Box 5
Folder 9. Treasure – New Hampshire
Item 1. Newspaper Clippings
Transcribed Text (OCR)
GARY MANGIACOPA ARCHIVE ============================================================ Title: B5F9I1 Slug: b5f9i1 Categories: Lost Treasure Source: https://garymangiacopraarchive.com/b5f9i1 Pages: 2 scanned, 2 extracted OCR: Google Vision API (document_text_detection) Processed: 2026-06-06 ============================================================ Kennebec Jour Augus Maine 7 July 1998 page 14 cal 1-5 TUESDAY N.H. island described as 'pirate's bank' for Blackbeard ISLES OF SHOALS, N.H. (AP) The woman who has summered on the Isles of Shoals for more than 70 years doesn't doubt for a minute that the 17th century pirate Black- beard hid treasure on Lunging Is- land. For Prudence Crandall Randall, whose family has owned 7.1-acre Lunging since 1926, her island child- hood was interwoven with the sto- ries passed down to her about pi- rates and their treasure. Sitting in the living room of "Hon- eymoon Cottage," the only house on Lunging, she retold the story of Blackbeard, who had captured and scuttled a British frigate carrying the pay for the King's regiment near Nantucket. He was making for his stronghold on the north end of Long Island when Captain Kidd, a former pirate- turned-bounty hunter, nearly caught up with him. Knowing he would be overtaken before he made it back to his lair, Blackbeard swung around, and fled north, reaching the Isles of Shoals off the New Hampshire coast just as the wind died down. "He knew, as I would have known, having lived with the elements so closely, that the wind would pick up again about four or five in the morn- ing," Randall said. Accordinmg to legend, Black- beard split the loot -half for his crew, and half for himself and his first mate. The crew buried its cut on another of the Isles of Shoals and the loot reportedly was found many years later. But Blackbeard and his first mate's share of the booty, rumored to be gold and silver bars, never was found. Lunging is the only of the Isles of Shoals with a natural harbor and a - one of the rea- small sandy beach- sons where Blackbeard and his mate are said to have buried their treasure. When Randall was a teen-ager, treasure hunters became interested in the island. One such hunter thought the loot was under a granite ledge now sub- merged near the harbor. After dig- ging to water level, it was decided the only way to get through the ledge would be to dynamite it. But Randall's father, the Rev. Frank Crandall, who regularly re- placed window panes cracked by Coast Guard target practice blasts, would not allow explosions on the is- land for fear of damaging the cot- tage. According to Bob Cahill, owner of the New England Pirate Museum in Salem, Mass., Lunging was a "pi- rate's bank.' Cahill, who traveled to Lunging for a story on Blackbeard for the television show "Unsolved Myster- ies," says the island indeed was Blackbeard's summer lair. Local fishermen, according to leg- end, guarded the treasures for a cut of the proceeds. [PAGE BREAK] Kennebec JOURNAL AUGUSTAMAINE New Taray Hampshire town abuzz with mystery of lost cannon WINCHESTER, N.H. (AP) History and mystery have people talking in Winchester after an ap- parent Civil War cannon was found in the Ashuelot River, then disap- peared. Diver Brian Severance checked out the river bottom almost daily, recovering everything from antique bottles to wagon wheels. In May, he came upon a cannon barrel. "It was sitting halfway up in the sand, and there were bottles all around it," he said. "It wasn't that rusty. It couldn't have been there more than 35 to 40 years.' Severance told Town Adminis- trator Thomas MacQuarrie about it. The news was printed in the town newsletter, and MacQuarrie sent the Fire Department out to search for the cannon in mid-Au- gust, when the water level was low. Firefighters couldn't find it. MacQuarrie said he thinks they looked in the wrong place. Severance said he thinks some- one else got there first. "I went over the area for an hour and a half, and it's gone," he said. "Someone took it. When I went back to look, there was a path leading down to the bank that was- n't there before." Severance, of Brattleboro, said he found the cannon about 6 feet from the shore. The barrel was about 6 feet long and 6 inches in diameter, he said, and the end was plugged. "Two people could have re- moved it easily," he said. MacQuarrie has not given up. He plans to have the Fire Depart- ment search the river again. One question is, Where is the cannon? Another is, Where did it come from? A man headed out of a barber shop on Main Street said he believes he knows. "I've been in town 80 years," said the man, who didn't give his name. "Sure, I remember seeing it. It was iron and it was painted black and it was on wheels. It was over there somewhere,' he said, pointing across the street to a grassy area next to Town Hall where the Sol- dier's Memorial Monument now stands. He guessed that he saw the cannon there some 70 years ago. NOU 2002 MONDAY POSIBSAll,2




