AS
the Pyrates in the
West-Indies have
been so formidable and numerous, that they have interrupted the
Trade
of Europe
into those Parts; and our
English Merchants,
in particular, have suffered more by their Depredations, than by
the
united Force of
France and
Spain, in the late
War: We do not doubt but the World will be curious to know the
Original and Progress of these Desperadoes, who were the Terror of
the trading Part of the World.
But
before we enter upon their particular History, it will not be
amiss,
by way of Introduction, to shew, by some Examples drawn from
History,
the great Mischief and Danger which threaten Kingdoms and
Commonwealths, from the Increase of these sort of Robbers; when
either by the Troubles of particular Times, or the Neglect of
Governments, they are not crush’d before they gather
Strength.It
has been the Case heretofore, that when a single Pyrate has been
suffered to range the Seas, as not being worth the Notice of a
Government, he has by Degrees grown so powerful, as to put them to
the Expence of a great deal of Blood and Treasure, before he was
suppress’d. We shall not examine how it came to pass, that our
Pyrates in the
West-Indies have
continually increased till of late; this is an Enquiry which
belongs
to the Legislature, or Representatives of the People in Parliament,
and to them we shall leave it.Our
Business shall be briefly to shew, what from Beginnings, as
inconsiderable as these, other Nations have suffered.In
the Times of Marius
and Sylla,
Rome was in her
greatest Strength, yet she was so torn in Pieces by the Factions of
those two great Men, that every Thing which concerned the publick
Good was altogether neglected, when certain Pyrates broke out
from
Cicilia, a Country
of Asia Minor,
situate on the Coast of the
Mediterranean,
betwixt Syria
on the East, from whence it is divided by Mount
Tauris, and
Armenia Minor on
the West. This Beginning was mean and inconsiderable, having but
two
or three Ships, and a few Men, with which they cruised about
the
Greek Islands,
taking such Ships as were very ill arm’d or weakly defended;
however, by the taking of many Prizes, they soon increased in
Wealth
and Power: The first Action of their’s which made a Noise, was the
taking of Julius
Cæsar, who was as
yet a Youth, and who being obliged to fly from the Cruelties
of
Sylla, who sought
his Life, went into
Bithinia, and
sojourned a while with
Nicomedes, King of
that Country; in his Return back by Sea, he was met with, and
taken,
by some of these Pyrates, near the Island of
Pharmacusa: These
Pyrates had a barbarous Custom of tying their Prisoners Back to
Back
and throwing them into the Sea; but, supposing
Cæsar to be some
Person of a high Rank, because of his purple Robes, and the Number
of
his Attendants, they thought it would be more for their Profit to
preserve him, in hopes of receiving a great Sum for his Ransom;
therefore they told him he should have his Liberty, provided he
would
pay them twenty Talents, which they judg’d to be a very high
Demand, in our Money, about three thousand six hundred Pounds
Sterling; he smiled, and of his own Accord promised them fifty
Talents; they were both pleased, and surpriz’d at his Answer, and
consented that several of his Attendants should go by his Direction
and raise the Money; and he was left among these Ruffians with no
more than 3 Attendants. He pass’d eight and thirty Days, and seemed
so little concerned or afraid, that often when he went to sleep, he
used to charge them not to make a Noise, threatening, if they
disturbed him, to hang them all; he also play’d at Dice with them,
and sometimes wrote Verses and Dialogues, which he used to repeat,
and also cause them to repeat, and if they did not praise and
admire
them, he would call them Beasts and Barbarians, telling them he
would
crucify them. They took all these as the Sallies of a juvenile
Humour, and were rather diverted, than displeased at them.At
length his Attendants return’d with his Ransom, which he paid, and
was discharged; he sail’d for the Port of
Miletum, where, as
soon as he was arriv’d, he used all his Art and Industry in fitting
out a Squadron of Ships, which he equipp’d and arm’d at his own
Charges; and sailing in Quest of the Pyrates, he surpriz’d them as
they lay at Anchor among the Islands, and took those who had taken
him before, with some others; the Money he found upon them he made
Prize of, to reimburse his Charges, and he carry’d the Men
to
Pergamus or
Troy, and there
secured them in Prison: In the mean Time, he apply’d himself
to
Junius, then
Governor of Asia,
to whom it belonged to judge and determine of the Punishment of
these
Men; but Junius
finding there was no Money to be had, answered
Cæsar, that he
would think at his Leisure, what was to be done with those
Prisoners;
Cæsar took his
Leave of him, returned back to
Pergamus, and
