ALEXANDER, John.
A Scotch buccaneer; one of Captain Sharp's crew. Drowned on
May 9th, 1681. Captain Sharp, with a party of twenty-four men,
had landed on the Island of Chiva, off the coast of Peru, and
taken several prisoners, amongst whom was a shipwright and his
man, who were actually at work building two great ships for the
Spaniards. Sharp, thinking these men would be very useful to him,
took them away, with all their tools and a quantity of ironwork,
in a dory, to convey them off to his ship. But the dory,
being[Pg
28] overladen, sank, and Alexander was drowned. On the
evening of May 12th his body was found; which they took up, and
next day "threw him overboard, giving him three French vollies
for his customary ceremony."
ALI BASHA.
Of Algiers. Barbary corsair.
Conquered the Kingdom of Tunis in the sixteenth century, and
captured many Maltese galleys. He brought the development of
organized piracy to its greatest perfection.
In 1571 Ali Basha commanded a fleet of no fewer than 250
Moslem galleys in the battle of Lepanto, when he was severely
defeated, but escaped with his life.
ALLESTON, Captain.
Commanded a vessel of eighteen tons, no guns, and a crew of
twenty-four. In March, 1679, sailed in company with eight other
vessels, under command of Captain Harris, to the Coast of Darien,
and marched on foot across the isthmus, on his way attacking and
sacking Santa Maria.
AMAND or ANNAND, Alexander.
Of Jamaica.
One of Major Stede Bonnet's crew in the Royal James.
Hanged on November 8th, 1718, at White Point, Charleston, South
Carolina, and buried in the marsh below low-water mark.
AMEER, Ibrahim.
An admiral of an Arabian fleet of Red Sea pirates. In 1816 he
captured four British merchant vessels on their way to
Surat.[Pg
29]
ANDRESON, Captain Cornelius.
A Dutch pirate. Sailed from Boston in 1674 with Captain
Roderigo to plunder English ships along the coast of Maine, in a
vessel called the Penobscot Shallop.
Tried at Cambridge, Massachusetts, sentenced to death, but
later on pardoned. Afterwards fought very bravely for the English
colonists against the Indians.
ANDROEAS, Captain.
A Chief or Captain of the Darien Indians, who in 1679
conducted the buccaneers under Coxon and Harris across the
isthmus to attack Santa Maria and afterwards to make an attempt
on Panama.
Captain Androeas had a great esteem for the English, partly
because the buccaneers were kind to the Indians, and partly
because of the Indians' fear and hatred of the Spaniards. He
afterwards led back a party of malcontents under Captain Coxon
from the Pacific side of the isthmus.
ANGORA, Sultan of Timor.
Refusing to allow the East India Company to station garrisons
on Timor, he was driven out of the whole of his island except the
chief town, also called Angora.
Deciding to take revenge, he turned pirate and went to sea in
command of a small fleet of five well-armed prows and several
galleys. His first prize was a packet brig carrying despatches
from Calcutta to the English General before Angora. Captain
Hastings, the commander, a near relation of Warren Hastings, and
a gallant officer, had thrown the despatches overboard, for which
he was hanged, while the crew were[Pg 30] sent to prison at
Angora and afterwards poisoned. His next prize was an East Indian
ship, the Edward, Captain Harford, the crew of which were
also poisoned. Cruising off Bombay he defeated a vessel sent out
by the Government to attack him. After taking other English
vessels, Angora met with a richly laden ship from Burmah, a
country whose sovereign he was on friendly terms with, but the
Sultan-pirate took this ship and drowned every soul on board
except one woman, who, owing to her great beauty, he kept for
himself. His next victim was a well-armed Malay praam, which he
captured after a severe fight. The crew he shackled and threw
overboard, while he burnt the vessel. Paying another visit to
Bombay, he caught the garrison unprepared, blew up the fort, and
sailed off with some sheep, cows, and pigs. A few days later the
pirate seized an English packet, St. George, and after he
had tortured to death the captain, the terrified crew joined his
service. Returning to Timor with his plunder, he was surprised by
the arrival off the port of H.M.S. Victorious,
seventy-four guns, which had been sent to take him. Slipping out
of harbour unobserved in the night in his fastest sailing praam,
he escaped to Trincomalee in Ceylon, where the East India Company
decided to allow him to remain undisturbed.
ANGRIA.
Brother of a famous pirate, Angora, Sultan of Timor. When the
Sultan retired from practice to the Island of Ceylon he gave his
brother his praam, a fast vessel armed with thirty-eight
guns.
Angria's brother Angora had been dethroned from the Island of
Timor by the English Government, and this had prevented the
former from all hope of succeeding as Sultan. Owing to this,
Angria, a very[Pg 31] vindictive man, nursed against the
English Government a very real grievance. Declaring himself
Sultan of another smaller island, Little Timor, he sailed out to
look for spoil. His first victim was the Elphinston, which
he took some eighty miles off Bombay. Putting the crew of
forty-seven men into an open boat, without water, and with
scarcely room to move, he left them. It was in the hottest month
of the year, and only twenty-eight of them reached Bombay
alive.
Angria, being broad-minded on the subject of his new
profession, did not limit himself to taking only English vessels,
for meeting with two Chinese junks, laden with spices and riches,
he plundered them both, and tying the crew back to back threw
them into the sea to drown. One of the Chinamen, while watching
his companions being drowned, managed to get a hand free from his
ropes, and, taking his dagger, stabbed Angria, but, missing his
heart, only wounded him in the shoulder. To punish him the pirate
had the skin cut off his back and then had him beaten with canes.
Then lashing him firmly down to a raft he was thrown overboard.
After drifting about for three days and nights he was picked up,
still alive, by a fishing-boat and carried to Bombay, where,
fully recovered, he lived the rest of his days.
Angria continued his activities for three years, during which
space he was said to have murdered in cold blood over 500
Englishmen. He was eventually chased by Commander Jones in H.M.S.
Asia, sixty-four guns, into Timor, and after a close siege
of the town for twelve months, Angria was shot by one of the mob
while haranguing them from a balcony.
After Commander Jones's death his widow built a tower at
Shooter's Hill, by Woolwich Common, to perpetuate the memory of
her husband who had rid the Indian Ocean of the tyrant
Angria.[Pg
32]
The following lines are from the pen of Robert Bloomfield, and
allude to this monument:
Yon far-famed monumental
tower
Records the achievements of
the brave,
And Angria's subjugated
power,
Who plunder'd on the Eastern
Wave.
ANSTIS, Captain Thomas.
The first mention of the name of this notorious pirate occurs
in the year 1718, when we hear of him shipping himself at
Providence in a sloop called the Buck in company with five
other rascals who were conspiring together to seize the vessel
and with her go "a-pyrating."
Of these five, one was Howel Davis, who was afterwards killed
in an affair at the Island of Princes; another, Denman Topping,
who was killed in the taking of a rich Portuguese ship on the
coast of Brazil; a third, Walter Kennedy, was eventually hanged
at Execution Dock, while the two others, who escaped the usual
end of pirates—that is, by hanging, shooting, or drowning
in saltwater or rum—disappeared into respectable obscurity
in employment of some sort in the City of London.
This party of six conspirators was the nucleus of a very
powerful combination of pirates, which eventually came under the
command of the famous Captain Roberts.
Anstis's pirate career began as did most others. They cruised
about amongst the West India Islands, seizing and plundering all
merchant ships they chanced upon, and, if we are to believe some
of the stories that were circulated at the time of their
treatment of their prisoners, they appear to have been an even
rougher lot of scoundrels than was usual.
Before long they seized a very stout ship, the Morning
Star, bound from Guinea to Carolina, and fitted her up with
thirty-two cannons taken from[Pg 33] another prize; manned
her with a crew of one hundred men, and put Captain John Fenn in
command. Anstis, as the elder officer, could have had command of
this newer and larger ship, but he was so in love with his own
vessel, the Good Fortune, which was an excellent sailer,
that he preferred to remain in her.
The party now had two stout ships, but, as so often happened,
trouble began to ferment amongst the crew. A large number of
these had been more or less forced to "go a-pyrating," and were
anxious to avoid the consequences, so they decided to send a
round-robin—that is, a petition—signed by all with
their names in a circle so that no rogue could be held to be more
prominent than any other, to ask for the King's pardon.
This round-robin was addressed to "his most sacred Majesty
George, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and
Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith," etc.
This petition was sent to England by a merchant vessel then
sailing from Jamaica, while the crews hid their ships amongst the
mangrove swamps of a small uninhabited island off the coast of
Cuba. Here they waited for nine months for an answer to their
petition to the King, living on turtle, fish, rice, and, of
course, rum ad lib. as long as it lasted.
To pass the time various diversions were instigated,
particularly dancing—a pastime in great favour amongst
pirates. We have a most amusing account left us of a mock court
of justice held by them to try one another of piracy, and he who
was on one day tried as the prisoner would next day take his turn
at being Judge.
