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Jean
Lafitte was a pirate who operated out of the port
of New Orleans in the early 1800's. Very little is
known about his childhood and adolescence except that
he was born in Haiti sometime around 1780 and was
at least partly Jewish.
In
the early 1800's, Jean and his brother established
what they called "The Kingdom of Barataria"
along coastal Louisiana. The "Kingdom" was
actually an illegal slave smuggling business conducted
by the brothers that fronted as a blacksmith outfit.
From the "Kingdom," Jean would outfit privateers
who would seize vessels in the Caribbean and Gulf
of Mexico and bring the stolen slaves and goods back.
During the War of 1812 between America and Great Britian,
Lafitte was offered a huge sum of money from the British
government to use his base. Lafitte took the money
and then informed the Americans of the plan. As a
valuable informant, Lafitte and his band of hundreds
of subordinates received a pardon for any illegal
pirating and smuggling crimes of the past and helped
the Americans defeat the British at the Battle of
New Orleans in 1814. His actions during the battle
were praised by General and future president Andrew
Jackson. The Lafittes, however, would prove only loyal
to themselves, as they were also hired as Spanish
spies to collect information on American military
forces.
In
1817, the Lafittes were run out of New Orleans. They
next set up shop near Galveston, Texas, where they
took over a huge mansion, which they heavily fortified
with armor and cannons. After one of their privateer
ships attacked an American vessel in the Gulf of Mexico,
they were forced to leave Galveston and burn their
mansion. The Lafittes then set up an operation off
the coast of Mexico, but by this time their operations
has shrunk substantially. Jean Lafitte is thought
to have died in 1826 of a fever in Mexico, though
no one really knows for sure. Although he claimed
to have stashed a great treasure of gold and jewels
somewhere among the swamps of southern Louisiana or
on Galveston Island, it has never been found.
Today,
Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve,
in the heart of New Orleans, is named in his honor.
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