commanded that the Prisoners should be brought out and executed,
according to Law in that Case provided; which is taken Notice of,
in
a Chapter at the End of this Book, concerning the Laws in Cases of
Pyracy: And thus he gave them that Punishment in Earnest, which he
had often threatned them with in Jest.Cæsar
went strait to Rome, where, being engaged in the Designs of his own
private Ambition, as were almost all the leading Men in Rome, the
Pyrates who were left, had Time to increase to a prodigious
Strength;
for while the civil Wars lasted, the Seas were left unguarded, so
that Plutarch
tells us, that they erected diverse Arsenals full of all manner of
warlike Stores, made commodious Harbours, set up Watch-Towers and
Beacons all along the Coasts of
Cilicia; that they
had a mighty Fleet, well equipp’d and furnish’d, with Galliots of
Oars, mann’d, not only with Men of desperate Courage, but also with
expert Pilots and Mariners; they had their Ships of Force, and
light
Pinnaces for cruising and making Discoveries, in all no less than a
thousand Sail; so gloriously set out, that they were as much to be
envied for their gallant Shew, as fear’d for their Force; having
the Stern and Quarters all gilded with Gold and their Oars plated
with Silver, as well as purple Sails; as if their greatest Delight
had been to glory in their Iniquity. Nor were they content with
committing Pyracies and Insolencies by Sea, they committed as great
Depredations by Land, or rather made Conquests; for they took and
sack’d no less than four hundred Cities, laid several others under
Contributions, plundered the Temples of the Gods, and inriched
themselves with the Offerings deposited in them; they often landed
Bodies of Men, who not only plundered the Villages along the Sea
Coast, but ransacked the fine Houses of the Noblemen along the
Tiber.
A Body of them once took
Sextillius and
Bellinus, two
Roman Prætors, in
their purple Robes, going from Rome to their Governments, and
carried
them away with all their Sergeants, Officers and Vergers; they also
took the Daughter of
Antonius a consular
Person, and one who had obtained the Honour of a Triumph, as she
was
going to the Country House of her Father.But
what was most barbarous, was a Custom they had when they took any
Ship, of enquiring of the Person on Board, concerning their Names
and
Country; if any of them said he was a
Roman, they fell
down upon their Knees, as if in a Fright at the Greatness of that
Name, and begg’d Pardon for what they had done, and imploring his
Mercy, they used to perform the Offices of Servants about his
Person,
and when they found they had deceived him into a Belief of their
being sincere, they hung out the Ladder of the Ship, and coming
with
a shew of Courtesy, told him, he had his Liberty, desiring him to
walk out of the Ship, and this in the Middle of the Sea, and when
they observed him in Surprize, as was natural, they used to throw
him
overboard with mighty shouts of Laughter; so wanton they were in
their Cruelty.Thus,
while Rome
was Mistress oft he World, she suffered Insults and Affronts,
almost
at her Gates, from these powerful Robbers; but what for a while
made
Faction cease, and roused the Genius of that People, never used to
suffer Wrongs from a fair Enemy, was an excessive Scarcity of
Provisions in Rome,
occasioned by all the Ships loaden with Corn and Provisions
from
Sicily,
Corsica, and other
Places, being intercepted and taken by these Pyrates, insomuch that
they were almost reduced to a Famine: Upon this,
Pompey the
Great was
immediately appointed General to manage this War; five hundered
Ships
were immediately fitted out, he had fourteen Senators, Men of
Experience in the War, for his Vice-Admirals; and so considerable
an
Enemy, were these Ruffians become, that no less than an Army of a
hundred thousand Foot, and five thousand Horse was appointed to
invade them by Land; but it happened very luckily for
Rome, that
Pompey sail’d out
before the Pyrate had Intelligence of a Design against them, so
that
their Ships were scattered all over the
Mediterranean, like
Bees gone out from a Hive, some one Way, some another, to bring
Home
their Lading; Pompey
divided his Fleet into thirteen Squadrons, to whom he appointed
their
several Stations, so that great Numbers of the Pyrates fell into
their Hands, Ship by Ship, without any Loss; forty Days he passed
in
scouring the
Mediterranean, some
of the Fleet cruizing along the Coast of
Africk, some about
the Islands, and some upon the Italian Coasts, so that often those
Pyrates who were flying from one Squadron, fell in with another;
however, some of them escaped, and these making directly to
Cilicia, and
acquainting their Confederates on Shore with what had happened,
they
appointed a Rendezvous of all the Ships that had escaped at the
Port
of Coracesium,
in the same Country.
