The story of New England is built on an endless armature of fascinating tales of Yankee ingenuity and hardy, intrepid characters. Bootleggers, Lobstermen, and Lumberjacks takes the top fifty wildest episodes in the region's bygone days and presents them to the reader in one convenient, narrative-driven package. Including incredible but true tales of hardy Yankee hill folk and crusty seafarers engaged in all manner of amazing activity?from witch-hunting to log rolling, sometimes with tragic results?this book is a perfect stroll through New England's past for resident and visitor alike. Yankee history is rife with all manner of shipwreck victims surviving any way they know how; Indian, pirate, and shark attacks, cougar and bear attacks, and, of course, rum runners and bootleggers doing what they do best.
Autorentext
Matthew P. Mayo is the author of several fiction and nonfiction books, including Cowboys, Mountain Men, and Grizzly Bears (TwoDot) and the Western novels Winters' War, Wrong Town, and Hot Lead, Cold Heart. Raised in Rhode Island and Vermont, he has spent much of his adult life in Maine, writing about the state for Down East and other publications. Visit him at matthewmayo.com.
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Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Pilgrims' Progress
A rough Atlantic crossing is followed by frigid temperatures, scurvy, starvation, and death. . . . Welcome to the New World. (1620)
2. Dungeon Rock
In a cave near Lynn, Massachusetts, pirate Thomas Veal guards his treasure?until the Great Earthquake of 1658 buries him alive. (1658)
3. The Great Swamp Fight
The Narragansetts are attacked deep in Rhode Island's Great Swamp by a force of 1,200. Three hundred children, women, and old people are shot, bludgeoned, and burned to death. (1675)
4. The Candlemas Massacre
Five hundred Abenakis raid York, Maine, killing, kidnapping, and burning. Jeremiah Moulton sees his parents get scalped. He doesn't forget . . . or forgive. (1692)
5. A Crushing End
During the Salem witch trials, 150 people are imprisoned on charges of witchcraft, twenty-nine are convicted, nineteen are hanged, and five die in prison. Giles Corey is not so lucky. (1692)
6. A Mother's Anger
Hannah Duston of Boscowen, New Hampshire, kills and scalps her sleeping captors . . . to avenge their brutal murder of her baby. (1697)
7. Boon Island's Curse
A midwinter wreck strands fourteen sailors on this barren rock six miles off the coast of York, Maine. Only ten survive for twenty-four days, without fire, by eating what meat is available. (1710)
8. Pirate Treasure
"Black Samuel" Bellamy captures the treasure-laden Whydah. But as the crew nears its home port of Cape Cod, a tempest strikes, and the ship's timbers begin to crack. (1717)
9. The Brutality of Ned Low
Vicious pirate Ned Low captures a Boston whaler, tortures the crew, steals their food, and sets them adrift to starve. But he's still not satisfied. (1723)
10. The Meetinghouse Tragedy
The frame of the new Wilton, New Hampshire, meetinghouse collapses, dropping fifty-three workers three stories to the ground?followed by tons of trusses and tools. (1773)
11. Ann Story's Cave
A falling tree kills her husband, and Indians burn her cabin, but Ann Story stays on her hard-won Vermont land, living in a riverbank cave and helping capture Tories. (1775)
12. Bunker Hole
Mainer Jack Bunker hijacks a British ship full of food stolen from colonists. The British give hard chase, so he runs it into a hidden cove, cuts the masts, and waits. (1775)
13. The Knox Cannon Train
Colonel Henry Knox leads eighty yoke of oxen, dragging fifty-nine cannons, three hundred miles in fifty-six days over mountains, lakes, and swamps . . . in winter. The British siege is soon broken. (1775)
14. A Manly Showing
During Connecticut's battle of Ridgefield, Colonel Benedict Arnold's horse, shot nine times, falls on him. A charging redcoat demands surrender, but Arnold refuses. (1777)
15. Revolutionary Woman
Dressed as a man, Deborah Sampson is wounded fighting for the Continental Army. She pries a musket ball from her leg with a knife, but a second ball is lodged too deep. (1782)
16. She-Pirate!
Rachel Wall lures innocent rescuers to their deaths at the hands of her concealed crew. But the game wears thin . . . and piracy in Massachusetts is a hanging offense. (1782)
17. Tough Times, Tough People
In February, Seth Hubbell and his family trek one hundred miles on foot to the raw wilderness of northern Vermont. His livestock and crops die. Then life grows difficult. (1789)
18. The Wild East
Mrs. Graves of Brookfield, Vermont, spends all night lunging with a pitchfork at a bear intent on savaging her swine. But as she grows wearier, the bear grows angrier. (1800)
19. The Black Snake Affair
A century before Prohibition, an illicit load of potash instigates animosity, mayhem, and murder between smugglers and the federal militia on Vermont's Winooski River. (1808)
20. The Legend of Skinner's Cave
Smuggler Uriah Skinner is trapped on his secret Lake Memphremagog island by federal officers who take his boat?and leave him no way off the island. (1808)
21. Runaway Pond
A Glover, Vermont, man's plan for more water works too well: Mammoth trees, boulders, buildings, bridges, and livestock are ripped free and carried for miles. (1810)
22. "1800-and-Froze-to-Death"
Killing frosts in each month of the year across New England result in crop failures, starvation, disease, and mass exodus?all the makings of a famine. (1816)
23. The Worst Mistake Ever Made
Threat of a crushing landslide forces Samuel Willey, his wife, their five children, and two hired men from their home in the heart of Crawford Notch. Big, big mistake. (1826)
24. Massachusetts Bay Man-Eater
Angler Joseph Blaney attracts the attention of two great white sharks in the middle of Massachusetts Bay. They are considerably larger than his dinghy. (1830)
25. Vortex of Doom
As their mother watches from shore, two brothers in a schooner are sucked into the gaping maw of the Old Sow Whirlpool, off Eastport, Maine. They aren't the first . . . or the last. (1835)
26. Rebels . . . in Vermont!
A Rebel raider and his gang attack a town on the Vermont-Canadian border, robbing banks, setting fires, and forcing hostages to swear allegiance to the Confederacy. (1864)
27. Aroostook Lynch Law
When he steals a pair of boots, Big Jim Cullen never dreams he'll be the star of New England's only lynching. (1873)
28. The Hartford Disaster
The engineer of the night express from White River Junction works to make up time, though winter track conditions are dicey, especially on bridges over frozen rivers. (1887)
29. North Woods Freeze-Up
Across northern New England, weeks of 40-below temperatures force loggers to kill their horses, cut off their own frostbitten digits, and fight like caged rats. (1887)
30. The Great White Hurricane
In March, a nor'easter wallops the coast, dumping fifty inches of snow, whipping up fifty-foot drifts, and wrecking two hundred ships. It takes weeks to tally the dead. (1888)
31. The Last Vampire
To ward off vampiric spirits of the recently deceased, a young Rhode Island girl's corpse is exhumed, her organs are burned, and the smoke is inhaled by family members. (1892)
32. . . . And with an Axe
In Fall River, Massachusetts, thirty-two-year-old Sunday school teacher Lizzie Borden opens her parents' heads with a hatchet?and is never convicted of the crime. (1892)
33. Lobstermen Fisticuffs!…