XII

Henry Morgan

Henry Morgan (c.1635–1688) was a Welsh privateer and buccaneer who commanded the largest pirate fleet of the Caribbean, sacking Panama City in 1671. Later pardoned and knighted, he became Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica, embodying the era's fluid boundary between privateering and piracy.

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Object 3 · Gallery XII

Bartholomew Roberts

Bartholomew Roberts (1682–1722), born John Roberts in Wales, became the most successful pirate captain of the Golden Age, commanding over 470 prizes across the Atlantic and African coasts. His disciplined fleet, written articles, and strategic brilliance made him legendary before his execution at Cape Coast Castle.

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Object 4 · Gallery XII

Edward Low

Edward Low (c.1690–1724) was a brutal English pirate who operated in the Atlantic and Caribbean during the final decade of the Golden Age. Known for extreme violence and sadism, he commanded multiple vessels and terrorized merchant shipping before his capture and execution in Newport, Rhode Island.

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Object 5 · Gallery XII

Charles Vane

Charles Vane (c.1680–1721) was a ruthless English pirate captain who commanded the brigantine Ranger and later the sloop Pearl. Operating in the Caribbean and Atlantic, he became notorious for violence, torture, and defiance of colonial authority before his capture, trial, and execution in Jamaica.

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Object 6 · Gallery XII

Calico Jack

John Rackham, called 'Calico Jack' for his striped cotton clothing, captained the pirate sloop Royal Fortune from 1718 to 1720. He is remembered less for naval prowess than for commanding the only documented pirate crew that included two women—Anne Bonny and Mary Read—who fought alongside men.

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Object 7 · Gallery XII

Anne Bonny

Irish-born pirate of legendary ferocity, active 1718–1720 aboard the sloop Revenge. Court records confirm her participation in raids off Jamaica and the Bahamas. One of history's documented female pirates; fate after Port Royal trial remains uncertain.

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Object 8 · Gallery XII

Mary Read

Mary Read (c.1690–1721) was an English pirate and privateer who served aboard merchant vessels and pirate ships, most notably under Captain Jack Rackham. Disguised as a man for much of her seafaring career, she became one of the few documented women pirates of the Golden Age, executed in Jamaica for piracy.

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Object 9 · Gallery XII

Benjamin Hornigold

English pirate captain who operated in the Atlantic and Caribbean during the Golden Age. Known for mentoring Blackbeard and establishing pirate havens. Transitioned from piracy to privateering; executed in Honduras.

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Object 10 · Gallery XII

Stede Bonnet

Barbados-born gentleman pirate who commanded the Revenge. Unlike typical pirates, Bonnet possessed education and wealth, making him an anomaly. Captured and executed in Charleston, South Carolina, his brief career epitomized the Golden Age's social upheaval.

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Object 11 · Gallery XII

Howell Davis

Welsh pirate captain who rose from merchant sailor to command the pirate republic of Madagascar. His brief but audacious career (1718–1719) unified fractious pirate crews, established trade protocols, and demonstrated sophisticated political organization before his assassination by rival captains.

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Object 12 · Gallery XII

Laurens de Graaf

Dutch-born pirate and privateer who commanded Caribbean operations across four decades. De Graaf raided Spanish colonial settlements, commanded mixed-nationality crews, and maintained complex allegiances between European powers. His career exemplifies the fluid boundary between piracy and state-sanctioned privateering during the Golden Age.

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Object 13 · Gallery XII

Roche Braziliano

Roche Braziliano was a Dutch-born buccaneer (c.1630–1671) who terrorized Spanish Caribbean settlements through cattle raids and plunder. Allied with Henry Morgan, he exemplified the brutal frontier violence of Golden Age piracy before execution in Campeche.

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Object 14 · Gallery XII

Woodes Rogers

English privateer, pirate hunter, and colonial governor. Rogers legitimized privateering through royal commission, captured Spanish treasure galleons, then eradicated piracy as Bahamas governor. His dual role embodied the era's moral ambiguity between state-sanctioned violence and criminal suppression.

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Object 15 · Gallery XII

Alexander Spotswood

Alexander Spotswood (1676–1740) was Virginia's lieutenant governor who orchestrated the capture and execution of Blackbeard in 1718, transforming colonial governance through military action against piracy and establishing the precedent for state intervention in maritime law.

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Object 16 · Gallery XII

Captain Kidd

Captain William Kidd (c.1645–1701) transitioned from privateer to accused pirate, executed in London. His trial and death marked the Crown's intensifying campaign against maritime outlawry during the Golden Age of Piracy.

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Object 17 · Gallery XII

William Dampier

William Dampier (1651–1715) was an English privateer, pirate, and naturalist whose circumnavigations and detailed observations of Pacific coasts, peoples, and wildlife made him a transitional figure between maritime adventure and scientific exploration.

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PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH
Object 18 · Gallery XII

Privateer

Privateers were state-sanctioned raiders operating under letters of marque, blurring the line between lawful commerce-raiding and piracy. Commanding fast, maneuverable vessels across the Atlantic and Caribbean, they seized enemy merchant ships and colonial settlements, enriching crown treasuries while destabilizing imperial trade networks during wars of succession and colonial expansion.

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END WALL · GALLERY XII

Blackbeard — Edward Teach, the slow-matches alight. The face every merchant crew hoped never to see.

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