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[[File:Captain John Carnes, by William Verstille, c. 1800, oil on canvas - Peabody Essex Museum - DSC07046.jpg|thumb|right|Captain John Carnes, by William Verstille, c. 1800, [[Peabody Essex Museum]]]]
[[File:Captain John Carnes, by William Verstille, c. 1800, oil on canvas - Peabody Essex Museum - DSC07046.jpg|thumb|right|Captain John Carnes, by William Verstille, c. 1800, [[Peabody Essex Museum]]]]

Revision as of 19:45, 31 May 2020

Captain John Carnes, by William Verstille, c. 1800, Peabody Essex Museum

Captain John Carnes of Salem, Massachusetts (1756–1796), was a privateer.

He served as the captain of the General Lincoln and carried letters for John Adams.[1] He held a letter of marque from the fledgling American government to harass, sink or capture British and allied shipping.

He served from February–March 1782 as captain of the privateer Porus, during which time he led an expedition of four privateer vessels against the British-held island of Tortola, but with disappointing results. The plan to surprise the island was discovered and failing that the expedition, after some hot exchanges of cannon fire with pursued shipping, withdrew due to a British squadron being alerted to their presence in the area.[2]

He later brought back the first shipload of pepper bought directly from the natives of the Dutch Spice Islands and thus opened the way to that trade in America and made a fortune in the process.

Legacy

His portrait hangs in the Salem Historical Society Museum.

Citations and references

Citations

  1. ^ "MHS Digital Edition: Adams Papers".
  2. ^ "The Tortola Expedition: March 1782".

References