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Privateering
Home Page All contents Copyright 1999 Dan Conlin Revised
Feb. 14, 2000
Here's an example of
a Letter of Marque from 1799.
And here's a
blank Letter of Marque from 1812.
The South - There were a few Confederate privateers
commissioned, however Confederate privateering
appears to have been limited by the Union naval blockade and that fact
that
privateering and steamships do not mix too well. It made more sense just
as well to
informally commission Confederate warships in a Confederate Navy and
simply destroy Northern ships instead of capturing them since it was
almost impossible to get captured ships through the Union blockade to
homeports in order to reward privateering investors.
The North - Didn't commission privateers because there was so little
Southern commerce to prey upon and because the North had a huge navy. The
North condemned Southern privateers as pirates and threatened to hang
them. From a Non-American perspective,
the Union position on privateering seems hypocritical and bizarre,
as the US refused to sign the Declaration of Paris,
which abolished privateering in 1856 and privateering remained (and still
remains) enshrined in the US constitution!
The only Canadian connection I know of is the use of a forged Confederate
letter of marque by raiders who seized the steamship Chesapeake and were
tried in Halifax in the Civil War. Historian Greg Marquis writes about
this in his book on Eastern Canada and the US civil war In Armagedon's
Shadow
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