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Money Island 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Money Island, by Andrew Jackson 
Howell, Jr. 
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Title: Money Island 
Author: Andrew Jackson Howell, Jr. 
 
Release Date: December 30, 2005 [eBook #17415] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MONEY 
ISLAND*** 
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MONEY ISLAND. 
by 
ANDREW J. HOWELL, Jr. 
 
Copyright, 1908, by Andrew J. Howell, Jr. Commercial Printing Co., 
Wilmington N.C. 
 
CONTENTS: Page. 
Money Island 5 
The Conquest of Jamesby 51 
 
[Illustration: The Little Island Among the Marshes] 
 
MONEY ISLAND.
This is the story of the buried treasure on Money Island, which lies in 
Greenville Sound, not far from Wilmington, North Carolina. It was told 
by Mr. Jonathan Landstone many years ago, and is a part of another 
story which follows, and which will explain something further about 
the mysterious little island that blinks in the sunlight and tries to hide 
its secret. The words are Mr. Landstone's and were written by him, to 
make sure that the story would be told correctly when the time came to 
publish it. 
(Mr. Landstone's MS.) 
My grandfather lived in Charleston, S.C. My home is in Philadelphia. 
In my boyhood I visited him several times. He was a fine old man, and 
was very fond of me. He used to tell me many stories of the good old 
colonial days. He said his father was a pirate; but that pirates in those 
days were gentlemen. Although they made game of the King's revenue 
on the high seas, it was regarded as nothing very wrong; and, although 
they played havoc with the Spanish shipping, it was but the assertion of 
a time-honored right of Englishmen, who never did love Spaniards. 
They were, many of them, ingloriously hanged, it is true, but it was by 
the King's officers, and not by the people. 
However, not to defend pirates, or indeed to condemn them, I will tell 
you what my grandfather narrated about his father, who was Capt. John 
Redfield. He was a gallant seaman, who consorted with Charles Vane 
and other doughty corsairs of those days of romance upon the seas. 
When Captain Kidd forsook the King's commission to run down the 
pirates on the American coast, and organized his formidable squadron, 
Captain Redfield was chosen as his trusted counsellor, to accompany 
the brilliant leader on his adventures. He gave up his own ship, and was 
with Captain Kidd on many voyages, being entrusted with many a 
commission of importance. 
One fine spring morning, while off the Carolina coast, Captain Kidd 
was pacing his deck, enjoying the warm splendor of the early sunshine. 
He had just returned from a successful voyage among the Spanish 
colonies of the south, and was gaily attired after the manner of a
Spanish cavalier. He wore a cocked hat, decked with a yellow band and 
a black plume, and a coat of black velvet which reached down to his 
knees. His trousers were blue, and were adorned by large golden 
knee-buckles. He wore massive silver buckles on his shoes. With his 
well-proportioned body, neatly trimmed beard, and steady, alert eyes, 
he presented as fine a picture of a man as could have anywhere been 
found. His manner had the dignity and repose of a beneficent prince, as 
he gave his orders for the day and received the salutations of his men. 
The ship had passed the Cape of Fear, and was making in towards the 
shore-line, which Captain Kidd was observing with great interest. 
Some near-by point was evidently the destination. At length, at his 
orders, the sails were lowered and the anchor dropped. "We will lie 
here to-day," he remarked, "and have a little rest." 
This information met the ready approbation of the men, who soon 
disposed themselves in careless groups about the ship. They knew it 
would be a day of idleness; because there were no forays to be made 
upon the land, for the reason that there wore no human habitations in 
those parts.    
    
		
	
	
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