Let’s Talk About…. Pirates On The Mississippi?

When you imagine a pirate, Johnny Depp might come to mind. The Mississippi River pirates were real but they weren’t as colorful as Johnny depicted.  Between about 1806 and 1844, there certainly were pirates prowling on the Mississippi River. Any of you remember this Walt Disney movie:

I had no idea there were pirates on the Mississippi and when the ship’s education guy told about these fellows, I was really surprised. I never learned about this before! River pirates have operated along rivers all over the world. Quoting from Wikipedia:


 “American river piracy in the late 18th and mid-19th century was primarily concentrated along the Ohio River and Mississippi River valleys. River pirates usually operated in isolated frontier settlements which were sparsely populated areas lacking the protection of civil authority and institutions. These pirates resorted to a variety of tactics depending on the number of pirates and the size of the boat crews involved, including deception, concealment, ambush and assaults in open combat near natural obstacles and curiosities, such as shelter caves, islands, river narrows, rapids, swamps and marshes. River travelers were robbed, captured and murdered, and their livestock, slaves, cargo and flatboats, keelboats and rafts were sunk or sold downriver.


Did your ancestor float down the Ohio or Mississippi Rivers and were they attacked by pirates?

What a story!

2 comments on “Let’s Talk About…. Pirates On The Mississippi?

  1. Dave says:

    My family did travel the Mississippi in the late 1840s 1850

  2. Eric Tabor says:

    I lived and was raised 10 miles from where Davey Crockett and the River Pirates was filmed which was Cave In Rock Illinois. That was one of the main pirate settlements along the Ohio River, Two of the more infamous murderers in Kentucky got their start there and they were the Harp Brothers. The eldest brother was the first to be captured and was hung near Providence, KY and near the Hopkins County Line. After he was hung at a Fork in the road, he was decapitated and his his was then placed on a pike for all would be criminals to see. That area was later named Harp’s Fork.

Comments are closed.