Pompey finding the
Mediterranean quite
clear, appointed a Meeting of all his Fleet at the Haven of
Brundusium, and
from thence sailing round into the
Adriatick, he went
directly to attack these Pyrates in their Hives; as soon as he came
near the Coracesium
in Cilicia,
where the Remainder of the Pyrates now lay, they had the Hardiness
to
come and give him Battle, but the Genius of old
Rome prevailed, and
the Pyrates received an entire Overthrow, being all either taken or
destroyed; but as they made many strong Fortresses upon the Sea
Coast, and built Castles and strong Holds up the Country, about the
Foot of Mount
Taurus, he was
obliged to besiege them with his Army; some Places he took by
Storm,
others surrendered to his Mercy, to whom he gave their Lives, and
at
length he made an entire Conquest.But
it is probable, that had these Pyrates receiv’d sufficient Notice
of the Roman
Preparation against them, so as they might have had Time to draw
their scattered Strength into a Body, to have met
Pompey by Sea, the
Advantage appeared greatly on their Side, in Numbers of Shipping,
and
of Men; nor did they want Courage, as may be seen by their coming
out
of the Port of
Coracesium, to give
the Romans
Battle, with a Force much inferior to their’s; I say, had they
overthrown Pompey,
it is likely they would have made greater Attempts, and
Rome, which had
conquer’d the whole World, might have been subdued by a Parcel of
Pyrates.This
is a Proof how dangerous it is to Governments to be negligent, and
not take an early Care in suppressing these Sea Banditti, before
they
gather Strength.The
Truth of this Maxim may be better exemplified in the History
of
Barbarouse, a
Native in the City of
Mitylene, in the
Island of Lesbos,
in the Egean
Sea; a Fellow of ordinary Birth, who being bred to the Sea, first
set
out from thence upon the pyrating Account with only one small
Vessel,
but by the Prizes he took, he gain’d immense Riches, so that
getting a great Number of large Ships, all the bold and dissolute
Fellows of those Islands flock’d to him, and listed in his Service,
for the Hopes of Booty; so that his Strength was increased to a
formidable Fleet: With these he perform’d such bold and adventurous
Actions, that he became the Terror of the Seas. About this Time it
happened that Selim
Eutemi, King of
Algiers, having
refused to pay the accustomed Tribute to the
Spaniards, was
apprehensive of an Invasion from thence; wherefore he treated
with
Barbarouse, upon
the Foot of an Ally, to come and assist him, and deliver him from
paying this Tribute;
Barbarouse readily
came into it, and sailing to
Algiers with a
great Fleet, he put part of his Men on Shore, and having laid a
Plot
to surprize the City, he effected it with great Success, and
murder’d
Selim in a Bath;
soon after which, he was himself crowned King of
Algiers; after this
he made War upon
Abdilabde, King of
Tunis, and
overthrew him in Battle; he extended his Conquests on all Sides;
and
thus from a Thief became a mighty King: and tho’ he was at last
kill’d in Battle, yet he had so well established himself upon that
Throne, that, dying without Issue, he left the Inheritance of the
Kingdom to his Brother, another Pyrate.I
come now to speak of the Pyrates infesting the
West-Indies, where
they are more numerous than in any other Parts of the World, on
several Reasons:First,
Because there are so many uninhabited little Islands and Keys, with
Harbours convenient and secure for cleaning their Vessels, and
abounding with what they often want, Provision; I mean Water,
Sea-Fowl, Turtle, Shell, and other Fish; where, if they carry in
but
strong Liquor, they indulge a Time, and become ready for new
Expeditions before any Intelligence can reach to hurt them.It
may here perhaps be no unnecessary Digression, to explain upon what
they call Keys in the
West-Indies: These
are small sandy Islands, appearing a little above the Surf of the
Water, with only a few Bushes or Weeds upon them, but abound (those
most at any Distance from the Main) with Turtle, amphibious
Animals,
that always chuse the quietest and most unfrequented Place, for
laying their Eggs, which are to a vast Number in the Seasons, and
would seldom be seen, but for this, (except by Pyrates:) Then
Vessels
from Jamaica
and the other Governments make Voyages, called Turtling, for
supplying the People, a common and approved Food with them. I am
apt
to think these Keys,
especially those nigh Islands, to have been once contiguous with
them, and separated by Earthquakes (frequently there) or
Inundations,
because some of them that have been within continual View, as those
nigh Jamaica,
are observed within our Time, to be entirely wasted away and lost,
and others daily wasting. There are not only of the Use above taken
Notice of to Pyrates; but it is commonly believed were always in
buccaneering pyratical Times, the hiding Places for their Riches,
and
often Times a Shelter for themselves, till their Friends on the
Main,
had found Means to obtain Indemnity for their Crimes; for you must
understand, when Acts of Grace were more frequent, and the Laws
less
severe, these Men continually found Favours and Incouragers
at
Jamaica, and
perhaps they are not all dead yet; I have been told many of them
them
still living have been of the same Trade, and left it off only
because they can live as well honestly, and gain now at the hazard
of
others Necks.Secondly,
another Reason why these Seas are chose by Pyrates, is the great
Commerce thither by
French,
Spaniards,
Dutch, and
especially English
Ships: They are sure in the Latitude of these trading Islands, to
meet with Prizes, Booties of Provision, Cloathing, and
Naval-Stores,
and sometimes Money; there being great Sums remitted this Way
to
England; (the
Returns of the Affiento, and private Slave-Trade, to the
Spanish West-Indies:)
And in short, by some one or other, all the Riches of
Potosi.A
third Reason, is the Inconveniency and Difficulty of being pursued
by
the Men of War, the many small Inlets, Lagoons and Harbours, on
these
solitary Islands and Keys, is a natural Security.