This shows a grim sense of humour, as most of those who took
part in these mock trials were certain to end their careers
before a real trial unless they came to a sudden and violent end
beforehand.[Pg 34]
Here is an account of one such mock-trial as given to Captain
Johnson, the historian of the pirates, by an eyewitness:
"The Court and Criminals being both appointed, as also Council
to plead, the Judge got up in a Tree, and had a dirty Taurpaulin
hung over his shoulder; this was done by Way of Robe, with a
Thrum Cap on his Head, and a large Pair of Spectacles upon his
Nose. Thus equipp'd, he settled himself in his Place; and
abundance of Officers attending him below, with Crows,
Handspikes, etc., instead of Wands, Tipstaves, and such like....
The Criminals were brought out, making a thousand sour Faces; and
one who acted as Attorney-General opened the Charge against them;
their Speeches were very laconick, and their whole Proceedings
concise. We shall give it by Way of Dialogue.
"Attor. Gen.: 'An't please your Lordship, and you Gentlemen of
the Jury, here is a Fellow before you that is a sad Dog, a sad
sad Dog; and I humbly hope your Lordship will order him to be
hang'd out of the Way immediately.... He has committed Pyracy
upon the High Seas, and we shall prove, an't please your
Lordship, that this Fellow, this sad Dog before you, has escaped
a thousand Storms, nay, has got safe ashore when the Ship has
been cast away, which was a certain Sign he was not born to be
drown'd; yet not having the Fear of hanging before his Eyes, he
went on robbing and ravishing Man, Woman and Child, plundering
Ships Cargoes fore and aft, burning and sinking Ship, Bark and
Boat, as if the Devil had been in him. But this is not all, my
Lord, he has committed worse Villanies than all these, for we
shall prove, that he has been guilty of drinking Small-Beer; and
your Lordship knows, there never was a sober Fellow but what was
a Rogue. My Lord, I should have spoke much finer than I do now,
but that[Pg
35] as your Lordship knows our Rum is all out, and how
should a Man speak good Law that has not drank a Dram....
However, I hope, your Lordship will order the Fellow to be
hang'd.'
"Judge: '... Hearkee me, Sirrah ... you lousy, pittiful,
ill-look'd Dog; what have you to say why you should not be tuck'd
up immediately, and set a Sun-drying like a Scare-crow?... Are
you guilty, or not guilty?'
"Pris.: 'Not guilty, an't please your Worship.'
"Judge: 'Not guilty! say so again, Sirrah, and I'll have you
hang'd without any Tryal.'
"Pris.: 'An't please your Worship's Honour, my Lord, I am as
honest a poor Fellow as ever went between Stem and Stern of a
Ship, and can hand, reef, steer, and clap two Ends of a Rope
together, as well as e'er a He that ever cross'd salt Water; but
I was taken by one George Bradley' (the Name of him that sat as
Judge,) 'a notorious Pyrate, a sad Rogue as ever was unhang'd,
and he forc'd me, an't please your Honour.'
"Judge: 'Answer me, Sirrah.... How will you be try'd?'
"Pris.: 'By G—— and my Country.'
"Judge: 'The Devil you will.... Why then, Gentlemen of the
Jury, I think we have nothing to do but to proceed to
Judgement.'
"Attor. Gen.: 'Right, my Lord; for if the Fellow should be
suffered to speak, he may clear himself, and that's an Affront to
the Court.'
"Pris.: 'Pray, my Lord, I hope your Lordship will consider
...'
"Judge: 'Consider!... How dare you talk of considering?...
Sirrah, Sirrah, I never consider'd in all my Life.... I'll make
it Treason to consider.'
"Pris.: 'But, I hope, your Lordship will hear some
reason.'[Pg
36]
"Judge: 'D'ye hear how the Scoundrel prates?... What have we
to do with the Reason?... I'd have you to know, Raskal, we don't
sit here to hear Reason ... we go according to Law.... Is our
Dinner ready?'
"Attor. Gen.: 'Yes, my Lord.'
"Judge: 'Then heark'ee you Raskal at the Bar; hear me, Sirrah,
hear me.... You must suffer, for three reasons; first, because it
is not fit I should sit here as Judge, and no Body be hanged....
Secondly, you must be hanged, because you have a damn'd hanging
Look.... And thirdly, you must be hanged, because I am hungry;
for, know, Sirrah, that 'tis a Custom, that whenever the Judge's
Dinner is ready before the Tryal is over, the Prisoner is to be
hanged of Course.... There's Law for you, ye Dog.... So take him
away Gaoler.'"
In August, 1722, the pirates sailed out from their
hiding-place and waylaid the ship which was returning to Jamaica
with the answer to the petition, but to their disappointment
heard that no notice had been taken of their round-robin by the
Government at home.
No time was lost in returning to their old ways, for the very
next day both pirate ships left their hiding-place and sailed out
on the "grand account."
But now their luck deserted them, for the Morning Star
was run aground on a reef by gross neglect on the part of the
officers and wrecked. Most of the crew escaped on to an island,
where Captain Anstis found them next day, and no sooner had he
taken aboard Captain Fenn, Phillips, the carpenter, and a few
others, than all of a sudden down upon them came two men-of-war,
the Hector and the Adventure, so that Anstis had
barely time to cut his cables and get away to sea, hotly pursued
by the Adventure. The latter, in a stiff breeze, was
slowly gaining on the brigantine[Pg 37] when all of a sudden
the wind dropped, the pirates got out the sweeps, and thus
managed, for the time being, to escape. In the meantime the
Hector took prisoner the forty pirates remaining on the
island.
Anstis soon got to work again, and captured several prizes. He
then sailed to the Island of Tobago to clean and refit his ship.
Just when all the guns and stores had been landed and the ship
heeled, as ill-luck would have it, the Winchester,
man-of-war, put into the bay; and the pirates had barely time to
set their ship on fire and to escape into the woods. Anstis had
by now lost all authority over his discontented crew, and one
night was shot while asleep in his hammock.
ANTONIO.
Captain of the Darien Indians and friend to the English
buccaneers.
ARCHER, John Rose.
He learnt his art as a pirate in the excellent school of the
notorious Blackbeard.
In 1723 he was, for the time being, in honest employment in a
Newfoundland fishing-boat, which was captured by Phillips and his
crew. As Phillips was only a beginner at piracy, he was very glad
to get the aid of such an old hand at the game as John Archer,
whom he promptly appointed to the office of quartermaster in the
pirate ship. This quick promotion caused some murmuring amongst
Phillips's original crew, the carpenter, Fern, being particularly
outspoken against it.
Archer ended his days on the gallows at Boston on June 2nd,
1724, and we read that he "dy'd very penitent, with the
assistance of two grave Divines to attend him."[Pg 38]
ARGALL.
Licensed and titled buccaneer.
Believed to have buried a rich treasure in the Isles of
Shoals, off Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in the seventeenth
century.
ARMSTRONG.
Born in London. A deserter from the Royal Navy. One of Captain
Roberts's crew taken by H.M.S. Swallow, from which ship he
had previously deserted.
In an account of his execution on board H.M.S. Weymouth
we read: "Being on board a Man of War there was no Body to press
him to an Acknowledgement of the Crime he died for, nor of
sorrowing in particular for it, which would have been exemplary,
and made suitable Impressions on seamen; so that his last Hour
was spent in lamenting and bewailing his Sins in general,
exhorting the Spectators to an honest and good life, in which
alone they could find Satisfaction."
This painful scene ended by the condemned singing with the
spectators a few verses of the 140th Psalm: at the conclusion of
which, at the firing of a gun, "he was tric'd up at the Fore
Yard."
Died at the age of 34.
ARNOLD, Sion.
A Madagascar pirate, who was brought to New England by Captain
Shelley in 1699.
ASHPLANT, Valentine.
Born in the Minories, London. He served with Captain Howell
Davis, and later with Bartholomew Roberts. He was one of the
leading lights of Roberts's crew, a member of the "House of
Lords."
He took part in the capture and plundering of the[Pg 39]
King Solomon at Cape Apollonia, North-West Coast of
Africa, in January, 1719, when the pirates, in an open boat,
attacked the ship while at anchor. Ashplant was taken prisoner
two years later by H.M.S. Swallow. Tried for piracy at
Cape Coast Castle and found guilty in March, 1722, and hanged in
chains there at the age of 32.
ATWELL.
A hand aboard the brig Vineyard in 1830, he took part
with Charles Gibbs and others in a mutiny in which both the
captain and mate was murdered.
AUGUR, Captain John.
A pirate of New Providence, Bahama Islands. He accepted the
royal pardon in 1718, and impressed the Governor, Woodes Rogers,
so favourably that he was placed in command of a sloop to go and
trade amongst the islands. A few days out Augur met with two
sloops, "the sight of which dispelled all memory of their late
good intention," and turning pirates once more, they seized the
two sloops and took out of them money and goods to the value of
£500.
The pirates now sailed for Hispaniola, but with bad luck, or
owing to retribution, a sudden hurricane arose which drove them
back to the one spot in the West Indies they must have been most
anxious to avoid—that is, the Bahama Islands. Here the
sloop became a total wreck, but the crew got ashore and for a
while lay hidden in a wood. Rogers, hearing where they were, sent
an armed sloop to the island, and the captain by fair promises
induced the eleven marooned pirates to come aboard. Taking these
back to Providence, Rogers had them all tried before a court of
lately converted pirates, and they were condemned to[Pg 40] be
hanged. While standing on the gallows platform the wretched
culprits reproached the crowd of spectators, so lately their
fellow-brethren in piracy, for allowing their old comrades to be
hanged, and urging them to come to the rescue. But virtue was
still strong in these recent converts, and all the comfort the
criminals got was to be told "it was their Business to turn their
Minds to another World, and sincerely to repent of what
Wickedness they had done in this." "Yes," answered the now
irritated and in no-wise abashed Augur, "I do heartily
repent: I repent I have not done more Mischief, and that we did
not cut the Throats of them that took us, and I am extremely
sorry that you an't all hang'd as well as we."
