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NGE >> Land and Resources >> Geography >> Coastal Plain and Barrier Islands >> Barrier Islands >> Blackbeard Island |
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Blackbeard Island The setting for generations of pirate lore and tales of buried treasure, coastal Georgia's Blackbeard Island has had a compelling history for at least 200 years, including a period when it was the largest federal marine quarantine station on the south Atlantic coast. The 5,618-acre island, northeast of Sapelo Island in McIntosh County, was named for Edward Teach, best known as "Blackbeard," a pirate who
Blackbeard Island was owned by a consortium of French investors for eleven years beginning in 1789. In 1800 the island was sold at public
Except for occasional leasing by the federal government for cattle stocking, Blackbeard Island saw little further use until after the Civil War (1861-65).
An 1894 Marine Hospital Service inspection report noted that the Blackbeard Island quarantine station comprised thirteen buildings and twenty-three employees. The report noted a surgeon's hospital on the south end of Blackbeard. A launch, the Hygeia, was used to disinfect ships and their ballasts as well as
The disinfecting station, built on wharves extending into Sapelo Sound from Blackbeard's north end, was composed of tanks and a rail track to expedite the removal of ballast stone from the holds of ships contaminated by yellow fever. In 1904 a brick crematory was built; it is the only structure from the quarantine era that still remains on Blackbeard Island. Marine hospital records do not note that this device was ever used for its intended purpose—to cremate the bodies of
The peak of the island's activity as a quarantine station was reached in 1900, largely because of the processing of yellow pine timber from the numerous sawmills around nearby Darien. Beginning in 1889, Sapelo Sound, with its natural deep harbor, became the preferred anchorage for vessels engaged in the timber trade. By 1900 shipping around Blackbeard Island and Sapelo Sound began making a transition from wooden, sail-powered vessels to steamships designed to accommodate larger timber cargoes. The Blackbeard quarantine station was deactivated in 1909,
Suggested Reading Buddy Sullivan, Early Days on the Georgia Tidewater: The Story of McIntosh County and Sapelo 5th ed. (Darien, Ga.: McIntosh County Board of Commissioners, 1997). Virginia Steele Wood, "James Keen's Journal of a Passage from Philadelphia to Blackbeard Island, Georgia, for Live Oak Timber," American Neptune 35 (October 1975). Buddy Sullivan, Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve Published 7/17/2003 |
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