’
Tis
generally here that the Pyrates begin their Enterprizes, setting
out
at first with a very small Force; and by infesting these Seas, and
those of the Continent of
North-America, in a
Year’s Time, if they have good luck on their Sides, they accumulate
such Strength, as enables them to make foreign Expeditions: The
first, is usually to
Guiney, taking the
Azores and
Cape de Verd
Islands in their Way, and then to
Brazil and the
East-Indies, where
if they meet with prosperous Voyages, they set down at
Madagascar, or the
neighbouring Islands, and enjoy their ill gotten Wealth, among
their
elder Brethren, with Impunity. But that I may not give too much
Encouragement to the Profession, I must inform my maritime Readers,
that the far greater Part of these Rovers are cut short in the
Pursuit, by a sudden Precipitation into the other World.The
Rise of these Rovers, since the Peace of
Utrecht, or at
least, the great Encrease of them, may justly be computed to
the
Spanish Settlements
in the West Indies;
the Governors of which, being often some hungry Courtiers, sent
thither to repair or make a Fortune, generally Countenance all
Proceedings that bring in Profit: They grant Commissions to great
Numbers of Vessels of War, on Pretence of preventing an interloping
Trade, with Orders to seize all Ships or Vessels whatsoever, within
five Leagues of their Coasts, which our
English Ships
cannot well avoid coming, in their Voyage to
Jamaica. But if the
Spanish Captains
chance to exceed this Commission, and rob and plunder at
Discretion,
the Sufferers are allowed to complain, and exhibit a Process in
their
Court, and after great Expence of Suit, Delay of Time, and other
Inconveniencies, obtain a Decree in their Favour, but then when the
Ship and Cargo comes to be claim’d, with Costs of Suit, they find,
to their Sorrow, that it has been previously condemn’d, and the
Plunder divided among the Crew; the Commander that made the
Capture,
who alone is responsible, is found to be a poor raskally Fellow,
not
worth a Groat, and, no doubt, is plac’d in that Station for the
like Purposes.The
frequent Losses sustain’d by our Merchants abroad, by these
Pyrates, was Provocation enough to attempt something by way of
Reprisal; and a fair Opportunity offering it self in the Year 1716,
the Traders of the
West-Indies, took
Care not to slip it over, but made the best Use of it their
Circumstances would permit.It
was about two Years before, that the
Spanish Galleons,
or Plate Fleet, had been cast away in the Gulf or
Florida; and
several Vessels from the
Havana, were at
work, with diving Engines, to fish up the Silver that was on board
the Galleons.The
Spaniards had
recovered some Millions of Pieces of Eight, and had carried it all
to
the Havana;
but they had at present about 350000 Pieces of Eight in Silver,
then
upon the Spot, and were daily taking up more. In the mean time, two
Ships, and three Sloops, fitted out from
Jamaica,
Barbadoes,
&c. under
Captain Henry
Jennings, sail’d
to the Gulf, and found the
Spaniards there
upon the Wreck; the Money before spoken of, was left on Shore,
deposited in a Store-House, under the Government of two
Commissaries,
and a Guard of about 60 Soldiers.The
Rovers came directly upon the Place, bringing their little Fleet to
an Anchor, and, in a Word, landing 300 Men, they attack’d the
Guard, who immediately ran away; and thus they seized the Treasure,
which they carried off, making the best of their Way to
Jamaica.In
their Way they unhappily met with a
Spanish Ship, bound
from Porto Bello
to the Havana,
with a great many rich Goods,
viz. Bales of
Cochineal, Casks of Indico, and 60000 Pieces of Eight more, which
their Hands being in, they took, and having rifled the Vessel, let
her go.They
went away to Jamaica
with their Booty, and were followed in View of the Port, by
the
Spaniards, who
having seen them thither, went back to the Governor of the
Havana, with the
Account of it, who immediately sent a Vessel to the Governor
of
Jamaica to complain
of this Robbery, and to reclaim the Goods.As
it was in full Peace, and contrary to all Justice and Right, that
this Fact was committed, they were soon made sensible that the
Government at
Jamaica would not
suffer them to go unpunished, much less protect them. Therefore
they
saw a Necessity of shifting for themselves; so, to make bad worse,
they went to Sea again, tho’ not without disposing of their Cargo
to good Advantage, and furnishing themselves with Ammunition,
Provisions, &c.