AUSTIN, James.
Captured with the rest of Captain John Quelch's crew in the
brigantine Charles. Escaped for a time, but was caught and
secured in the gaol at Piscataqua, and later on tried for piracy
at the Star Tavern at Boston in June, 1704.
AVERY, Captain John, alias Henry Every, alias
Captain Bridgeman. Nicknamed "Long Ben," or the
"Arch-Pirate."
In the year 1695, when at the height of his career, Avery
caught the public's fancy as no other pirate ever did, with the
possible exception of Captain Kidd. So much so that his
achievements, or supposed achievements, formed the plot of
several popular novels and plays.
Charles Johnson wrote a play called "The Successful Pyrate,"
which work ran into several editions, and was acted at the
Theatre Royal in Drury Lane.
The scene in this play was laid in the Island of[Pg 41]
Madagascar, and the hero was modelled on Captain Avery.
This pirate was a Devonshire man, being born near Plymouth
about the year 1665, and was bred to the sea. He sailed on
several voyages as mate aboard a merchantman. He was later
appointed first officer in an armed privateer The Duke,
Commander Captain Gibson, which sailed from Bristol for Spain,
being hired by the Spaniards for service in the West Indies
against the French pirates.
Avery soon plotted a mutiny, which was carried out while
The Duke lay at anchor in Cadiz Harbour; the ship was
seized, and the captain put ashore. Avery was elected captain,
and he renamed the ship the Charles the Second. For more
than a year Avery sailed in this vessel, preying without
distinction upon persons of all nations and religions.
After leaving Spain he first sailed to the Isle of May,
holding the Portuguese governor for ransom till provisions were
sent on board. He took near here three English ships, then sailed
to the coast of Guinea to procure slaves. To catch these Avery
would anchor off a village and hoist English colours. The
trusting negroes would then paddle off to the ship in canoes,
bringing gold to traffic with. At a given signal these natives
would be seized, clapped in irons, and thrown into the hold.
Avery next sailed to the Island of Princes, where he attacked
two Danish ships, and took them both. The next place the pirates
touched at was Madagascar, from there they sailed to the Red Sea
to await the fleet expected from Mocha. To pass the time and to
earn an honest penny the pirates called in at a town called Meat,
there to sell to the natives some of their stolen merchandise.
But the cautious inhabitants refused to do any business with
these suspicious looking merchants, so in order to punish them
the pirates burnt[Pg 42] down their town. They next visited
Aden, where they met two other English pirate ships, and were
soon joined by three others from America, all on the same
enterprise.
Expecting the Mocha fleet to come along, they waited here, but
the fleet slipped past the pirates in the night. Avery was after
them the next morning, and catching them up, singled out the
largest ship, fought her for two hours, and took her. She proved
to be the Gunsway, belonging to the Great Mogul himself,
and a very valuable prize, as out of her they took 100,000 pieces
of eight and a like number of chequins, as well as several of the
highest persons of the court who were passengers on a pilgrimage
to Mecca. It was rumoured that a daughter of the Great Mogul was
also on board. Accounts of this exploit eventually reached
England, and created great excitement, so that it soon became the
talk of the town that Captain Avery had taken the beautiful young
princess to Madagascar, where he had married her and was living
in royal state, the proud father of several small princes and
princesses.
The Mogul was naturally infuriated at this outrage on his
ship, and threatened in retaliation to lay waste all the East
India Company's settlements.
Having got a vast booty, Avery and his friends sailed towards
Madagascar, and on the way there Avery, as admiral of the little
fleet, signalled to the captain of the other sloops to come
aboard his vessel. When they arrived Avery put before them the
following ingenious scheme. He proposed that the treasures in the
two sloops should, for safety, be put into his keeping till they
all three arrived in Madagascar. This, being agreed to, was done,
but during the night, after Avery had explained matters to his
own men, he altered his course and left the sloops, and never saw
them again. He now sailed away with all the[Pg 43]
plunder to the West Indies, arriving safely at New Providence
Island in the Bahamas, where he offered the Governor a bribe of
twenty pieces of eight and two pieces of gold to get him a
pardon. Avery arrived in 1696 at Boston, where he appears to have
successfully bribed the Quaker Governor to let him and some of
his crew land with their spoils unmolested. But the pirate did
not feel quite safe, and also thought it would be wellnigh
impossible to sell his diamonds in the colony without being
closely questioned as to how he came by them. So, leaving
America, he sailed to the North of Ireland, where he sold the
sloop. Here the crew finally dispersed, and Avery stopped some
time in Dublin, but was still unable to dispose of his stolen
diamonds. Thinking England would be a better place for this
transaction, he went there, and settled at Bideford in Devon.
Here he lived very quietly under a false name, and through a
friend communicated with certain merchants in Bristol. These came
to see him, accepted his diamonds and some gold cups, giving him
a few pounds for his immediate wants, and took the valuables to
Bristol to sell, promising to send him the money procured for
them. Time dragged on, but nothing came from the Bristol
merchants, and at last it began to dawn on Avery that there were
pirates on land as well as at sea. His frequent letters to the
merchants brought at the most but a few occasional shillings,
which were immediately swallowed up by the payment of his debts
for the bare necessities of life at Bideford. At length, when
matters were becoming desperate, Avery was taken ill and died
"not being worth as much as would buy him a coffin." Thus ended
Avery, "the Grand Pirate," whose name was known all over Europe,
and who was supposed to be reigning as a king in Madagascar when
all the while he was hiding and starving in a cottage at
Bideford.[Pg
44]
AYLETT, Captain.
This buccaneer was killed by an explosion of gunpowder on
board the Oxford during a banquet of Morgan's captains off
Hispaniola in 1669.
BAILY, Job, or Bayley.
Of London.
One of Major Stede Bonnet's crew. Hanged at Charleston in
1718.
BAKER, Captain.
One of Gasparilla's gang up to 1822, when they were broken up
by the United States Navy. His favourite hunting-ground was the
Gulf of Mexico.
BALL, Roger.
One of Captain Bartholomew's crew in the Royal Fortune.
Captured by H.M.S. Swallow off the West Coast of Africa.
He had been terribly burnt by an explosion of a barrel of
gunpowder, and while seated "in a private corner, with a look as
sullen as winter," a surgeon of the king's ship came up and asked
him how he came to be blown up in that frightful manner. "Why,"
says he, "John Morris fired a pistol into the powder, and if he
had not done it, I would." The surgeon, with great kindness,
offered to dress the prisoner's wounds, but Ball, although in
terrible pain, refused to allow them to be touched. He died the
same night.
BALLET, John. Buccaneer.
Third mate on board Woodes Rogers's ship, the Duke, but
was by profession a surgeon, in which latter capacity he had
sailed on a previous voyage with Dampier.[Pg 45]
BALTIZAR, Captain.
A terror to all shipping in the Gulf of Mexico in the early
part of the nineteenth century. Brought to Boston as a prisoner
in 1823, taken thence to Kingston, Jamaica, and there hanged. For
some extraordinary reason the American juries seldom would
condemn a pirate to death, so that whenever possible the pirate
prisoners were handed over to the English, who made short shift
with them.
BANNISTER, Captain.
Ran away from Port Royal, Jamaica, in June, 1684, on a
"privateering" venture in a ship of thirty guns. Caught and
brought back by the frigate Ruby, and put on trial by the
Lieutenant-Governor Molesworth, who was at that time very active
in his efforts to stamp out piracy in the West Indies.
Bannister entirely escaped punishment, capital or otherwise,
as he was released by the grand jury on a technical point, surely
most rare good fortune for the captain in days when the law was
elastic enough to fit most crimes, and was far from lenient on
piracy. Six months later the indefatigable captain again eluded
the forts, and for two years succeeded in dodging the frigates
sent out by Governor Molesworth to capture him. Finally, in
January, 1687, Captain Spragge sailed victoriously into Port
Royal with Bannister and three other buccaneers hanging at the
yard-arm, "a spectacle of great satisfaction to all good people,
and of terror to the favourers of pirates."
BARBAROSSA, or
"Redbeard" (his real name was URUJ). Barbary Corsair.
Son of a Turkish renegade and a Christian mother. Born in the
Island of Lesbon in the Ægean Sea, a stronghold of the
Mediterranean pirates.
In 1504 Barbarossa made his headquarters at Tunis,[Pg 46] in
return for which he paid the Sultan one-fifth of all the booty he
took. One of his first and boldest exploits was the capture of
two richly laden galleys belonging to Pope Julius II., on their
way from Genoa to Civita Vecchia. Next year he captured a Spanish
ship with 500 soldiers on board. In 1512 he was invited by the
Moors to assist them in an attempt to retake the town and port of
Bujeya from the Spaniards. After eight days of fighting,
Barbarossa lost an arm, and the siege was given up, but he took
away with him a large Genoese ship. In 1516 Barbarossa changed
his headquarters to Jijil, and took command of an army of 6,000
men and sixteen galliots, with which he attacked and captured the
Spanish fortress of Algiers, of which he became Sultan.
