21 entries match your criteria. Entries Containing the Word «blackbeard»This list will also include matches for inflectional* forms of the word. By Richard Denney, August 10, 2016 Statue of Blackbeard with Blackbeard's Castle in background RANKED BY RELEVANCE, THEN GEOGRAPHICALLY 1 ► Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, Charlotte Amalie — Skytsborg — (Blackbeard's Castle) — 2 ► Virginia, Newport News, South Newport News — Hampton Roads — World’s Largest Natural Harbor — 3 ► North Carolina, Beaufort County, Bath — B-47 — Edward Teach — 4 ► North Carolina, Hyde County, Ocracoke — Teach's Hole — 5 ► North Carolina, Carteret County, Cedar Island — C-4 — Ocracoke Inlet — 6 ► Virginia, Hampton, Victoria Boulevard Historic District — Eighteenth-Century Hampton — Virginia’s Most Important Town — 7 ► Georgia, Chatham County, Tybee Island — Model 1859 Seacoast Carriage — 8 ► North Carolina, Camden County, Camden — A-38 — Lemuel Sawyer — 9 ► Virginia, Williamsburg — The Public Gaol — 10 ► British Overseas Territories, Turks and Caicos Islands, Providenciales, The Bight Settlement — Edward Thatch — 11 ► Jamaica, Kingston Parish, Port Royal — Welcome to Port Royal — 12 ► North Carolina, Carteret County, Atlantic Beach — C-86 — Queens Anne's Revenge — 13 ► North Carolina, Beaufort County, Bath — BB-2 — Historic Bath — 14 ► North Carolina, Hyde County, Ocracoke — B-43 — Lt. Robert Maynard — 15 ► Virginia, York County, Yorktown — Pirates in Yorktown? — 16 ► North Carolina, Chowan County, Edenton — 2 — Sea Port Fame Brings Famous Forefathers — Nation's Leaders, to Edenton — Edenton Historical Commission Museum Trail — 17 ► North Carolina, Pitt County, Greenville — F-67 — Voice Of America — Paid Advertisement 18 ► British Overseas Territories, Turks and Caicos Islands, Providenciales, The Bight Settlement — Welcome to Port Royal — 19 ► North Carolina, Beaufort County, Bath — BB-1 — Colonial Bath — 20 ► Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, Charlotte Amalie — Pirate Treasure — 21 ► The Bahamas, Bimini, Alice Town — Bimini through Time — Bimini - Islands of The Bahamas — Heritage — * Inflectional forms of words are their plurals, singulars, and possessives as well as gramatical tenses and similar variations.