and being thus made desperate, they turn’d Pyrates, robbing not
the
Spaniards only, but
their own Countrymen, and any Nation they could lay their Hands
on.It
happened about this Time, that the
Spaniards, with
three or four small Men of War, fell upon our Logwood Cutters, in
the
Bay of Campeachy,
and Bay or Honduras;
and after they had made Prizes of the following Ships and Vessels,
they gave the Men belonging to them, three Sloops to carry them
home,
but these Men being made desperate by their Misfortunes, and
meeting
with the Pyrates, they took on with them, and so encreas’d their
Number.The
LIST of Ships and Vessels taken by the
Spanish Men of War
in the Year 1716.The
Stafford, Captain
Knocks, from
New-England, bound
for London.Anne,
——— Gernish,
for ditto.Dove,
——— Grimstone,
for New-England.A
Sloop, ———
Alden, for ditto.A
Brigantine, ———
Mosson, for ditto.A
Brigantine, ———
Turfield, for
ditto.A
Brigantine, ———
Tennis, for ditto.A
Ship, ——— ———
Porter, for ditto.Indian
Emperor,
Wentworth, for
New-England.A
Ship, ———
Rich, Master.Ditto,
——— Bay.Ditto,
——— Smith.Ditto,
——— Stockum.Ditto,
——— Satlely.A
Sloop, ——— ———
Richards, belonging
to New-England.Two
Sloops, ——— ——— belonging to
Jamaica.One
Sloop ——— ——— of
Barbadoes.Two
Ships ——— ——— from
Scotland.Two
Ships ——— ——— from
Holland.The
Rovers being now pretty strong, they consulted together about
getting
some Place of Retreat, where they might lodge their Wealth, clean
and
repair their Ships, and make themselves a kind of Abode. They were
not long in resolving, but fixed upon the Island of
Providence, the
most considerable of the
Bahama Islands,
lying in the Latitude of about 24 Degrees North, and to the
Eastward
of the Spanish
Florida.This
Island is about 28 Miles long, and eleven where broadest, and has a
Harbour big enough to hold 500 Sail of Ships; before which lies a
small Island, which makes two Inlets to the Harbour; at either Way
there is a Bar, over which no Ship of 500 Tun can pass. The
Bahama Islands were
possess’d by the
English till the
Year 1700, when the
French and
Spaniards from
Petit Guavus,
invaded them, took the Fort and Governor in the Island of
Providence,
plunder’d and destroy’d the Settlements,
&c. carried off
half the Blacks, and the rest of the People, who fled to the Woods,
retired afterwards to
Carolina.In
March 1705-6, the House of Lords did in an Address to her late
Majesty, set forth,
‘
That
the French
and Spaniards
had twice, during the Time of the War, over run and plundered
the
Bahama Islands,
that there was no Form of Government there: That the Harbour of the
Isle of Providence,
might be easily put in a Posture of Defence, and that it would be
of
dangerous Consequence, should those Islands fall into the Hands of
the Enemy; wherefore the Lords humbly besought her Majesty to use
such Methods as she should think proper for taking the said Island
into her Hands, in order to secure the same to the Crown of this
Kingdom, and to the Security and Advantage of the Trade
thereof.But,
however it happened, no Means were used in compliance to that
Address, for securing the
Bahama Islands,
till the English
Pyrates had made
Providence their
Retreat and general Receptacle; then ’twas found absolutely
necessary, in order to dislodge that troublesome Colony; and
Information being made by the Merchants to the Government, of the
Mischief they did, and were likely to do, his Majesty was pleased
to
grant the following Order.Whitehall
September 15, 1716.