Barbarossa was by now vastly rich and powerful, his fleets
bringing in prizes from Genoa, Naples, Venice, and Spain.
Eventually Charles V. of Spain sent an army of 10,000 troops
to North Africa, defeated the corsairs, and Barbarossa was slain
in battle.
BARBE, Captain Nicholas.
Master of a Breton ship, the Mychell, of St. Malo,
owned by Hayman Gillard. Captured by an English ship in 1532. Her
crew was made up of nine Bretons and five Scots.
BARNARD, Captain. Buccaneer.
In June, 1663, this buccaneer sailed from Port Royal to the
Orinoco. He took and plundered the town of Santo Tomas, and
returned the following March.
BARNES, Captain.
In 1677 several English privateers surprised and sacked the
town of Santa Marta in the Spanish Main.[Pg 47] To
save the town from being burnt, the Governor and Bishop became
hostages until a ransom had been paid. These the pirates, under
the command of Captains Barnes and Coxon, carried back to Jamaica
and delivered up to Lord Vaughan, the Governor of the island.
Vaughan treated the Bishop well, and hired a vessel specially to
send him back to Castagona, for which kindness "the good old man
was exceedingly pleased."
BARNES, Henry.
Of Barbadoes.
Tried for piracy at Newport in 1723, but found to be not
guilty.
BARROW, James.
Taken by Captain Roberts out of the Martha snow
(Captain Lady). Turned pirate and served in the Ranger in
1721.
BELLAMY, Captain Charles. Pirate, Socialist, and orator. A
famous West Indian filibuster.
He began life as a wrecker in the West Indies, but this
business being uncertain in its profits, and Bellamy being an
ambitious young man, he decided with his partner, Paul Williams,
to aim at higher things, and to enter the profession of piracy.
Bellamy had now chosen a calling that lent itself to his
undoubted talents, and his future career, while it lasted, was a
brilliant one.
Procuring a ship, he sailed up and down the coast of Carolina
and New England, taking and plundering numerous vessels; and when
this neighbourhood became too hot for him he would cruise for a
while in the cooler climate of Newfoundland.
Bellamy had considerable gifts for public speaking, and seldom
missed an opportunity of addressing the[Pg 48]
assembled officers and crews of the ships he took, before
liberating or otherwise disposing of them.
His views were distinctly Socialistic. On one occasion, in an
address to a Captain Beer, who had pleaded to have his sloop
returned to him, Captain Bellamy, after clearing his throat,
began as follows: "I am sorry," he said, "that you can't have
your sloop again, for I scorn to do anyone any
mischief—when it is not to my advantage—though you
are a sneaking puppy, and so are all those who will submit to be
governed by laws which rich men have made for their own security,
for the cowardly whelps have not the courage otherwise to defend
what they get by their knavery. But damn ye altogether for a pack
of crafty rascals, and you, who serve them, for a parcel of
hen-hearted numbskulls! They vilify us, the scoundrels do, when
there is the only difference that they rob the poor under cover
of the law, forsooth, and we plunder the rich under the
protection of our own courage. Had you not better make one of us
than sneak after these villains for employment?"
Bellamy's fall came at last at the hands of a whaler captain.
At the time he was in command of the Whidaw and a small
fleet of other pirate craft, which was lying at anchor in the Bay
of Placentia in Newfoundland. Sailing from Placentia for
Nantucket Shoals, he seized a whaling vessel, the Mary
Anne. As the skipper of the whaler knew the coast well,
Bellamy made him pilot of his small fleet. The cunning skipper
one night ran his ship on to a sand-bank near Eastman,
Massachusetts, and the rest of the fleet followed his stern light
on to the rocks. Almost all the crews perished, only seven of the
pirates being saved. These were seized and brought to trial,
condemned, and hanged at Boston in 1726. The days spent between
the sentence and the hanging were not wasted, for we read in a
contemporary[Pg 49] account that "by the indefatigable
pains of a pious and learned divine, who constantly attended
them, they were at length, by the special grace of God, made
sensible of and truly penitent for the enormous crimes they had
been guilty of."
BELVIN, James.
Bo'son to Captain Gow, the pirate. He had the reputation of
being a good sailor but a bloodthirsty fellow. Was hanged at
Wapping in June, 1725.
BEME, Francis.
In 1539 this Baltic pirate was cruising off Antwerp, waiting
to waylay English merchant vessels.
BENDALL, George, or Bendeall.
A flourishing pirate, whose headquarters, in the early
eighteenth century, were in New Providence Island.
In the year 1717, King George offered a free pardon to all
freebooters who would come in and give themselves up. But the
call of the brotherhood was too strong for a few of the "old
hands," and Bendall, amongst others, was off once again to carry
on piracy around the Bahama and Virgin Islands. Within a few
years these last "die-hards" were all killed, drowned, caught, or
hanged.
BENNETT, William.
An English soldier, who deserted from Fort Loyal, Falmouth,
Marne, in 1689, and joined the pirate Pounds. Was sent to prison
at Boston, where he died.
BILL, Philip.
Belonged to the Island of St. Thomas.
One of Captain Roberts's crew. Hanged at the age of
27.[Pg
50]
BISHOP.
An Irishman. Chief mate to the pirate Captain Cobham.
BISHOP, Captain.
In 1613, Bishop and a few other English seamen set up as
pirates at Marmora on the Barbary Coast.
BISHOP, William.
One of Avery's crew. Hanged at Execution Dock in 1691.
BLADS, William.
Born in Rhode Island.
One of Captain Charles Harris's crew. Hanged at Newport on
July 19th, 1723. Age 28.
BLAKE, Benjamin.
A Boston boy, taken prisoner with Captain Pounds's crew at
Tarpaulin Cove.
BLAKE, James.
One of Captain Teach's crew. Hanged in 1718 at Virginia.
BLEWFIELD, Captain, or Blauvelt.
In 1649 this Dutch pirate brought a prize into Newport, Rhode
Island. In 1663 was known to be living among the friendly Indians
at Cape Gratia de Dios on the Spanish Main. He commanded a barque
carrying three guns and a crew of fifty men. He was very active
in the logwood cutting in Honduras. Whether the town and river of
Bluefield take their name from this pirate is uncertain, but the
captain must many a time have gone up the river into the forests
of Nicaragua on his logwood cutting raids.[Pg 51]
BLOT, Captain. French filibuster.
In 1684 was in command of La Quagone, ninety men, eight
guns.
BOLIVAR, Lieutenant.
This Portuguese pirate was first officer to Captain Jonnia. He
was a stout, well-built man of swarthy complexion and keen,
ferocious eyes, huge black whiskers and beard, and a tremendously
loud voice. He took the Boston schooner Exertion at Twelve
League Key on December 17th, 1821.
BOND, Captain.
Of Bristol.
In 1682 arrived at the Cape Verde Islands. Having procured
leave to land on Mayo Island, on the pretence of being an honest
merchant in need of provisions, particularly of beef and goats,
Bond and his crew seized and carried away some of the principal
inhabitants. A year later John Cooke and Cowley arrived at Mayo
in the Revenge, but were prevented by the inhabitants from
landing owing to their recent treatment at the hands of Bond.
BONNET, Major Stede,
alias Captain Thomas, alias Edwards.
The history of this pirate is both interesting and unique. He
was not brought up to the seafaring life; in fact, before he took
to piracy, he had already retired from the Army, with the rank of
Major. He owned substantial landed property in Barbadoes, lived
in a fine house, was married, and much respected by the quality
and gentry of that island. His turning pirate naturally greatly
scandalized his neighbours, and they found it difficult at first
to imagine whatever had caused this sudden and
extraordinary[Pg 52] resolution, particularly in a man of
his position in Society. But when the cause at last came to be
known, he was more pitied than blamed, for it was understood that
the Major's mind had become unbalanced owing to the unbridled
nagging of Mrs. Bonnet. Referring to this, the historian Captain
Johnson writes as follows: "He was afterwards rather pitty'd than
condemned, by those that were acquainted with him, believing that
this Humour of going a-pyrating proceeded from a Disorder in his
Mind, which had been but too visible in him, some Time before
this wicked Undertaking; and which is said to have been
occasioned by some Discomforts he found in a married State; be
that as it will, the Major was but ill qualified for the
Business, as not understanding maritime Affairs." Whatever the
cause of the Major's "disorder of mind," the fact remains that at
his own expense he fitted out a sloop armed with ten guns and a
crew of seventy men. The fact that he honestly paid in cash for
this ship is highly suspicious of a deranged mind, since no other
pirate, to the writer's knowledge, ever showed such a nicety of
feeling, but always stole the ship in which to embark "on the
account." The Major, to satisfy the curious, gave out that he
intended to trade between the islands, but one night, without a
word of farewell to Mrs. Bonnet, he sailed out of harbour in the
Revenge, as he called his ship, and began to cruise off
the coast of Virginia. For a rank amateur, Bonnet met with
wonderful success, as is shown by a list of the prizes he took
and plundered in this first period of his piracy:
The Anne, of Glasgow (Captain Montgomery).
