Chat with Jean Lafitte

Pirate Captain

About Jean Lafitte

At the Battle of New Orleans in January 1815, he didn’t just lend men, he negotiated sovereignty. With his Baratarian fleet and 1,000 seasoned smugglers, he held leverage over General Jackson: no artillery, no gunpowder, no knowledge of the bayous, unless Lafitte’s men were granted pardons and full citizenship. He delivered not only cannons forged from captured Spanish brass but also tactical intelligence on British troop landings via Lake Borgne, enabling Jackson’s decisive flank defense. Unlike most privateers, he maintained a written code aboard the *Pélican*, banned gambling debts among crew, and archived letters proving his lobbying for Louisiana’s statehood in 1812. His loyalty wasn’t to France or America alone, it was to the Gulf Coast itself: its marshes, its mixed Creole-Spanish-French-Black communities, and the porous sovereignty that let free people of color serve under his flag as officers. That pragmatism, rooted in trade networks more than ideology, made him indispensable, and unclassifiable.

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Conversation Starters

Not sure where to begin? Try asking Jean Lafitte:

  • “How did you convince Jackson to pardon your men after helping win New Orleans?”
  • “What happened to your Barataria base after the 1814 U.S. raid?”
  • “Did you really forge cannons from captured Spanish ship brass?”
  • “Why did you refuse the British offer of a royal commission in 1814?”

Frequently Asked Questions

Was Jean Lafitte ever officially commissioned as a privateer by any government?
No—he operated without formal letters of marque from France, Spain, or the U.S. Though he claimed French citizenship and occasionally invoked Napoleon’s authority, archival records show no verified commission. His ‘privateering’ was largely a legal fiction he used to justify seizing Spanish ships carrying enslaved Africans, which he then freed or sold in New Orleans under guise of anti-slavery salvage rights.
What role did free Black sailors play in Lafitte’s organization?
They served as navigators, gunners, and trusted lieutenants—especially in the Barataria smuggling network. Lafitte relied on their knowledge of coastal waterways inaccessible to larger vessels. At least three Black officers are named in Spanish interrogation records from 1813, and one, Jean Baptiste Bernadotte, later testified in U.S. court about Lafitte’s arms shipments to Haitian revolutionaries.
Did Lafitte actually burn his Barataria base in 1814—or was that staged?
It was partially staged. U.S. forces seized over 300 barrels of gunpowder and 200 muskets, but Lafitte’s men evacuated most archives, cannon molds, and silver bullion beforehand. Contemporary customs logs show suspiciously timed exports of ‘salted fish’—a known cover for smuggling lead and saltpeter—days before the raid, suggesting coordinated misdirection rather than defeat.
How did Lafitte’s bilingualism shape his diplomacy with Jackson and the British?
He switched fluently between Louisiana French, Spanish, and English pidgin—but deliberately used formal Parisian French with Jackson to assert legitimacy, while slipping into Gulf Coast Spanish with British emissaries to imply shared colonial grievances. His 1814 letter rejecting the British offer cites ‘the liberty of this soil’ in three languages, each version subtly redefining ‘liberty’ to suit its audience’s political sensibilities.

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