‘
COmplaint
having been made to his Majesty, by great Number of Merchants,
Masters of Ships and others, as well as by several Governors of his
Majesty’s Islands and Plantations in the
West-Indies; that
the Pyrates are grown so numerous, that they infest not only the
Seas
near Jamaica,
but even those of the Northern Continent of
America; and that,
unless some effectual Means be used, the whole Trade from
Great Britain to
those Parts, will not be only obstructed, but in imminent Danger of
being lost: His Majesty has, upon mature Deliberation in Council,
been pleased, in the first Place, to order a proper Force to be
employ’d for the suppressing the said Pyrates, which Force so to be
employed, is as follows.
‘
A
List of his Majesty’s Ships and Vessels employed, and to be
employed, at the British Governments and Plantations in the
West-Indies.Place
where. Rates, Ships, Guns. Jamaica, 5 Adventure, 40 Now there. Diamond, 40 Sail'd from
hence thither 5th of last Month. Ludlow
Castle, 40 To carry
the Governor. Swift
Sloop, Now there. 6 Winchelsea, 20 Surveying
the Coast of the West-Indies, and then to
return Home; but, during
her being at Jamaica, is to join the
others, for Security of the
Trade, and intercepting Pyrates. Barbadoes, 5 Scarborough, 30 Now there. Leeward
Islands, 6 Seaford,Now there. Tryal
Sloop, 6 Virginia, 6 Lime, 20 Now there. 5 Shoreham, 30 Order'd
Home. Pearl, 40 Sailed
thither from Home the 7th of last Month,
and is to cruise about
the Capes. New-York, 6 Phoenix, 30 Now there. New-England, Squirrel, 20 Rose, 20 Order'd
Home.
‘
Those
at Jamaica,
Barbadoes and the
Leeward Islands, are to join upon Occasion, for annoying the
Pyrates,
and the Security of the Trade: And those at
New-England,
Virginia and
New-York, are to do
the like.Besides
these Frigots, two Men of War were ordered to attend Captain
Rogers, late
Commander of the two
Bristol Ships,
called the Duke
and Dutchess,
that took the rich
Acapulca Ship, and
made a Tour round the Globe. This Gentleman received a Commission
from his Majesty, to be Governor of the Island of
Providence, and was
vested with Power to make Use of all possible Methods for reducing
the Pyrates; and that nothing might be wanting, he carried with
him,
the King’s Proclamation of Pardon, to those who should return to
their Duty by a certain Time; the Proclamation is as
follows;By
the KING,A
PROCLAMATION, for suppressing of PYRATES.GEORGE
R.WHereas
we have received Information, that several Persons, Subjects
of
Great Britain, have
since the 24th
Day of June,
in the Year of our Lord
1715, committed
divers Pyracies and Robberies upon the High-Seas, in the
West-Indies, or
adjoyning to our Plantations, which hath and may Occasion great
Damage to the Merchants of
Great Britain, and
others trading into those Parts; and tho’ we have appointed such a
Force as we judge sufficient for suppressing the said Pyrates, yet
the more effectually to put an End to the same, we have thought
fit,
by and with the Advice of our Privy Council, to Issue this our
Royal
Proclamation; and we do hereby promise, and declare, that in Case
any
of the said Pyrates, shall on or before the
5th of
September, in the
Year of our Lord
1718, surrender him
or themselves, to one of our Principal Secretaries of State in
Great Britain or
Ireland, or to any
Governor or Deputy Governor of any of our Plantations beyond the
Seas; every such Pyrate and Pyrates so surrendering him, or
themselves, as aforesaid, shall have our gracious Pardon, of and
for
such, his or their Pyracy, or Pyracies, by him or them committed
before the fifth of
January next
ensuing. And we do hereby strictly charge and command all our
Admirals, Captains, and other Officers at Sea, and all our
Governors
and Commanders of any Forts, Castles, or other Places in our
Plantations, and all other our Officers Civil and Military, to
seize
and take such of the Pyrates, who shall refuse or neglect to
surrender themselves accordingly. And we do hereby further declare,
that in Case any Person or Persons, on, or after, the
6th Day of
September 1718,
shall discover or seize, or cause or procure to be discovered or
seized, any one or more of the said Pyrates, so refusing or
neglecting to surrender themselves as aforesaid, so as they may be
brought to Justice, and convicted of the said Offence, such Person
or
Persons, so making such Discovery or Seizure, or causing or
procuring
such Discovery or Seizure to be made, shall have and receive as a
Reward for the same,
viz. for every
