Lafitte was either born in France or a French colony of saint-Dominique.
Though Lafitte tried to warn barataria of a British attack, American authorities successfully invaded in 1814 and captured most of Lafitte’s fleet.
Lafitte helped a general Andrew Jackson defend parts of new Orleans against the British in 1815.
Lafitte continued attacking merchant ships as a pirate around Central America ports until he had died around 1823 trying to capture Spanish vessels.
Information about his life and death continues among historians.
The place of his death is unknown but here are some possible places he could have died Yucatán, gulf of Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, south Carolina, Illinois, Leon, Nicaragua, sao Miguel island, and Azores.
He was a captain.
Battles and wars he was in the battle of new Orleans.
Around 1820, Lafitte reportedly married Madeline regaud, who was possibly the widow of a French colonist who had died during an ill-fated expedition to Galveston.
He was born in 1776 and died in 1823.
Lafitte was unhappy with the time it took to transport goods from to merchants navigating the swamps could take him a full week.
In 1812 Lafitte and his men began holding auctions at the temple a prehistoric memorial earthwork mound halfway between Grande Terre and New Orleans.
By 1810 their new port was very successful the Lafitte’s pursued a successful operation and also started to engage in piracy.
A number of details about Jean Lafitte’s early life are obscure and often contradictory.
By 1805 he was thought to be running a warehouse in New Orleans and possibly a store on Royal Street.
In approximately 1784, his mother married Pedro Aubry, a New Orleans merchant and kept Jean with her.
During his lifetime he gathered significant and colorful fame, with many people thinking of him to be either hero or the notorious pirate.
Operating in the waters of Mexican Gulf, he