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Many of us have heard of the Last of the Mohegans, but few have heard of the First of the Mohegans. The Bond of Two Worlds: Captain James Avery and Uncas First of the Mohegans is the story of two influential figures who worked together to defend early colonial Connecticut. While Avery was an English colonist and military leader, Uncas was a Native American chief who played a crucial role in maintaining peace and protecting his tribe's interest. Their alliance and cooperation were essential in navigating the complex and often tense relationships between the English and the Native American tribes during early colonial America. This book is a work of historical fiction based on two very real people and historical events that really happened. This story is told through the voice of James Avery with words and interactions with real historical figures as they might have occurred as imagined by the author. It is a fascinating story based on historical facts.
From the golden age of pirates and privateers comes the novel The Sea Beggar: A Sloop of My Own. This is the second novel of the Sea Beggar series of a historical novels about Ephraim Bogardus who was a Dutch American Hudson River mariner of the early 18th century. Ephraim Bogardus lived between 1687 and 1770. The term sea beggar or in Dutch watergeuzen means a sea robber and was applied to Dutch privateers. Ephraim Bogardus considered himself to be a watergeuzen or sea beggar. In this novel Ephraim tells his story of how he had his own sloop built by his brothers in Albany and obtained a letter of marque from the governor of New York to hunt Spanish and French prizes and to trade commodities like flour and tobacco in the Caribbean.Ephraim and his brother Cornelius sailed to North Carolina in 1711. Queen Anne's War between Great Britain against Spain and France is still in full swing. North Carolina at the was at the time a wild and wooly place with fights over the government of the new colony and threats of attack by Native Americans. Along the way the brothers captured a Spanish privateer sloop which they kept as their own with his brother Cornelius as the captain. Together Ephraim in his sloop the Watergeuzen and Cornelius in the former Spanish sloop renamed Wyntie Bosch operated out of North Carolina and sailing the Caribbean.Together the Bogardus brother traded tobacco for arms on the Dutch island of Stint Eustatious also known Golden Rock, fought Native American tribes in North Carolina and captured Spanish and French ship to take as prizes.Standby for high adventure from the golden age of pirates and privateers as told in fiction by Ephraim Bogardus.The author of this tale, James B. Battles, is a retired Navy Captain. Captain Jim is a sailor of sloops in the Chesapeake Bay and the Caribbean. He is also a family historian. He has applied his sailing skills with his historical expertise to create a historical novel about one of his ancestors, Ephraim Bogardus.
Queen Anne's War has ended in 1713 with the Treaty of Utrecht. Ephraim Bogardus and his brother Cornelius suddenly discover that their letters of marque which allowed them to operate as privateers and take French and Spanish prizes are null and void. They must now seek letters of marque from the King of Denmark so that they can continue to take Spanish ships as prizes. In The Sea Beggar: Under the Danish Flag, the third and final book in the Sea Beggar series Ephraim and his brother continue their privateer escapades well as their commodities trading in flour and tobacco throughout the Caribbean. Following a huge hurricane, they recover gold and silver from the wrecked Spanish treasure fleet off Florida. They defend the Carolinas from attacks by Native Americans. Both Ephraim and Cornelius purse of the businesses ashore. Former privateers from Queen Anne's War turn to piracy and pose a threat to the colonial governments of the American Colonies. Each brother finds love and thinks of retiring from privateering and settling down however one last cruise keeps them going during the years after Queen Anne's War.Standby for more high adventure from the golden age of pirates and privateers as told in fiction by Ephraim Bogardus.The author of this tale, James B. Battles, is a retired Navy Captain. Captain Jim is a sailor of sloops in the Chesapeake Bay and the Caribbean. He is also a family historian. He has applied his sailing skills with his historical expertise to create a historical novel about one of his ancestors, Ephraim Bogardus.
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