Commander of any private Ship or Vessel, the Sum of
100 l. for every
Lieutenant, Master, Boatswain, Carpenter, and Gunner, the Sum
of
40 l; for every
inferior Officer, the Sum of
30 l. and for every
private Man, the Sum of
20 l. And if any
Person or Persons, belonging to and being Part of the Crew of any
such Pyrate Ship or Vessel, shall on or after the said sixth Day
of
September 1718,
seize and deliver, or cause to be seized or delivered, any
Commander
or Commanders, of such Pyrate Ship or Vessel, so as that he or they
be brought to Justice, and convicted of the said Offence, such
Person
or Persons, as a Reward for the same, shall receive for every such
Commander, the Sum of
200 l. which said
Sums, the Lord Treasurer, or the Commissioners of our Treasury for
the Time being, are hereby required, and desired to pay
accordingly.Given
at our Court, at
Hampton-Court,
thefifth Day of
September, 1717, in
thefourth Year of
our Regin.God
save the KING.Before
Governor Rogers
went over, the Proclamation was sent to them, which they took
as
Teague took the
Covenant, that is, they made Prize of the Ship and Proclamation
too;
however, they sent for those who were out a Cruising, and called a
general Council, but there was so much Noise and Glamour, that
nothing could be agreed on; some were for fortifying the Island, to
stand upon their own Terms, and Treating with the Government upon
the
Foot of a Commonwealth; others were also for strengthening the
Island
for their own Security, but were not strenuous for these
Punctillios,
so that they might have a general Pardon, without being obliged to
make any Restitution, and to retire, with all their Effects, to the
neighbouring British
Plantations.But
Captain Jennings,
who was their Commadore, and who always bore a great Sway among
them,
being a Man of good Understanding, and good Estate, before this
Whim
took him of going a Pyrating, resolved upon surrendering, without
more ado, to the Terms of the Proclamation, which so disconcerted
all
their Measures, that the
Congress broke up
very abruptly without doing any Thing; and presently
Jennings, and by
his Example, about 150 more, came in to the Governor of
Bermudas, and had
their Certificates, tho’ the greatest Part of them returned again,
like the Dog to the Vomit. The Commanders who were then in the
Island, besides Captain
Jennings
abovementioned, I think were these,
Benjamin Hornigold, Edward Teach, John Martel, James Fife,
Christopher Winter, Nicholas Brown, Paul Williams, Charles Bellamy,
Oliver la Bouche,
Major Penner, Ed.
England, T. Burgess, Tho. Cocklyn, R. Sample, Charles Vane,
and two or three others:
Hornigold, Williams, Burgess
and la Bouche
were afterwards cast away;
Teach and
Penner killed, and
their Crews taken;
James Fife killed
by his own Men;
Martel’s Crew
destroyed, and he forced on an uninhabited Island;
Cocklyn, Sample and
Vane hanged;
Winter and
Brown surrendered
to the Spaniards
at Cuba,
and England
lives now at
Madagascar.In
the Month of May
or June
1718, Captain Rogers
arrived at his Government, with two of his Majesty’s Ships, and
found several of the abovesaid Pyrates there, who upon the coming
of
the Men of War, all surrendered to the Pardon, except
Charles Vane and
his Crew, which happened after this Manner.I
have before described the Harbour to have two Inlets, by Means of a
small Island lying at the Mouth of it; at one of which, both the
Men
of War entered, and left the other open, so that
Vane slip’d his
Cable, set Fire to a large Prize they had there, and resolutely put
out, firing at the Man of War as he went off.As
soon as Captain
Rogers had settled
himself in his Government, he built a Fort for his Defence, and
garrisoned it with the People he found upon the Island; the
quondam Pyrates, to
the Number of 400, he formed into Companies, appointed Officers of
those whom he most confided in, and then set about to settle a
Trade
with the Spaniards,
in the Gulf of
Mexico; in one of
which Voyages, Captain
Burgess
abovementioned, died, and Captain
Hornigold, another
of the famous Pyrates, was cast away upon Rocks, a great Way from
Land, and perished, but five of his Men got into a Canoe and were
saved.Captain
Rogers sent out a
Sloop to get Provisions, and gave the Command to one
John Augur, one of
the Pyrates, who had accepted of the Act of Grace; in their Voyage
they met with two Sloops, and
John and his
Comrades not yet forgetting their former Business, made Use of
their
old Freedom, and took out of them in Money and Goods, to the Value
of
about 500 l.
