WRECK OF THE 1717 WHYDAH
CAPE COD, MASSAHUSETTS
Salem, Massachusetts :
A sunken cutlass with a
cargo of gold doubloons, may or may not, be booty of
an 18th century
pirate ship, but ship wreck experts say the objects raised from
the Cape Cod
waters show evidence of
an early and important wreck.
Shortly after Barry
Clifford announced he had found the 1717 Whydah which sank
during a storm, he
displayed artifacts to the Underwater Archeological Resources
to prove
the coins, cannon balls and
a pistols brass fingerguard were the loot of pirate Black Sam
Bellamy after 267 years
under water. The coins and fingerguard will be the earliest find
in Massachusetts.
Clifford has spent two
or more years combing the sandy ocean floor off Wellfleet
for the Whydah said she
was exactly where a British mapmaker reported the sinking of a
three masted galley,
1500 feet off shore. The State Board quickly confirmed the
find
as that of the Whydah
and worth $400,000.
Before it's capture by
pirates 3 February 1717, the Whydah was a British vessel
sailing between England,
Africa, Caribbaean Islands and the American colonies and at
the time she sank was
carrying cargo including 180, 5 pound sacks of coins , 4-1/2 tons
of
gold and silver.
Clifford will not be allowed to take up the ship until he has full
approval
by next summer.
Clifford holds title to
the ship wreck by a 1983 Federal Judge ruling.
Abstract: Sunday
Morning News , Wilmington, Delaware, 29 July, 1984.
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