Edward Teach, also known as Blackbeard, is killed on November 22, 1718, off North Carolina’s Outer Banks during a bloody battle with a British navy force sent from Virginia.
Believed to be a native of England, Edward Teach likely began his pirating career in 1713, when he became a crewman aboard a Caribbean sloop commanded by pirate Benjamin Hornigold. In 1717, after Hornigold accepted an offer of general amnesty by the British crown and retired as a pirate, Teach took over a captured 26-gun French merchantman, increased its armament to 40 guns, and renamed it the Queen Anne’s Revenge.
Read the rest of this exciting tale in History.com.
There are no historic sea shanties written by pirates, though there is one ballad attributed to Captain Henry Every/Avery. The “Golden Age of Piracy” was from approximately 1650 – 1730, and sea shanties, as music scholars identify them, were a product of the commercial shipping trade that flourished around 1830 – 1860. Here is an excellent Library of Congress article on the subject by Stephen Winick. One might also hunt up a copy of “The Book of Pirate Songs” by Stuart M. Frank (ISBN 0-937854-05-0).