The Turbet, of Barbadoes, which, after plundering, he
burnt, as he did all prizes from Barbadoes.
The Endeavour (Captain Scott).
The Young, of Leith.[Pg 53]
The plunder out of these ships he sold at Gardiner Island,
near New York.
Cruising next off the coast of Carolina, Bonnet took a brace
of prizes, but began to have trouble with his unruly crew, who,
seeing that their captain knew nothing whatever of sea affairs,
took advantage of the fact and commenced to get out of hand.
Unluckily for Bonnet, he at this time met with the famous Captain
Teach, or Blackbeard, and the latter, quickly appreciating how
matters stood, ordered the Major to come aboard his own ship,
while he put his lieutenant, Richards, to command Bonnet's
vessel. The poor Major was most depressed by this undignified
change in his affairs, until Blackbeard lost his ship in Topsail
Inlet, and finding himself at a disadvantage, promptly
surrendered to the King's proclamation and allowed Bonnet to
reassume command of his own sloop. But Major Bonnet had been
suffering from qualms of conscience latterly, so he sailed to
Bath Town in North Carolina, where he, too, surrendered to the
Governor and received his certificate of pardon. Almost at once
news came of war being declared between England and France with
Spain, so Bonnet hurried back to Topsail, and was granted
permission to take back his sloop and sail her to St. Thomas's
Island, to receive a commission as a privateer from the French
Governor of that island. But in the meanwhile Teach had robbed
everything of any value out of Bonnet's ship, and had marooned
seventeen of the crew on a sandy island, but these were rescued
by the Major before they died of starvation. Just as the ship was
ready to sail, a bumboat came alongside to sell apples and cider
to the sloop's crew, and from these they got an interesting piece
of news. They learnt that Teach, with a crew of eighteen men, was
at that moment lying at anchor in Ocricock Inlet. The Major,
longing to revenge the insult he had[Pg 54]
suffered from Blackbeard, and his crew remembering how he had
left them to die on a desert island, went off in search of Teach,
but failed to find him. Stede Bonnet having received his pardon
in his own name, now called himself Captain Thomas and again took
to piracy, and evidently had benefited by his apprenticeship with
Blackbeard, for he was now most successful, taking many prizes
off the coast of Virginia, and later in Delaware Bay.
Bonnet now sailed in a larger ship, the Royal James, so
named from feelings of loyalty to the Crown. But she proved to be
very leaky, and the pirates had to take her to the mouth of Cape
Fear River for repairs. News of this being carried to the Council
of South Carolina, arrangements were made to attempt to capture
the pirate, and a Colonel William Rhet, at his own expense,
fitted out two armed sloops, the Henry (eight guns and
seventy men) and the Sea Nymph (eight guns and sixty men),
both sailing under the direct command of the gallant Colonel. On
September 25th, 1718, the sloops arrived at Cape Fear River, and
there sure enough was the Royal James, with three sloops
lying at anchor behind the bar. The pirate tried to escape by
sailing out, but was followed by the Colonel's two vessels until
all three ran aground within gunshot of each other. A brisk fight
took place for five hours, when the Major struck his colours and
surrendered. There was great public rejoicing in Charleston when,
on October 3rd, Colonel Rhet sailed victoriously into the harbour
with his prisoners. But next day Bonnet managed to escape out of
prison and sailed to Swillivant's Island. The indefatigable
Colonel Rhet again set out after the Major, and again caught him
and brought him back to Charleston.
The trial of Stede Bonnet and his crew began on October 28th,
1718, at Charleston, and continued till[Pg 55]
November 12th, the Judge being Nicholas Trot. Bonnet was found
guilty and condemned to be hanged. Judge Trot made a speech of
overwhelming length to the condemned, full of Biblical
quotations, to each of which the learned magistrate gave chapter
and verse. In November, 1718, the gallant, if unfortunate, Major
was hanged at White Point, Charleston.
Apart from the unusual cause for his turning pirate, Bonnet is
interesting as being almost the only case known, otherwise than
in books of romance, of a pirate making his prisoners walk the
plank.
BONNY, Anne. Female pirate.
Anne was born in County Cork, and her father was an
Attorney-at-Law, who practised his profession in that city, her
mother being lady's maid to the attorney's lawful wife.
The story of the events which led to the existence of Anne may
be read in Johnson's "History of the Pyrates," where it is
recounted in a style quite suggestive of Fielding. In spite of
its sad deficiency in moral tone, the narrative is highly
diverting. But as this work is strictly confined to the history
of the pirates and not to the amorous intrigues of their
forbears, we will skip these pre-natal episodes and come to the
time when the attorney, having lost a once flourishing legal
practice, sailed from Ireland to Carolina to seek a fortune
there, taking his little daughter Anne with him. In new
surroundings fortune favoured the attorney, and he soon owned a
rich plantation, and his daughter kept house for him.
Anne was now grown up and a fine young woman, but had a
"fierce and courageous temper," which more than once led her into
scrapes, as, on one occasion, when in a sad fit of temper, she
slew her English servant-maid with a case-knife. But except for
these[Pg
56] occasional outbursts of passion she was a good and
dutiful girl. Her father now began to think of finding a suitable
young man to be a husband for Anne, which would not be hard to
do, since Anne, besides her good looks, was his heir and would be
well provided for by him. But Anne fell in love with a
good-looking young sailor who arrived one day at Charleston, and,
knowing her father would never consent to such a match, the
lovers were secretly married, in the expectation that, the deed
being done, the father would soon become reconciled to it. But on
the contrary, the attorney, on being told the news, turned his
daughter out of doors and would have nothing more to do with
either of them. The bridegroom, finding his heiress worth not a
groat, did what other sailors have done before and since, and
slipped away to sea without so much as saying good-bye to his
bride. But a more gallant lover soon hove in sight, the handsome,
rich, dare-devil pirate, Captain John Rackam, known up and down
the coast as "Calico Jack." Jack's methods of courting and taking
a ship were similar—no time wasted, straight up alongside,
every gun brought to play, and the prize seized. Anne was soon
swept off her feet by her picturesque and impetuous lover, and
consented to go to sea with him in his ship, but disguised
herself in sailor's clothes before going on board. The lovers
sailed together on a piratical honeymoon until certain news being
conveyed to Captain Rackam by his bride, he sailed to Cuba and
put Anne ashore at a small cove, where he had a house and also
friends, who he knew would take good care of her. But before long
Anne was back in the pirate ship, as active as any of her male
shipmates with cutlass and marlinspike, always one of the leaders
in boarding a prize.
However, the day of retribution was at hand. While cruising
near Jamaica in October, 1720, the[Pg 57] pirates were surprised
by the sudden arrival of an armed sloop, which had been sent out
by the Governor of that island for the express purpose of
capturing Rackam and his crew. A fight followed, in which the
pirates behaved in a most cowardly way, and were soon driven
below decks, all but Anne Bonny and another woman pirate, Mary
Read, who fought gallantly till taken prisoners, all the while
flaunting their male companions on their cowardly conduct. The
prisoners were carried to Jamaica and tried for piracy at St.
Jago de la Vega, and convicted on November 28th, 1720. Anne
pleaded to have her execution postponed for reasons of her
condition of health, and this was allowed, and she never appears
to have been hanged, though what her ultimate fate was is
unknown. On the day that her lover Rackam was hanged he obtained,
by special favour, permission to see Anne, but must have derived
little comfort from the farewell interview, for all he got in the
way of sympathy from his lady love were these words—that
"she was sorry to see him there, but if he had fought like a Man,
he need not have been hang'd like a Dog."
BOON, John.
Member of the Council of Carolina under Governor Colleton, and
expelled from it "for holding correspondence with pirates,"
1687.
BOOTH, Samuel.
Of Charleston, Carolina.
One of Major Bonnet's crew. Hanged at Charleston, South
Carolina, in 1718.
BOURNANO, Captain, or de Bernanos.
In 1679 this famous French filibuster commanded a ship of
ninety tons, armed with six guns, and manned[Pg 58] by a
crew of eighty-six French sailors. Joined Captain Bartholomew
Sharp when he was preparing his expedition to assault the town of
Santa Maria. Bournano was a useful ally, as he was much liked by
the Darien Indians, but his crew quarrelled with the English
buccaneers, and they left Sharp's company. In the year 1684,
Bournano, known by then as Le Sieur de Bernanos, commanded a
ship, La Schite, carrying a crew of sixty men and armed
with eight guns.
la BOUSE, Captain Oliver, or de la Bouche.
French pirate.
When Captain Howel Davis had taken and sacked the fort at
Gambia and with his crew was spending a day in revelry, a ship
was reported, bearing down on them in full sail. The pirates
prepared to fight her, when she ran up the Black Flag and proved
to be a French pirate ship of fourteen guns and sixty-four hands,
half French and half negroes, commanded by Captain La Bouse. A
great many civilities passed between the two captains, and they
agreed to sail down the coast together. Arriving at Sierra Leone,
they found a tall ship lying at anchor. This ship they attacked,
firing a broadside, when she also ran up the Black Flag, being
the vessel of the notorious Captain Cocklyn. For the next two
days the three captains and their crews "spent improving their
acquaintance and friendship," which was the pirate expression for
getting gloriously drunk. On the third day they attacked and took
the African Company's Fort. Shortly afterwards the three captains
quarrelled, and each went his own way. In 1718 La Bouse was at
New Providence Island. In 1720 this pirate commanded the
Indian Queen, 250 tons, armed with twenty-eight guns, and
a crew of ninety men. Sailing from the Guinea Coast to
the[Pg
59] East Indies, de la Bouche lost his ship on the
Island of Mayotta, near Madagascar.
