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  1. The fate of Quedagh Merchant rested in the hands of merchants hired by Captain Kidd to guard the ship and await his return to the Caribbean in three months' time. During Kidd's long imprisonment in New York and later in England, New York Governor Lord Richard Bellomont attempted to extract a confession for the location of the ship, which was ...

  2. Research. Dominican Republic. Captain Kidd's Quedagh Merchant. The Wreck of the Quedagh Merchant. Since Captain William Kidd first reported the location of his abandoned vessel the Quedagh Merchant in 1699 until today, people have searched for the lost ship.

  3. This matched the time period and last known location of the Quedagh Merchant, a ship abandoned by Captain William Kidd in 1699, while he returned to Boston to answer charges that he was a pirate. The ship was believed to have been burned at about that time by Kidd’s Dominican colleagues.

  4. Dec 15, 2007 · Archaeologists from the University of Indiana say they have found the wreck of the Quedagh Merchant, an Armenian ship loaded with treasures satins, muslins, silver and gold that probably belonged...

  5. Dec 14, 2007 · Resting in less than 10 feet of Caribbean seawater, the wreckage of Quedagh Merchant, the ship abandoned by the scandalous 17th century pirate Captain William Kidd as he raced to New York in an...

  6. Feb 19, 2020 · It is here that we also learn of Kidd’s ultimate downfall and the scuttling of Quedagh Merchant. Hanselmann fascinatingly demonstrates “that Kidd was not necessarily a pirate by choice, but that his actions led to his denunciation as one” (p. 94).

  7. 4 days ago · He left the Quedagh Merchant at the island of Hispaniola (where the ship was possibly scuttled; in any case, it disappeared with its questionable booty) and sailed in a newly purchased ship, the Antonio, to New York City, where he tried to persuade the earl of Bellomont, then colonial governor of New York, of his innocence.

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