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Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management
gov.ns.ca > Tourism, Culture and Heritage > NSARM > Virtual Exhibits > Spoils of War: Privateering in Nova Scotia
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Spoils of War: Privateering in Nova Scotia

Introduction
Chronology
Original Log-Books
Virtual Exhibit
Archival Sources
Library Sources









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Privateer: An armed vessel owned and crewed by private individuals and holding a government commission authorizing its use in war, esp. in the capture of merchant shipping.
~ Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Privateering was a recognized part of war-at-sea in Nova Scotia's offshore waters, beginning in the 1750s and continuing to the end of the Napoleonic Era. Vessels sailing out of home ports such as Halifax and Liverpool roamed the North Atlantic and ventured as far south as Caribbean waters off Venezuela. Their adventures were many, their successes mixed; privateering was dangerous and risky business.

Nova Scotians have always been divided over how to regard the story of these sea-going ventures. Many considered privateering immoral, "little better than legalized piracy"; others have viewed it as an activity born of economic necessity. Enos Collins, the greatest and most successful privateersman of them all, refused to be drawn into the debate: "You will observe, sir, that there were many things happened we don't care to talk about."

This online exploration of privateering in Nova Scotia contains the following:

  • a brief Introduction, in order to situate privateering in its context of time and place, and to help us understand its mixed legacy

  • 'Notes on Nova Scotian Privateers,' to provide a chronological history of names, dates, vessels and events

  • digitized original log-books for the privateers Charles Mary Wentworth (1799-1800), Nelson (1802) and Dart (1813)

  • a virtual exhibit telling the story of war-at-sea, 1793-1815, using digitized content selected from Halifax newspapers, court records and government documents of the time

  • a guide to relevant primary sources (i.e. archival records) held at NSARM

  • a comprehensive list of secondary sources (i.e. library materials) that have been published on Nova Scotia privateering over the years.

Thanks are extended to David Sutherland (Halifax, NS) for his generous assistance throughout the project – writing the Introduction; developing the guides to primary research sources and secondary published materials; and researching, selecting and writing accompanying notes for the newspaper extracts and related documents featured in the Virtual Exhibit. Thanks are also extended to the Dalhousie University Archives (Halifax, NS) for making both the log-book of the Dart and original artwork by T.W. Hayhurst available for digitization purposes; and to the Nova Scotia Legislative Library (Halifax, NS) for providing access to issues of contemporary Halifax newspapers not held at NSARM.




    This project was made possible in part through the Canadian Culture Online Program of Canadian Heritage, Library and Archives Canada and the Canadian Council of Archives.
    canada cca
    Ce projet a été rendu possible en partie grâce au soutien du programme Culture canadienne en ligne du ministère du Patrimoine canadien, Bibliothèque et Archives Canada et du Conseil canadien des archives.



| ~ Nova Scotia and the Sea ~ |
|   Brigs and Barques: Images and Artworks from the Age of Sail   |   Lighthouses of Nova Scotia   |   Ports and Harbours   |   Schooners: Workhorses of the Sea   |   Spoils of War: Privateering in Nova Scotia   |   The Royal Navy in Nova Scotia Waters   |   W.R. MacAskill   |   Where the Land Meets the Sea: Shipwrecks of Nova Scotia   |   William E. deGarthe    |

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