Pirate Glass 

Color: Black
Material:  Sea Glass
Location: Spanish Town, Jamaica
   Circa 1500s:  St. Jago de la Vega, Santiago
Mohs Hardness: 6

"In the Caribbean, many nations traded, and pirates plundered them all. Sea glass arrived in Jamaica with the old world supply chain first established in the 15th century. Black glass is the rarest of all the sea glasses due to age and difficulty in finding it. "  --Wikipedia, Sea Glass, Antique black sea glass

Pirate Glass: Black Sea Glass
From the Golden Age of Piracy, a single type of glass stands apart from all sea glass; Black sea glass or Pirate Glass. The type of glass bottles used in the sea trade contained iron and other strengtheners that caused the glass to change color over the years of being in the sea. Because of this, Pirate Glass is dated to that time period definitively. Many of these bottles began thier new lives from wrecked ships due to storms and piracy. When you touch Pirate Glass, you reach further backwards in time than any other sea glass.

Santiago: Modern Day Jamaica
Christopher Columbus named the island and used it as a mini-state for his family. 
Blackbeard (Edward Teach) operated from Jamaica on privateer ships during the War of the Spanish Succession.
Calico Jack (John Rackham) was, in Port Royal in 1720, hung by the neck until dead.

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