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Privateers

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 8.88
  Total Words: 2219
  Total Characters: 12324
  Number of Sentences: 130


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 17.07
  Characters per Words: 5.55


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 50.2
  Fog Scale Level: 13.84
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.5  

Privateers


     The word "privateer" conjures a romantic image in the minds of most
Americans.  Tales of battle and bounty pervade the folklore of privateering,
which has become a cherished, if often overlooked part of our shared heritage.
Legends were forged during the battle for American independence, and these men
were understandably glorified as part of the formation of our national identity.
The fact of the matter is that the vast majority of these men were common
opportunists, if noteworthy naval warriors.  The profit motive was the driving
force behind almost all of their expeditions, and a successful privateer could
easily become quite wealthy.  In times of peace, these men would be common
pirates, pariahs of the maritime community.  Commissioned in times of war, they
were respected entrepreneurs, serving their purses and their country, if only
incidentally the latter.  However vulgar their motivation, the system of
privateering arose because it provided a valuable service to the country, and
indeed the Ame rican Revolution might not have been won without their
involvement.  Many scholars agree that all war begins for economic reasons, and
the privateers of the war for independence contributed by attacking the
commercial livelihood of Great Britain's merchants.
     It is ironic that the entire notion of privateering began in Great Britain.
In 1649 a frigate named Constant-Warwick was constructed in England for a
privateer in the employ of the Earl of Warwick.   Seeing how profitable this
investment was, a great many of the English peerage commissioned their own
privateers.  The Seven-Years War saw the proliferation of privateering on both
the English and French coasts as each attempted to disrupt their opponent's
colonial trade.  American investors quickly entered this battle, commissioning
ships to prey upon cargo vessels coming to and from French colonial holdings in
the Americas.  Here began the American privateer heritage, ...

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