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John Newland Maffitt (privateer)
Officer in the Confederate States Navy
Officer in the Confederate States Navy
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | John Newland Maffitt | |
| birth_date | ||
| death_date | ||
| birth_place | Atlantic Ocean | |
| death_place | Wilmington, North Carolina | |
| placeofburial_label | Place of burial | |
| image | John Newland Maffitt - DPLA - c42e6f0acb004c3cb128951510c64af7 (page 1).jpg | |
| caption | Commander John Newland Maffitt, CSN in 1863 | |
| nickname | "Prince of Privateers" | |
| allegiance | United States of America | |
| Confederate States of America | ||
| branch | US Naval Jack 24 stars.svg United States Navy | |
| serviceyears | USN 1832-1861 | |
| CSN 1861-1865 | ||
| rank | [[File:USN lt rank insignia.jpg | 35px]] Lieutenant (USN) |
| [[File:Csn strap cmdr.png | 35px]] Commander (CSN) | |
| battles | American Civil War |
Confederate States of America
CSN 1861-1865 John Newland Maffitt (February 22, 1819 – May 15, 1886) was an officer in the Confederate States Navy who was nicknamed the "Prince of Privateers" due to his success as a blockade runner and commerce raider in the U.S. Civil War.
Early life
Maffitt was born at sea on a ship bound for New York City, his parents having emigrated from Ireland. Maffitt's parents, Reverend John Newland Maffitt and his wife Ann Carnicke, settled with their son in Connecticut. When Maffitt was about five years old, he was adopted by his uncle, Dr. William Maffitt who traveled across the Atlantic Ocean with them, and moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina to live at the Ellerslie Plantation.
Maffitt was a slave owner, and sold Cornelia Williams Read in 1857. During the American Civil War, while commanding the Confederate States Navy cruiser , he was chased by the United States Navy steam frigate to Europe. On board Niagara was William B. Gould, who married Read after the war.
Later life
At the end of the war, he refused to surrender his ship to the United States. Instead, he returned Owl to agents in Liverpool. He chose to remain in England, and, after passing the British naval examination, he served for about two years in command of the British merchant steamer Widgeon running between Liverpool and South America. He returned to the United States in 1868 and settled on a farm near Wilmington, North Carolina. In 1870, Maffit commanded a warship for Cuban revolutionaries during the Ten Years' War.
Maffit died in Wilmington in 1886, leaving an unfinished manuscript about piracy in the West Indies. His collected papers are in the library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
References
Sources
- Commander John Newland Maffitt, CSN at U.S. Naval Historical Center
- Inventory of the John Newland Maffitt Papers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Biography of John Newland Maffitt at Confederate States Navy Museum, Library & Research Institute
- John Newland Maffitt and the Galveston Blockade at Texas A&M University Institute of Nautical Archaeology
- John Newland Maffitt at the Alexandria, Virginia Library
- "Captain John Newland Maffit", from Derelicts by James Sprunt, at Joyner Library, East Carolina University
Bibliography
- Shingleton, Royce,* High Seas Confederate: The Life and Times of John Newland Maffitt*,
References
- James Sprunt. "JOHN N. MAFFITT". Confederate States Navy Research Library.
- Parker, Roy. (August 22, 1996). "Stealth Practice Served Blockade Runner Well". Fayetteville Observer.
- Gould IV, William B.. (2002). "Diary of a Contraband: The Civil War Passage of a Black Sailor". Stanford University Press.
- "Generals of the Confederecy". www.alexandria.lib.va.us.
- James Sprunt. (2 August 1896). "Confederate States Navy Research Library". www.csnavy.org.
- "Commander John Newland Maffitt". DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY -- NAVAL HISTORICAL CENTER.
- Tim Winstead. "John Newland Maffitt". The Cape Fear Civil War Round Table.
- Shingleton, Royce. (1995). "High Seas Confederate The Life and Times of John Newland Maffitt". University of South Carolina Press.
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