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Canoot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Canoot (fl. 1698, real name unknown) was a French pirate active off the coast of New England.

History

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In early 1698 John Redwood of Philadelphia was sailing out of Maryland’s Sinepuxent Bay toward Cape May when he was attacked by Canoot and his pirates.[1] They exchanged ships with Redwood, leaving him their slower vessel and taking his sloop. That September Canoot sailed to the waters off Sussex County, Delaware.[2] Residents saw the sloop but were not alarmed. The following day he stormed the town of Lewes with fifty men,[3] plundering everything of value, including the residents’ clothes, leaving them "scarce anything in the place to cover or wear."[2] Canoot’s pirates also stole all the town’s livestock and forced the inhabitants to help load their sloop. He then anchored offshore until he left to chase a passing ship. This was not his first attack - “Many other crimes of similar nature were traced to Canoot and his pirate ship” - so local officials levied a tax to raise funds for coastal defense, though Canoot escaped.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Productions, Moonshell. "Legends of Eastern Shore Pirates - Delmarva Almanac". delmarva-almanac.com. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Scharf, John Thomas (1888). History of Delaware : 1609–1888: General history. Philadelphia: L. J. Richards. p. 100. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  3. ^ Mervine, William M. (1908). "Pirates and Privateers in the Delaware Bay and River". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 32 (4): 459–470. JSTOR 20085447.