The captain and forty men set about building a new vessel,
while the remainder went off in canoes to join Captain England's
pirates at Johanna.
BOWEN.
A Bristol man. In 1537, when the Breton pirates were becoming
very daring along the south coast of England and Wales, Bowen
contrived to capture fourteen of these robbers, who had landed
near Tenby, and had them put in prison.
BOWEN, Captain John.
The practice of this South Sea pirate extended from Madagascar
to Bengal. He commanded a good ship, the Speaker, a French
vessel, owned by an English company interested in the slave
trade, which Bowen had captured by a cunning ruse. He afterwards
lost his ship off Mauritius, but was well treated by the Dutch
Governor, who supplied doctors, medicine, and food to the
shipwrecked pirates. After three months' hospitality on the
island, Bowen procured a sloop, and in March, 1701, sailed for
Madagascar. As a parting friendly gift to the Governor, he gave
him 2,500 pieces of eight and the wreck of the Speaker,
with all the guns and stores. On arriving at Madagascar, Bowen
erected a fort and built a town. Shortly after this a ship, the
Speedy Return, and a brigantine were so very thoughtless
as to put into the port, and paid for this thoughtlessness by
being promptly seized by Bowen. With these two vessels Bowen and
his merry men went "a-pyrating" again, and with great success,
for in a short time they had gathered together over a million
dollars in coin, as well as vast quantities of valuable
merchandise. The pirates then, most wisely, considering that they
had[Pg
60] succeeded well enough, settled down amongst their
Dutch friends in the Island of Mauritius to a quiet and
comfortable life on shore.
BOWMAN, William.
A seaman; one of the party which crossed the Isthmus of Darien
on foot with Dampier in 1681. Wafer records that Bowman, "a
weakly Man, a Taylor by trade," slipped while crossing a swollen
river, and was carried off by the swift current, and nearly
drowned by the weight of a satchel he carried containing 400
pieces of eight.
BOYD, Robert.
Of Bath Town, North Carolina.
Sailed with Major Stede Bonnet in the Royal James.
Hanged on November 8th, 1718, at Charleston.
BOYZA.
A Columbian.
One of Captain Gilbert's crew in the Panda. Hanged at
Boston in June, 1835.
BRADISH, Captain Joseph.
A notorious pirate. Born at Cambridge, Massachusetts, on
November 28th, 1672. In March, 1689, was in London out of a
berth, and shipped as mate in the hake-boat Adventure,
bound for Borneo on an interloping trade.
In September, 1698, when most of the officers and passengers
were ashore at the Island of Polonais, Bradish and the crew cut
the cable and ran away with the ship. The crew shared the money
which was found in the bread-room, and which filled nine chests,
amounting to about 3,700 Spanish dollars.
Bradish sailed the Adventure to Long
Island,[Pg
61] arriving there on March 19th, 1699. After leaving
their money and jewels on Nassau Island, they sank their ship.
Most of the crew bought horses at the neighbouring farmhouses and
disappeared. Bradish and a few others were rash enough to go to
Massachusetts, where they were promptly arrested and placed in
the Boston Gaol. But the gaolkeeper, one Caleb Ray, was a
relation of Bradish, and allowed him to escape. An offer of a
reward of £200 brought the escaped prisoner back, and he
sailed in irons on H.M.S. Advice, with Kidd and other
pirates, to England, and was hanged in chains in London at Hope
Dock in 1700.
BRADLEY, George.
Master of Captain Fenn's ship, the Morning Star,
wrecked on the Grand Caymans in August, 1722. The crew got ashore
on an island and hid in the woods. Bradley and the other pirates
afterwards surrendered themselves to an English sloop, and were
carried to Bermuda. Bradley escaped to England, and was last
heard of at Bristol.
BREAKES, Captain Hiram.
This Dutch pirate was the second son of a well-to-do
councillor of the Island of Saba in the West Indies. Hiram was
appointed in the year 1764 to a ship which traded between that
island and Amsterdam. In the latter port, Hiram, who was now 19
years of age and a handsome fellow standing over six feet in
height, fell in love with a certain Mrs. Snyde.
Getting command of a small ship that traded between Schiedam,
in Holland, and Lisbon, Breakes for some time sailed between
these ports. Returning to Amsterdam, he and Mrs. Snyde murdered
that lady's husband, but at the trial managed to get
acquitted.[Pg 62]
Breakes's next exploit was to steal his employer's ship and
cargo and go out as a pirate, naming his vessel the
Adventure. His first exploit was a daring one. Sailing
into Vigo Harbour in full view of the forts, he seized a vessel,
the Acapulco, lately come from Valparaiso, and took her
off. On plundering her they found 200,000 small bars of gold,
each about the size of a man's finger. The captain and crew of
this Chilian vessel were all murdered. Breakes preferred the
Acapulco to his own ship, so he fitted her up and sailed
in her to the Mediterranean.
Breakes was one of the religious variety of pirate, for after
six days of robbing and throat-slitting he would order his crew
to clean themselves on the Sabbath and gather on the
quarter-deck, where he would read prayers to them and would often
preach a sermon "after the Lutheran style," thus fortifying the
brave fellows for another week of toil and bloodshed.
Gifted with unlimited boldness, Breakes called in at Gibraltar
and requested the Governor to grant him a British privateer's
commission, which the Governor did "for a consideration." Sailing
in the neighbourhood of the Balearic Islands, he took a few
ships, when one day, spying a nunnery by the sea-shore in
Minorca, he proposed to his crew that they should fit themselves
out with a wife apiece.
This generous offer was eagerly accepted, and the crew, headed
by Captain Breakes, marched up to the nunnery unopposed, and were
welcomed at the door by the lady abbess. Having entered the
peaceful cloister, each pirate chose a nun and marched back to
the ship with their spoils. Soon after this Breakes decided to
retire from piracy, and returned to Amsterdam to claim Mrs.
Snyde. But he found that she had but lately been hanged for
poisoning her little son, of which the pirate was father. This
tragedy so preyed[Pg 63] upon the mind of Captain Breakes
that he turned "melancholy mad" and drowned himself in one of the
many dykes with which that city abounds.
BRECK, John.
One of the crew of the brigantine Charles (Captain John
Quelch). Tried for piracy at Boston in 1704.
BREHA, Captain, alias Landresson.
BRENNINGHAM, Captain.
Of Jamaica and Tortuga.
In 1663 commanded a frigate of six guns and seventy men.
BRIERLY, John, alias Timberhead.
Of Bath Town in North Carolina.
One of the crew of the Royal James. Hanged at
Charleston in November, 1718.
BRIGHT, John.
Of St. Margaret's, Westminster.
One of the crew of Captain Charles Harris. Hanged at Newport,
Rhode Island, in July, 1723, at the age of 25.
BRINKLEY, James.
Of Suffolk, England.
One of Captain Charles Harris's crew. Hanged for piracy at
Newport, Rhode Island, on July 19th, 1723. Age 28.
BRODLEY, Captain Joseph, or Bradley, sometimes called
"Lieutenant-Colonel." "An ancient and expert pirate."
Appointed Vice-Admiral by Morgan in his expedition up the
Chagre River. He was a tough old pirate,[Pg 64] and
had proved himself a terror to the Spaniards, particularly when
Mansvelt took the Isle of St. Catharine. In 1676 Brodley was sent
by Morgan to capture the Castle of Chagre, a very strongly
garrisoned fort. All day the pirates kept up a furious attack,
but were driven back. At last, when it seemed impossible for the
pirates ever to succeed in entering the castle, a remarkable
accident happened which altered the whole issue. One of the
pirates was wounded by an arrow in his back, which pierced his
body and came out the opposite side. This he instantly pulled out
at the side of his breast; then, taking a little cotton, he wound
it about the arrow, and, putting it into his musket, he shot it
back into the castle. The cotton, kindled by the powder, set fire
to several houses within the castle, which, being thatched with
palm-leaves, took fire very easily. This fire at last reached the
powder magazine, and a great explosion occurred. Owing to this
accident of the arrow the pirates were eventually able to take
the Castle of Chagre. This was one of the finest and bravest
defences ever made by the Spaniards. Out of 314 Spanish soldiers
in the castle, only thirty survived, all the rest, including the
Governor, being killed. Brodley was himself severely wounded in
this action and died as a consequence ten days later.
BROOKS, Joseph (senior).
One of Blackbeard's crew in the Queen Ann's Revenge.
Killed on November 22nd, 1718, at North Carolina.
BROOKS, Joseph (junior).
One of Blackbeard's crew in the Queen Ann's Revenge.
Taken prisoner by Lieutenant Maynard on November 22nd, 1718.
Carried to Virginia, where he was tried and hanged.[Pg 65]
BROWN, Captain.
A notorious latter-day pirate, who "worked" the east coast of
Central America in the early part of the nineteenth century.
