『BLACKOAK: Gold in the Sand — What the Whydah's Carpenter Heard Before the Hull Opened』のカバーアート

BLACKOAK: Gold in the Sand — What the Whydah's Carpenter Heard Before the Hull Opened

BLACKOAK: Gold in the Sand — What the Whydah's Carpenter Heard Before the Hull Opened

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
She was built to carry slaves. She became the richest pirate ship of her age. And on the night of April 26, 1717, she struck a sandbar off Cape Cod and took one hundred and forty men to the bottom of the Atlantic in the space of a few hours.Of those men, only two survived. One of them was the carpenter.In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account it received in a Boston tavern in October of 1717 — the same afternoon that six of the Whydah's captured crew were hanged at the waterfront. The man holding Blackoak that evening was Thomas Davis, a Welsh carpenter who had been seized from a merchant vessel and forced aboard the Whydah against his will. He had given the court the testimony that saved his life. Then he had come to Fish Street with three centuries' worth of weight and nowhere left to put it.He told Blackoak what a carpenter sees that no one else does: the load riding too deep, the hull speaking in the hours before the wreck, and what the bags of gold sounded like through the planking in the last hour before everything became water. He told it about holding iron slave fittings in his hands and what he felt that no court had language to receive. About two men on a beach where one hundred and forty had been the night before. And about the word he kept arriving at for what the cargo sounded like at the end — a word no official record would accept but that he could not replace with anything more accurate.In 1984, marine archaeologist Barry Clifford found the Whydah's bell on the floor of the Atlantic. It read: THE WHYDAH GALLY 1716. The first authenticated pirate shipwreck ever discovered. Over 200,000 artifacts recovered since — including the remains of John King, a boy estimated to be eight to eleven years old who had demanded to join the pirates over his mother's objection and died in the wreck.The gold Davis heard is still out there. Distributed across miles of Cape Cod seabed by three centuries of Atlantic weather. Surfacing after storms. Waiting.BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in the rooms where history was made by people who believed objects couldn't listen. They were wrong.Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. Premium cinematic audio storytelling.Whydah Gally pirate shipBlack Sam Bellamy pirateWhydah treasure foundCape Cod pirate wreckWhydah shipwreck 1717pirate ship discoveredBarry Clifford WhydahWhydah museum Provincetownpirate gold Cape Codauthenticated pirate shipwreckSamuel Bellamy prince of piratesWhydah bell foundpirate history podcastBLACKOAK podcastFuzzy Life StudiosWhat happened to the Whydah Gally pirate shipWas Black Sam Bellamy's treasure ever foundWhere is the Whydah shipwreck locatedHow much gold was on the Whydah GallyWho survived the Whydah shipwreckWhat artifacts were found on the WhydahWho was Black Sam Bellamy the pirateWhydah Gally Cape Cod Massachusetts wreck siteHow did Barry Clifford find the WhydahJohn King youngest pirate Whydah GallyWhat was the Whydah Gally before it was a pirate shipIs there still treasure from the Whydah on Cape CodThomas Davis Whydah carpenter survivor acquittedFirst authenticated pirate shipwreck in historyBest historical podcasts about real pirate shipsCinematic storytelling podcast about pirate historyBLACKOAK podcast Whydah Gally episodeHow many people died on the Whydah GallyCape Cod pirate gold coins found after stormsWhydah bell inscription THE WHYDAH GALLY 1716What was the Whydah Gally and what happened to it? The Whydah Gally was a purpose-built slave ship launched in London in 1715. In February 1717, it was captured near the Bahamas by the pirate Samuel Bellamy, who converted it into his flagship, armed it with 28 cannons, and loaded it with plunder from more than fifty captured ships. On the night of April 26, 1717, while sailing off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, the Whydah was struck by a nor'easter storm and driven onto a sandbar approximately 500 feet offshore near Wellfleet. The hull broke apart and sank in shallow water. Of more than 140 men aboard, only two survived. The wreck was discovered in 1984 by marine archaeologist Barry Clifford and is considered the first fully authenticated pirate shipwreck ever found.Was the Whydah Gally's treasure ever recovered? Yes, significantly — but not completely. After the wreck was authenticated in 1984, excavations led by Barry Clifford's team have recovered over 200,000 artifacts including gold coins, silver reales, African gold dust, weapons, personal items, and human remains. A ship's bell inscribed "THE WHYDAH GALLY 1716" confirmed the vessel's identity. However, the storm that sank the ship distributed its contents across a wide debris field stretching miles along the outer Cape Cod coastline. Three centuries of Atlantic weather have continued to redistribute artifacts. Archaeologists believe...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません