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Jean Lafitte and Barataria
Lagniappe
"He left a corsair’s name to other times,
Linked one virtue to a thousand crimes."-- Lord Byron
Jean Lafitte
He has been called "The Corsair," "The Buccaneer," "The King of
Barataria," "The Terror of the Gulf," "The Hero of New Orleans". At
three separate times, U.S. presidents have condemned, exonerated and again
condemned his actions. He is known for his piracy in the Gulf of Mexico,
and lauded for his heroism in the Battle of New Orleans. Each personae
seems to balance the other. He hated being called "pirate," for, as he saw
it, he was a "privateer" serving an economic purpose in an economically
frugal time in a new country that needed to economize. When he at last
sailed away from American shores, he felt betrayed by a country that
didn’t understand the difference.
He was Jean Lafitte.
From the Gulf of Mexico through a vast uncharted maze of waterways to
New Orleans, his name was legend even in his day. Entrepreneur and astute
diplomat, he took an island-full of bloodied seafarers, rovers and
fishermen and turned them into an organization of buccaneers, smugglers
and wholesalers. From the ships they plundered off the Caribbean Coast and
in the Atlantic he and his "crew of a thousand men" kept a constant cargo
of black-marketed and very necessary provisions (including Negro slaves, a
very important "commodity" to the early South) moving through the
Mississippi Delta to help feed and clothe a part of the nation that the
government overlooked. As a result, he won the praise of the local rich
and poor alike.
He never attacked an American ship. A man without a country, he
nevertheless respected the constitution of American ideals and hoped that
what he called his "kingdom by the sea" might someday meld into like
ideals.
His self-made kingdom, from the Gulf of Mexico through the villages and
plantations to and including New Orleans, was a part of an untamed
wilderness that came as part of the package called the Louisiana Purchase
of 1803. This delta was a new and lusty territory, overgrown with willows
and wildlife. Within its miles and miles of marshlands a man could get
lost and wander until he maddened and died of starvation. Unlike anything
the government knew; the topography, coupled by its habitation of
misunderstood Cajuns and Creoles, confused and perplexed Washington
decision makers. Much more, overcome with other, deepening international
problems, the nation more or less abandoned this wetland with its foreign
cultures to fend for itself. Lafitte’s commerce of merchandise -- of
cloths and linens, spices and trinkets, furniture and utensils -- sold at
discount prices, avoiding high tariffs, to the grateful citizens of New
Orleans. In short, Lafitte’s piratical methods, despite their negative
connotation, proved to be a survival factor for what was to become a major
American city.
And then came a new territorial governor who decided that it was not
conventional to let an outsider -- let alone a notorious pirate -- become
a part of the blossoming American texture. Harassment and imprisonment
followed, even destruction of Lafitte’s Valhalla. But, the governor and
the rest of burgeoning America were to learn that Lafitte’s importance to
this new territory meant much more to him than his own personal
prosperity. When men were needed to keep New Orleans and the entire
Mississippi River from enemy hands, Lafitte -- despite the chastisement
and near ruination he faced from American mediators -- stepped forward to
defend them.
Many stories have been told of Lafitte. To quote author Jack C. Ramsay,
Jr. from his excellent and concise Jean Lafitte, Prince of Pirates,
"Some considered him a rapacious rogue, a man of unmitigated violence.
Others, many of whom were young women, regarded him as a charming person.
He was seductive, perhaps deceptive, but always elegantly gracious."
He writes that contemporaries described "(Lafitte) as ‘graceful and
elegant in manners...accomplished in conversation.’ And yet this was the
man who was often described in very different terms as the ‘Prince of
Pirates’ or the ‘ferocious’ head of ‘desperadoes.’"
Lord Byron sketched a poem about him even in his day. Countless books
have been written about his adventures. He has inspired many moves, the
finest being Cecil B. DeMille’s classic, The Buccaneer. There is a
national park named after him, and along the Mississippi below New Orleans
sits the City of Jean Lafitte. To some, however, he is still a pirate.
But -- pirate, thief, swordsman, businessman or savior, Lafitte’s
legend grows. Complex in nature, shrouded in mystery, and often painted in
splashes of color, he lives on in the role of auspicious hero.
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Gorgeous SE Louisiana Redfish
Happy Customers
4 Buddies loving there day on the water with Capt. EJ
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The Famous Louisiana Delta
Inland fishing from Lafitte to the Gulf of Mexico. Enjoy the
wetlands and wildlife that makes the Louisiana culture what it is today.
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