Infatuation Rules
Photo: Joshua Roberts
As of this writing, the Peabody-Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts now holds the skull from the Edward Rowe Snow collection.
They get romantic. They will start to obsess over giving her presents, taking her out to nice places, and just trying to make her smile. So, if you...
Read More »
These four horsemen are criticism, defensiveness, stonewalling, and contempt—with contempt being the most lethal. If you want a better marriage in...
Read More »
“You can definitely get over your first love, because your brain has the ability to readjust, to actually look at things in a realistic point of...
Read More »
These Are the Sexiest Clothes for Men, According to Women Your clothes should fit your body—period. Don't let your pants fall down. A good tee goes...
Read More »Legends also suggest that for many years the skull made the rounds of coastal dinner parties as a sober reminder of the fate of lawless sailors. Other tales claim that the skull played a central role in fraternity rituals in Virginia and Connecticut. In a footnote in Lee’s 1974 book he states that the skull can no longer be located in Virginia, although “a well-known New England writer on pirates and a collector of pirate memorabilia” claimed to be in possession of the famous skull. The New England writer and collector Lee refers to is no doubt Edward Rowe Snow (1902-1982). I have a photocopy from his out-of-print book, Secrets of the North Atlantic Islands , published in 1950, that shows a picture of a skull. The caption reads, “The skull of the famous pirate Blackbeard, photographed with one of his pistols.” I am told that the skull was included in several trips that Snow made in the ’60’s & ’70’s to various places of nautical interest in the New England area. In the process of researching the legend and searching for the skull, John Walker, on his web page, Blackbeard, talks about contacting, in 1990, an elderly woman in Massachusetts who claimed to be in possession of Captain Teach’s skull. She said she was in the process of donating it to a museum in Salem, Massachusetts. As of this writing, the Peabody-Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts now holds the skull from the Edward Rowe Snow collection. On their web page, From the Quarter Deck, Gena and Tom Metcalf, folklorists and historians, are shown holding the object in question. According to some sources, officials at the museum have never put the skull on display, and refuse to claim it as Blackbeard’s citing lack of proof one way or the other. Tom Metcalf, who finds no reason to doubt its authenticity, reports that the skull has been on tour, and even made it to the San Diego Maritime Museum a few years ago. In his book, Blackbeard’s Cup , Charles Whedbee, North Carolina historian and collector of Outer Banks folklore, claimed to have actually drunk from the silver plated skull/punch bowl while on a visit to Ocracoke Island in the early 1930’s. Although it is an entertaining story, it is unlikely to have actually happened. To my knowledge, no one on the island has heard of such an object ever being located here, nor do the tales of furtive meetings, solemn rituals, or secret passwords sound convincing. They are more likely the product of an imaginative college graduate’s mind than the true account of the lives of the native Outer Bankers I know.
20 signs a player is falling for you They become less secretive. They suddenly want to spend more time with you. They start digging deep into your...
Read More »
Men love women who are thoughtful, caring, loving and kind. A woman who does little things for her man for no other reason other than that she...
Read More »Furthermore, although Whedbee is reported to have seen photos of Edward Rowe Snow with his silvered skull, and to have stated that this skull was indeed the same one he was familiar with, this is difficult to believe. Whedbee, an accomplished storyteller, claimed to have drunk from a shallow bowl fashioned from the top half of a skull. He reports that the vessel bore the curse “Deth to Spotswoode” engraved on the rim. Neither the size, shape, nor details of this skull match those of the skull in the Peabody-Essex Museum.
Negative thinking has many different causes. Intrusive negative thoughts can be a symptom of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), generalized...
Read More »
Top 5 things a man needs in a relationship Feeling like a hero. A vital need of every man based on the hunter's archetype is to feel like a hero....
Read More »
So if we know there are millions of years of history indicating that males are sexually attracted to red, it stands to reason that wearing red...
Read More »
No human is inherently unlovable, and you deserve to be treated well by your loved ones. Therapy and support are available to help you if you feel...
Read More »