BROWN, Captain.
On July 24th, 1702, sailed from Jamaica in command of the
Blessing—ten guns and crew of seventy-nine men, with
the famous Edward Davis on board—to attack the town of Tolu
on the Spanish Main. The town was taken and plundered, but Brown
was killed, being shot through the head.
BROWN, Captain Nicholas.
Surrendered to the King's pardon for pirates at New
Providence, Bahamas, in 1718. Soon afterwards he surrendered to
the Spanish Governor of Cuba, embraced the Catholic faith, and
turned pirate once more; and was very active in attacking English
ships off the Island of Jamaica.
BROWN, John.
Of Durham, England.
One of Captain Charles Harris's crew. Hanged at the age of 29
years at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1723.
BROWN, John.
Of Liverpool.
One of Captain Harris's crew. Found guilty of piracy at
Newport, Rhode Island, in 1723, but recommended to the King's
favour, perhaps in view of his age, being but 17 years old.
BROWNE, Captain James.
A Scotchman.
In 1677, when in command of a mixed crew of English, Dutch,
and French pirates, he took a Dutch[Pg 66] ship trading in negroes
off the coast of Cartagena. The Dutch captain and several of his
crew were killed, while the cargo of 150 negroes was landed in a
remote bay on the coast of Jamaica.
Lord Vaughan sent a frigate, which captured about a hundred of
the negro slaves and also Browne and eight of his pirate crew.
The captain and crew were tried for piracy and condemned. The
crew were pardoned, but Browne was ordered to be executed. The
captain appealed to the Assembly to have the benefit of the Act
of Privateers, and the House of Assembly twice sent a committee
to the Governor to beg a reprieve. Lord Vaughan refused this and
ordered the immediate execution of Browne. Half an hour after the
hanging the provost-marshal appeared with an order, signed by the
Speaker, to stop the execution.
BROWNE, Edward.
Of York River, Virginia.
One of Captain Pounds's crew. Wounded at Tarpaulin Cove in
1689.
BROWNE, John, alias Mamme.
An English sailor who joined the Barbary pirates at Algiers
and turned Mohammedan. Taken in the Exchange in 1622 and
carried a prisoner to Plymouth.
BROWNE, Richard. Surgeon.
Surgeon-General in Morgan's fleet which carried the buccaneers
to the Spanish Main. He wrote an account of the disastrous
explosion on board the Oxford during a banquet given to
Morgan and the buccaneer commanders on January 2nd, 1669, off Cow
Island to the south of Hispaniola, at which the details were
being discussed for an attack on Cartagena.[Pg 67]
Browne writes: "I was eating my dinner with the rest when the
mainmasts blew out and fell upon Captains Aylett and Bigford and
others and knocked them on the head. I saved myself by getting
astride the mizzenmast." Only Morgan and those who sat on his
side of the dinner-table were saved.
Browne, who certainly was not biased towards Morgan in his
accounts of his exploits, is one of the few narrators who gives
the buccaneer Admiral credit for moderation towards his
prisoners, particularly women.
BUCK, Eleazer.
One of Captain Pounds's crew. Tried at Boston in 1689 for
piracy and found guilty, but pardoned on payment of a fine of
twenty marks.
BUCKENHAM, Captain.
In 1679 sailed from England to the West Indies. He was taken
by the Spaniards off Campeachy and carried to Mexico. A seaman,
Russel, also a prisoner there, and who escaped afterwards,
reported to Lionel Wafer that he last saw Captain Buckenham with
a log chained to his leg and a basket on his back, crying bread
about the streets of the city of Mexico for his master, a
baker.
BULL, Captain Dixey.
Born in London of a respectable family, and in 1631 went to
Boston, where he received a grant of land at York on the coast of
Maine. Became a "trader for bever" in New England. In June, 1632,
while in Penobscot Bay, a French pinnace arrived and seized his
shallop and stock of "coats, ruggs, blanketts, bisketts, etc."
Annoyed by this high-handed behaviour, Bull collected together a
small[Pg
68] crew and turned pirate, thus being the very first
pirate on the New England coast. Bull took several small vessels,
and was not caught by the authorities, who sent out small armed
sloops to search for him, and nothing more was heard of this
pioneer pirate after 1633, although rumour said that he had
reached England in safety.
BULL, Mr.
A member of the crew of Coxon's canoe, he was killed in the
famous attack by the buccaneers on the Spanish Fleet off Panama
in 1680.
BULLOCK. Surgeon.
One of the crew at the second disastrous attack by Captain
Sharp on the town of Arica, when the buccaneers were driven out
of the town. All escaped who could, except the surgeons, who, in
a most unprofessional way, had been indulging somewhat freely in
the wines of the country during the battle, and consequently were
in no condition to take their places with the retreating force.
The surgeons, after being taken prisoner, were persuaded to
disclose to the Spaniards the prearranged signals by smoke from
two fires, which was to be given in case of a successful taking
of the town, to bring up the boats that were hiding on the shore,
ready to take the buccaneers back to their ships. Fortunately the
buccaneers on the shore arrived just as the canoes were getting
under way, otherwise the whole remnant of them would have
perished. The only one of these disreputable surgeons whose name
we know is Dr. Bullock. Some months afterwards it was
ascertained, through a prisoner, that the Spaniards "civilly
entertained these surgeons, more especially the women." Surgeons,
even such surgeons as these, were considered to be valuable in
those days in the out-of-the-way Spanish colonies.[Pg 69]
BUNCE, Charles.
Born at Exeter; died at the age of 26.
Taken by Captain Roberts out of a Dutch galley in 1721, he
joined the pirates, to be eventually hanged in 1722. He made a
moving speech from the gallows, "disclaiming against the guilded
Bates of Power, Liberty, and Wealth that had ensnared him amongst
the pirates," earnestly exhorting the spectators to remember his
youth, and ending by declaring that "he stood there as a beacon
upon a Rock" (the gallows standing on one) "to warn erring
Marriners of Danger."
BURDER, William.
Mayor of Dover.
It may seem strange to accuse the mayor of so important a
seaport as Dover of being a pirate, but it is difficult to see
how William Burder is to escape the accusation when we learn that
in the year 1563 he captured 600 French vessels and a large
number of neutral craft, which he plundered, and also no fewer
than sixty-one Spanish ships, to the very natural annoyance of
the King of Spain, whose country was at this time at peace with
England.
BURGESS, Captain Samuel South.
Born and bred in New York, he was a man of good education, and
began his career on a privateer in the West Indies. Later on he
was sent by a Mr. Philips, owner and shipbuilder, to trade with
the pirates in Madagascar. This business Burgess augmented with a
little piracy on his own account, and after taking several prizes
he returned to the West Indies, where he disposed of his loot. He
then proceeded to New York, and, purposely wrecking his vessel at
Sandy Hook, landed in the guise of an honest shipwrecked
mariner.[Pg
70]
Burgess settled down for a time to a well-earned rest, and
married a relative of his employer, Mr. Philips.
Philips sent him on two further voyages, both of which were
run on perfectly honest lines, and were most successful both to
owner and captain. But a later voyage had an unhappy ending.
After successfully trading with the pirates in Madagascar,
Burgess was returning home, carrying several pirates as
passengers, who were returning to settle in America, having made
their fortunes. The ship was captured off the Cape of Good Hope
by an East Indiaman, and taken to Madras. Here the captain and
passengers were put in irons and sent to England to be tried. The
case against Burgess fell through, and he was liberated. Instead
of at once getting away, he loitered about London until one
unlucky day he ran across an old pirate associate called
Culliford, on whose evidence Burgess was again arrested, tried,
and condemned to death, but pardoned at the last moment by the
Queen, through the intercession of the Bishop of London. After a
while he procured the post of mate in the Neptune, a
Scotch vessel, which was to go to Madagascar to trade liquors
with the pirates who had their headquarters in that delectable
island. On arrival at Madagascar a sudden hurricane swept down,
dismasted the Neptune, and sank two pirate ships. The
chief pirate, Halsey, as usual, proved himself a man of resource.
Seeing that without a ship his activities were severely
restricted, he promptly, with the help of his faithful and
willing crew, seized the Neptune, this satisfactory state
of affairs being largely facilitated by the knowledge that the
mate, Burgess, was all ripe to go on the main chance once more.
The first venture of this newly formed crew was most successful,
as they seized a ship, the Greyhound, which lay in the
bay, the owners[Pg 71] of which had but the previous day
bought—and paid for—a valuable loading of merchandise
from the pirates. This was now taken back by the pirates, who,
having refitted the Neptune, set forth seeking fresh
adventures and prizes. The further history of Burgess is one of
constant change and disappointment.
While serving under a Captain North, he was accused of
betraying some of his associates, and was robbed of all his
hard-earned savings. For several years after this he lived ashore
at a place in Madagascar called Methalage, until captured by some
Dutch rovers, who soon after were themselves taken by French
pirates. Burgess, with his former Dutch captain, was put ashore
at Johanna, where, under the former's expert knowledge, a ship
was built and sailed successfully to Youngoul, where Burgess got
a post as third mate on a ship bound to the West Indies. Before
sailing, Burgess was sent, on account of his knowledge of the
language, as ambassador to the local King. Burgess, unfortunately
for himself, had in the past said some rather unkind things about
this particular ruler, and the offended monarch, in revenge, gave
Burgess some poisoned liquor to drink, which quickly brought to
an end an active if chequered career.
