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Historian and journalist, Dr. Daphne Palmer Geanacopoulos, visits with us to discuss her riveting new book, The Pirate’s Wife: The Remarkable True Story of Sarah Kidd. “In the course of writing my first book, …The Pirate Next Door: The Untold Story of Eighteenth Century Pirates’ Wives, Families, and Communities, I learned about Sarah Kidd and I knew she would be worth a much deeper look.” This narrative nonfiction tells the story of Sarah, the wife of the infamous Captain Kidd, and her life as a pirate’s wife while secretly acting as his accomplice during his seafaring adventures. At the time, piracy was a way of life and the seas were rampant with hundreds of pirates. “The reason there was so much piracy and it took on the name, the Golden Age of Piracy, is that when there was peace time, sailors were unemployed and they had no way of making a living and so they resorted to other means of making a living, as mariners. When mariners were working on merchant ships for the British navy, the conditions were very, very harsh… for men who were sailors, turning to pirates, with the pirates, was a better way because onboard the pirate ship the conditions were better, the food was better, and they got a boat. It was a democratic organization so they were treated with respect while on British ships, and merchant ships they were not treated with respect. So men turned to piracy for that reason.”

Aside from being Captain Kidd’s wife, Geanacopoulos also delves into Sarah’s history. At the young age of 14, she arrived in New York as Sarah Bradley, with her father and two brothers. Within a year, she was married off to William Cox, one of the wealthiest men in the colony and by the time she was 21, Sarah was twice widowed and had married her third husband, Captain Kidd. While there are no portraits of Sarah, “she was described as lovely and accomplished. She was described as a lady of intelligence and exemplary piety…she was clearly very mature for her age and very attractive.” Geanacopoulos added, “…she had had a great deal of life experience that many of us have never had. She knew what she wanted. She knew a lot about men and marriage and love and lost.”

There was a brotherhood among pirates and mariners. They took care of each other. There was a brotherhood among these men and if a pirate ship captured a merchant ship and the crew said how brutal the merchant captain had been to them, then they didn’t have much mercy for the merchant captain. They were protecting…They empathized with their fellow crew members.

Dr. Daphne Geanacopolous

There’s a lot of history out there and you just have to explore and find it, and this is a good way to start.

Caroline Kilbourn

About

Monica Hadley is co-founder, host and producer of Writers' Voices which broadcasts on KHOE 90.5 FM World Radio from MIU in Fairfield, Iowa, and KICI-LP 105.3 a community-based radio station in Iowa City. She is also cofounder of Aeron Lifestyle Technology, Inc. and founder of the Iowa Justice Project, Inc.

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