My great-great-grandfather came to New York from Trinidad, Cuba on a bark called "Pride of the Sea." The passenger manifest that lists him is signed by a William D. Urann, Master of "Pride of the Sea" in 1858 when my ancestor came over. I would like to know more about this man, but can find nothing, other than the fact that there was a William Dwight Urann in Massachusetts, and a William D. Urann (Maybe the same man?) who served the Union Navy in the Civil War (By then, ironically enough, my ancestor had made his way to Louisiana, and married into a family of staunch Confederates!). Obviously this is not a direct line for me, but I am always curious about the people who touched the lives of my ancestors, and would like to know more of this man, who provided passage for my ancestor to America, at a time when his father was being shot as a revolutionary in Cuba.