BURGESS, Captain Thomas.
One of the pirates of the Bahama Islands who surrendered to
King George in 1718 and received the royal pardon. He was
afterwards drowned at sea.
BURK, Captain.
An Irishman, who committed many piracies on the coast of
Newfoundland. Drowned in the Atlantic during a hurricane in
1699.
CACHEMARÉE, Captain. French
filibuster.
Commanded the St. Joseph, of six guns and a crew of
seventy men. In 1684 had his headquarters at San Domingo.
CÆSAR.
A negro. One of Teach's crew hanged at Virginia in 1718.
Cæsar, who was much liked and trusted by Blackbeard, had
orders from him to blow up the Queen Ann's Revenge by
dropping a lighted match into the powder magazine in case the
ship was taken by Lieutenant Maynard. Cæsar attempted to
carry out his instructions, but was prevented from doing so by
two of the surrendered pirates.
CÆSAR, Captain.
One of Gasparilla's gang of pirates who hunted in the Gulf of
Mexico. His headquarters were on Sanibel Island.
CALLES, Captain John, or Callis.
A notorious Elizabethan pirate, whose activities were
concentrated on the coast of Wales.
We quote Captain John Smith, the founder of Virginia, who
writes: "This Ancient pirate Callis, who most refreshed himselfe
upon the Coast of Wales, who grew famous, till Queene Elizabeth
of Blessed Memory, hanged him at Wapping."
Calles did not die on the gallows without an attempt at
getting let off. He wrote a long and ingenious letter to Lord
Walsyngham, bewailing his former wicked life and promising, if
spared, to assist in ridding the coast of pirates by giving
particulars of "their roads, haunts, creeks, and maintainers."
One of the chief of these "maintainers," or receivers of stolen
property, was Lord O'Sullivan, or the Sulivan[Pg 73] Bere
of Berehaven. In spite of a long and very plausible plea for
pity, this "ancient and wicked pyrate" met his fate on the gibbet
at Wapping.
CAMMOCK, William.
A seaman under Captain Bartholomew Sharp. He died at sea on
December 14th, 1679, off the coast of Chile. "His disease was
occasioned by a sunfit, gained by too much drinking on shore at
La Serena; which produced in him a celenture, or malignant
fever and a hiccough." He was buried at sea with the usual
honours of "three French vollies."
CANDOR, Ralph.
Tried for piracy with the rest of Captain Lowther's crew at
St. Kitts in March, 1723, and acquitted.
CANNIS, alias Cannis Marcy.
A Dutch pirate who acted as interpreter to Captain Bartholomew
Sharp's South Sea Expedition. Captain Cox and Basil Ringmore took
him with them after the sacking of Hilo in 1679, to come to terms
with the Spanish cavalry over the ransoming of a sugar mill. On
Friday, May 27th, 1680, while ashore with a watering party in the
Gulf of Nicoya, the interpreter, having had, no doubt, his fill
of buccaneering, ran away.
CARACCIOLI, Signor, alias D'Aubigny.
An Italian renegade priest, who became an atheist, Socialist,
and revolutionist, and was living at Naples when Captain Fourbin
arrived there in the French man-of-war Victoire.
Caraccioli met and made great friends with a young French
apprentice in the ship, called Misson, and a place was found for
him on board. The ex-priest[Pg 74] proved himself to be a
brave man in several engagements with the Moors and with an
English warship, and was quickly promoted to be a petty
officer.
Caraccioli, by his eloquence, soon converted most of the crew
to believe in his theories, and when Captain Fourbin was killed
in an action off Martinique with an English ship, Misson took
command and appointed the Italian to be his Lieutenant, and
continued to fight the English ship to a finish. The victorious
crew then elected Misson to be their captain, and decided to "bid
defiance to all nations" and to settle on some out-of-the-way
island. Capturing another English ship off the Cape of Good Hope,
Caraccioli was put in command of her, and the whole of the
English crew voluntarily joined the pirates, and sailed to
Madagascar. Here they settled, and the Italian married the
daughter of a black Island King; an ideal republic was formed,
and our hero was appointed Secretary of State.
Eventually Caraccioli died fighting during a sudden attack
made on the settlement by a neighbouring tribe.
CARMAN, Thomas.
Of Maidstone in Kent.
Hanged at Charleston in 1718 with the rest of Major Bonnet's
crew.
CARNES, John.
One of Blackbeard's crew. Hanged at Virginia in 1718.
CARR, John.
A Massachusetts pirate, one of Hore's crew, who was hiding in
Rhode Island in 1699.[Pg 75]
CARTER, Dennis.
Tried for piracy in June, 1704, at the Star Tavern in Boston.
One of John Quelch's crew.
CARTER, John.
Captured by Major Sewall in the Larimore galley, and
brought into Salem. One of Captain Quelch's crew. Tried at Boston
in 1704.
CASTILLO.
A Columbian sailor in the schooner Panda. Hanged for
piracy at Boston on June 11th, 1835.
la CATA.
A most blood-thirsty pirate and one of the last of the West
Indian gangs.
In 1824, when La Cata was cruising off the Isle of Pines, his
ship was attacked by an English cutter only half his size. After
a furious fight the cutter was victorious, and returned in
triumph to Jamaica with the three survivors of the pirates as
prisoners. One of these was found out at the trial to be La Cata
himself. Hanged at Kingston, Jamaica.
CHANDLER, Henry, alias Rammetham Rise.
Born in Devonshire, his father kept a chandler's shop in
Southwark. An English renegado at Algiers, who had turned
Mohammedan and had become an overseer in the pirates' shipyards.
He was a man of some authority amongst the Moors, and in 1621 he
appointed a slave called Goodale to become master of one of the
pirate ships, the Exchange, in which one Rawlins also
sailed. Owing to the courage and ingenuity of the latter, the
European slaves afterwards seized the ship and brought her into
Plymouth; Chandler being thrown into gaol and afterwards
hanged.[Pg
76]
CHEESMAN, Edward.
Taken prisoner out of the Dolphin, on the Banks of
Newfoundland, by the Pirate Phillips in 1724. With the help of a
fisherman called Fillmore, he killed Phillips and ten other
pirates and brought the ship into Boston Harbour.
CHEVALLE, Daniel.
One of Captain John Quelch's crew. Tried for piracy at Boston
in 1704.
CHILD, Thomas.
In the year 1723, at the age of 15, he was tried for piracy at
Newport, Rhode Island. This child must have seen scores of
cold-blooded murders committed while he sailed with Low and
Harris. Found to be not guilty.
CHRISTIAN, Captain.
In 1702 the town of Tolu was sacked by Captain Brown of the
Blessing. Brown was killed, and Christian was elected to
be captain in his stead. Davis tells us that "Christian was an
old experienced soldier and privateer, very brave and just in all
his actions." He had lived for a long while amongst the Darien
Indians, with whom he was on very friendly terms.
CHULY, Daniel.
Tried for piracy at Boston, Massachusetts, in 1706.
CHURCH, Charles.
Of St. Margaret's, Westminster.
One of Captain Charles Harris's crew. Hanged on July 19th,
1723, at Newport, Rhode Island. Age[Pg 77]
CHURCH, Edward.
In 1830 he served in the brig Vineyard, from New
Orleans to Philadelphia. Took part in the mutiny which was
planned by the notorious pirate Charles Gibbs.
CHURCH, William.
Of the Gertrwycht of Holland.
At the trial at West Africa in 1722 of the crew of Bartholomew
Roberts's, four of the prisoners—W. Church, Phil. Haak,
James White, and Nicholas Brattle—were proved to have
"served as Musick on board the Royal Fortune, being taken
out of several merchant ships, having had an uneasy life of it,
having sometimes their Fiddles, and often their Heads broke, only
for excusing themselves, as saying they were tired, when any
Fellow took it in his Head to demand a Tune." Acquitted.
CHURCHILL, John.
One of Captain George Lowther's crew. Captured by the
Eagle sloop at the Island of Blanco, not far from
Tortuga.
Hanged on March 11th, 1722, at St. Kitts.
CLARKE, Jonathan.
Of Charleston, South Carolina.
One of Major Stede Bonnet's crew. Tried for piracy at
Charleston in 1718, and found to be not guilty.
CLARKE, Richard, alias Jafar.
A renegade English sailor, who turned "Turk"—that is,
became a Mohammedan—and was appointed chief gunner on one
of the Barbary pirate ships.[Pg 78] Captured in the
Exchange, and brought into Plymouth in 1622. He was
hanged.
CLARKE, Robert.
Governor of New Providence, Bahama Islands. Instead of trying
to stamp out the pirates, he did all he could to encourage them,
by granting letters of marque to such men as Coxon, to go
privateering, these letters being quite illegal. The proprietors
of the Bahama Islands turned Clarke out and appointed in his
place Robert Lilburne in 1682.
CLIFFORD, John.
One of Captain John Quelch's crew; tried at the Star Tavern at
Boston in 1704 for piracy. All the accused pleaded "Not guilty"
except Clifford and two others who turned Queen's evidence.
CLINTON, Captain.
One of the notorious