Ahoy, treasure hunters |
| By Kristen Hampshire |
The Whydah Pirate Museum’s real pirate loot anchors a hands-on journey through history, excavation and discovery.![]() ![]() Photos: Bryan Stearns Q. What sets the Whydah story apart from other pirate narratives?A. The biggest thing is authenticity. We’re home to the world’s only verified pirate treasure. Other wrecks have been found, but none had the telltale artifact — the ship’s bell inscribed 1716. The Whydah began as a slave ship, was overtaken by Sam Bellamy’s crew and wrecked in a brutal storm off Wellfleet. It’s real history, not folklore.![]() Q. Your gift shop is compact but packed. How do you approach buying?A. I’m very intentional. I don’t buy every pirate item out there. We focus on quality and pieces that tie back to our mission. We created our own apparel line, Expedition Whydah, with designs produced by Advanced Embroidery. We also carry hats, sweatshirts and tees with our logo and ship artwork.Q. What are some of your bestselling items at the gift shop?A. Foam swords from Rhode Island Novelty are safer than plastic and absolutely our No. 1 seller. Our custom “booty bags” are also huge with kids: little sacks filled with plastic coins, gems, rocks and rings. We also sell treasure chests in different sizes, telescopes, wooden ship kits, toy pistols from Design Masters and beautiful Folkmanis puppets. There’s a scarlet macaw, along with whales and sharks, which are big on the Cape.Magnets and patches are consistent sellers. People collect them everywhere they go. ![]() Q. What do sales support at the Whydah Pirate Museum gift shop?A. Everything goes back to the dive and research. We’re still actively excavating, and every purchase helps fund that work. When someone buys a magnet or a sword or a sweatshirt, they’re supporting archaeology. |




