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In the early 1700s, two women did the impossible: they disguised themselves as men and became pirates in the Caribbean's most dangerous waters. Anne Bonny and Mary Read sailed alongside Calico Jack Rackham during the Golden Age of Piracy, fighting, plundering, and living lives that defied every convention of their era.
Their partnership began on the high seas and flourished through cunning, courage, and an unspoken understanding. When British authorities finally captured Rackham's crew in 1720, only Anne and Mary fought back while the male pirates cowered below deck. Their trial became a sensation—not for their crimes, but for their gender. Both women escaped execution through pregnancy, but their ultimate fates diverged into mystery and tragedy.
This is the story of how two extraordinary women carved their names into pirate history by refusing to live by society's rules. Discover the partnership, the captures, and the unanswered questions that surround the Caribbean's most famous female pirates.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
Episode Summary:
Explore the extraordinary lives of Anne Bonny and Mary Read, two women who disguised themselves as men to become pirates in the Caribbean during the Golden Age of Piracy. This episode uncovers their partnership with Calico Jack Rackham, their bold defiance during capture, and the mysterious fates that followed their infamous 1720 trial.
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Why This Story Matters: Anne Bonny and Mary Read represent two of only a handful of documented female pirates in history. Their story challenges assumptions about gender roles in the 18th century and reveals how women navigated extremely male-dominated spaces through disguise, partnership, and sheer courage. Their mysterious fates—particularly Anne's complete disappearance from records—continue to fascinate historians and fuel ongoing research into women's hidden roles in maritime history.
By Shane Waters4.5
136136 ratings
In the early 1700s, two women did the impossible: they disguised themselves as men and became pirates in the Caribbean's most dangerous waters. Anne Bonny and Mary Read sailed alongside Calico Jack Rackham during the Golden Age of Piracy, fighting, plundering, and living lives that defied every convention of their era.
Their partnership began on the high seas and flourished through cunning, courage, and an unspoken understanding. When British authorities finally captured Rackham's crew in 1720, only Anne and Mary fought back while the male pirates cowered below deck. Their trial became a sensation—not for their crimes, but for their gender. Both women escaped execution through pregnancy, but their ultimate fates diverged into mystery and tragedy.
This is the story of how two extraordinary women carved their names into pirate history by refusing to live by society's rules. Discover the partnership, the captures, and the unanswered questions that surround the Caribbean's most famous female pirates.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays. Every hometown has a story—what's yours?
Episode Summary:
Explore the extraordinary lives of Anne Bonny and Mary Read, two women who disguised themselves as men to become pirates in the Caribbean during the Golden Age of Piracy. This episode uncovers their partnership with Calico Jack Rackham, their bold defiance during capture, and the mysterious fates that followed their infamous 1720 trial.
Key Locations:
Key Dates & Timeline:
Key Figures:
Primary Sources & Research:
Why This Story Matters: Anne Bonny and Mary Read represent two of only a handful of documented female pirates in history. Their story challenges assumptions about gender roles in the 18th century and reveals how women navigated extremely male-dominated spaces through disguise, partnership, and sheer courage. Their mysterious fates—particularly Anne's complete disappearance from records—continue to fascinate historians and fuel ongoing research into women's hidden roles in maritime history.

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