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The Pirates of Colonial America


            During the eighteenth century, piracy began ruling the waters surrounding the American colonies. For many people piracy adds an exciting thrill to maritime history with its adventure, romanticism, mysteriousness, and its alluring nature. However, piracy is just the practice of a pirate: these pirates conducted robbery or illegal violence at sea; violence and crimes that killed, hurt, and affected the lives of others.1 Legally, crime is broken into three different parts: mens rea, the mental state of mind the criminal had during the crime; actus reus, the acts that are criminally committed; and locus, when and where the crime happened.2 These three things made the task of classifying a pirate as a criminal an extremely difficult one because the acts committed were inconsistent and the location of the crime was even less consistent; but colonists knew they were criminals. Piracy implied challenges to the law because kept themselves away from states" jurisdiction, but that was going to change.3 Pirates were criminals and their actions were villainous and they needed to be punished for their wrong doing. They were following the very definition of crime with their acts of mutiny, destruction, and robbery.4 Pirates were a cause of chaos in Maritime History during the beginning of America, especially in the New England colonies, and religious authority used social and moral reasons to stop them. .
             Reports of piracy began showing up and down the Colonial American coast. For instance an article from the Boston Newsletter tells of a group of pirates that went aboard a ship, off the coast of New England, and had taken the linen, food, and other goods. The article went on to describe a fight that broke out between the sailors being robbed and the pirates. The pirates fought unfair and maliciously.5 Another report talked about Paul Williams and his crew of ,pirates, in 1717, that went aboard a ship, near Philadelphia, and stole three hundred and fifty ounces of silver.


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