pirate flag to fly from NC ferries

Blackbeard’s flag will sail the seas again!

300 years ago Captain Robert Maynard of the Royal Navy trapped Blackbeard off Ocracoke and took his head back to Virginia in triumph. In commemoration, some NC ferries will sport Blackbeard’s flag this season. North Carolina has put together a traveling show about the pirate — look for it at the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras June 2-July 29.  This NCDOT press release has the details.

Ferry Division Director Harold Thomas, Blackbeard 300 Committee Chair LaRae Umfleet, and Ferry Division Deputy Director Jed Dixon display one of the Blackbeard flags
Ferry Division Director Harold Thomas, Blackbeard 300 Committee Chair LaRae Umfleet, and Ferry Division Deputy Director Jed Dixon display one of the Blackbeard flags

“Ahoy, mateys! If ye be sailing for Ocracoke or Bath this year, be prepared to do so under the black flag of the dreaded pirate Blackbeard. The North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources has teamed up with the NCDOT’s Ferry Division to fly the flag in observance of the 300th anniversary of Blackbeard’s death in 1718.

The flag will fly on ferries serving the Hatteras-Ocracoke, Cedar Island-Ocracoke, and Swan Quarter-Ocracoke ferry routes, as well as the Pamlico River route between Bayview and Aurora. Both areas have historic ties to the 18th-century scallywag.

“We’re honored to take part in this celebration of an important piece of North Carolina history,” said Ferry Division Director Harold Thomas. “It will be a great reminder for our passengers that they’re plying the same waters that Blackbeard sailed 300 years ago.”

The Department of Natural and Cultural Resources is leading the charge in the state’s official observance of the Blackbeard anniversary, and purchased the flags to install on the ferries.  “We are so thrilled that the Ferry Division agreed to partner with us to commemorate the Blackbeard 300th anniversary this year,” said LeRae Umfleet, chairwoman of the NCDNCR’s Blackbeard 300 Committee. “We’re not only celebrating Blackbeard and the golden age of piracy, we’re also celebrating North Carolina’s maritime history, and the ferries have been a part of that history for 75 years.”

The Blackbeard 300 Committee will be hosting exhibits, educational opportunities and events throughout 2018. The anniversary will wrap up at Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree  on Ocracoke, Oct. 25-28. Learn more about Blackbeard and find a complete schedule of events at www.ncdcr.gov/bb300.”

 

[box type=”bio”] Blackbeard the Pirate sails again! Or at least his flag does, as NCDOT commemorates the anniversary of his death at the hand of Lt. Maynard.[/box]