Saturday, October 7, 2023

EVEN PIRATES CARED!

 7 October 2023: Here we are in October! Leaves are turning from the brilliant greens of summer into first, a wonderful sparkling yellow, red, and orange, then, perhaps in sadness, a dull brown before they fall to the earth. We know they'll be back in their full glory in a few months. But first, November, December, and the cold damps of winter. On that cheery note, let's have a look at the medical practices aboard Edward Teach's (better known as Blackbeard) pirate ship, Queen Anne's Revenge, still being excavated and explored off Beaufort Inlet (NC). Clearly, a pirate needed a healthy crew to pursue his trade and hence, a doctor and well stocked medical suite was essential, as the archeologists exploring the wreck have discovered. From several sources, including CNET and North Carolina History Center.

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Archaeologists excavating the Queen Anne's Revenge have found a variety of medical implements indicating health hazards on the high seas.

The life of a pirate in the 17th century was not really kind to one's health -- and hazards numbered greater than scurvy and musket-balls. Even the infamously cruel pirate Edward Teach -- better known as Blackbeard -- needed to make health provisions for his crew.

His frigate, the Queen Anne's Revenge, was -- like pretty much anything owned by a pirate -- stolen. Operating as a French slaver under the name La Concorde de Nantes, she was seized by pirate Captain Benjamin Hornigold on November 28, 1717. Captain Hornigold gave the ship to one of his men to captain -- Blackbeard.

Blackbeard didn't have the ship for long. He ran her aground in May of 1718 at Beaufort Inlet, North Carolina, and left her there until her rediscovery in 1996. (Blackbeard himself was killed nearly a year to the day after the capture of the ship -- November 22, 1718.)

Although Blackbeard made some modifications to the vessel -- adding cannons -- he probably didn't need to restock, for example, her first aid supplies, many of which have been recovered by archaeologists working on the Queen Anne's Revenge project by the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources. So far, around 60 percent of the ship has been excavated.

 

syringe for injecting mercury into the penis
 - a cure for syphilis

 


     


 



mortar and pestle

partial device for rectally injecting water







 

 

 

 

 

 

 

silver surgical needle

 

 

 

 

"We just have to understand that these people were suffering," she said. "They were seeking relief for any kind of ailment, and certainly if there was warfare on the water, there were wounds among other ailments that needed treatment. It wasn't always a formally trained person in desperate times. That's probably more common than we know."

That said, on board the Queen Anne's Revenge, Blackbeard retained, along with the medical supplies, the ship's three surgeons, pressing them into service. Surgeon Major Jean Dubou and surgeon Marc Bourgneuf are listed on both the La Concorde de Nantes crew muster and court records regarding Blackbeard's crew. The surgeon's aide, Nicholas Gautrain, is listed on the muster, but not the court records.

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So - not all bad, right? Three docs and a complete dispensary. What more could a pirate ask!

Until next time,

                                        Fair Winds,

                                              Old Salt  

 

        

   

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