News Flash Home
The original item was published from 4/26/2021 4:53:00 PM to 4/30/2021 10:16:15 AM.

News Flash

Hampton History Museum

Posted on: April 26, 2021

[ARCHIVED] The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet - Monday May 3, 7 pm

SQUARE STEDE BONNET

Virtual Port Hampton Lecture
The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet
Facebook Live - Monday, May 3, 7 pm

Chesapeake-native Jeremy Moss brings to life the golden age of piracy through the vivid life of one of the least likely, yet most interesting pirates, Major Stede Bonnet. Using his book, The Life and Tryals of the Gentleman Pirate, Major Stede Bonnet as a backdrop, Moss re-creates the life and times of some of the most famous pirates of the Golden Age of Piracy, including the infamous Blackbeard. 

Awash with myth-busting history, Moss tells the story of the real pirates, sharing accounts of their daily life, social issues, natural disasters, political intrigues, bloody battles, and of course, buried treasure, while weaving in interesting connections to the history of Hampton.

An heir to an established land-owning aristocratic family in Barbados, Major Stede Bonnet enjoyed luxuries equal to those of the finest houses in London. “A Gentleman of good Reputation” and a “Master of a plentiful Fortune,” he was given “the Advantage of a liberal Education,” but the call of the sea-and perhaps more significantly, the push of his obligations as a father and husband-cast Major Bonnet onto an unlikely and deliberate course toward piracy. Easily likable, by friend and foe, many would be drawn to Bonnet. In his two short years of piracy, Stede Bonnet stood alongside some of the New World’s most notorious pirates, including Charles Vane, Charles Condent (also known as “Billy One-Hand”), Robert Deal, “Calico” John Rackham, Israel Hands, Benjamin Hornigold, William Kidd, Mary Read, Anne Bonny, and the pirate to whom Bonnet would forever be connected, Edward Thatch (infamously known around the world as “Blackbeard”).

Jeremy R. Moss is a lawyer and lobbyist living in Alexandria, Virginia. An emerging author and freelance historian, Moss's research is focused on piracy and early colonial maritime history. When not working or writing, he is a family man and can be found telling stories of adventure and buried treasure to his three young sons.

View our videos online!
After they air live, event videos can later be found at on the www.hamptonhistorymuseum.org homepage, and under the Videos tab on our Facebook page, as well as on the museum's YouTube playlist. Check back often for new content!

Like the Hampton History Museum on Facebook!
Facebook Twitter Email