after this they steered away for
Hispaniola, not
being satisfy’d whether the Governor would admit them to carry on
two Trades at once, and so thought to have bidden Farewel to
the
Bahama Islands; but
as ill Luck would have it, they met with a violent Turnado, wherein
they lost their Mast, and were drove back to one of the
uninhabited
Bahama’s, and
lost their Sloop; the Men got all ashore, and lived up and down in
the Wood, for a little Time, till Governor
Rogers happening to
hear of their Expedition, and where they had got to, sent out an
armed Sloop to the aforesaid Island; the Master of which, with good
Words and fair Promises, got them on Board, and brought them all
to
Providence, being a
eleven Persons, ten of which were try’d at a Court of Admiralty,
convicted, and hanged by the other’s Evidence, in the Sight of all
their former Companions and fellow Thieves. The Criminals would
fain
have spirited up the pardoned Pyrates, to rescue them out of the
Hands of the Officers of Justice, telling them from the Gallows,
that, They never
thought to have seen the Time, when ten such Men as they should be
ty’d up and hanged like Dogs, and four hundered of their sworn
Friends and Companions quietly standing by to behold the
Spectacle.
One Hamphrey Morrice
urged the Matter further than the rest, taxing them with
Pusilanimity
and Cowardice, as if it were a Breach of Honour in them not to rise
and save them from the ignominious Death they were going to suffer.
But ’twas all in vain, they were now 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 one
of them, I do
heartily repent; I repent I had 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. So do I,
says another: And I,
says a third; and then they were all turned off, without making any
other dying Speeches, except one
Dennis Macarty, who
told the People,
That some Friends of his had often said he should die in his Shoes,
but that he would make them Lyars,
and so kicked them off. And thus ended the Lives, with their
Adventures, of those miserable Wretches, who may serve as sad
Examples of the little Effect Mercy has upon Men once abandoned to
an
evil Course of Life.Least
I be thought severe in my Animadversions upon the
Spanish Proceedings
in the West-Indies,
in respect to their Dealings with us; I shall mention an Instance
or
two, wherein I’ll be as concise as possible, and then transcribe
some original Letters from the Governor of
Jamaica, and an
Officer of a Man of War, to the
Alcaldees of
Trinidado, on the
Island of Cuba,
with their Answers, translated into
English, and then
proceed to the particular Histories of the Pyrates and their Crews,
that have made most Noise in the World in
our own Times.About
March 1722, one of
our Men of War trading upon the Coast,
viz. the
Greyhound Galley,
Captain Walron,
the said Captain invited some of the Merchants to Dinner, who with
their Attendants and Friends came on Board to the Number of 16 or
18
in all; and having concerted Measures, about six or eight dined in
the Cabin, and the rest were waiting on the Deck. While the Captain
and his Guests were at Dinner, the Boatswain Pipes for the Ship’s
Company to dine; accordingly the Men take their Platters, receive
their Provisions, and down they go between Decks, leaving only 4 or
5
Hands besides the
Spaniards, above,
who were immediately dispatched by them, and the Hatches laid on
the
rest; those in the Cabin were as ready as their Companions, for
they
pulled out their Pistols and shot the Captain, Surgeon and another
dead, and grievously wounded the Lieutenant; but he getting out of
the Window upon a Side-Ladder, thereby saved his Life, and so they
made themselves Masters of the Ship in an Instant: But by
accidental
good Fortune, she was recovered before she was carry’d off; for
Captain Walron
having mann’d a Sloop with 30 Hands out of his Ship’s Company,
had sent her to Windward some Days before, also for Trade, which
the
Spaniards knew very
well; and just as the Action was over they saw this Sloop coming
down, before the Wind, towards their Ship; upon which the
Spaniards took
about 10000 l.
in Specie, as I am informed, quitted the Ship, and went off in
their
Launch unmolested.About
the same Time, a
Guard le Coast, of
Porto Rico,
commanded by one
Matthew Luke, an
Italian, took four
English Vessels,
and murthered all the Crews: He was taken by the
Lanceston Man of
War, in May
1722, and brought to
Jamaica, were they
were all but seven deservedly hanged. It is likely the Man of War
might not have meddled with her, but that she blindly laid
the
Lanceston on Board,
thinking she had been a Merchant Ship, who thereupon catched a
Tartar. Afterwards in rummaging there was found a Cartridge of
Powder
made up with a Piece of an
English Journal,
belonging, I believe, to the
Crean Snow; and
upon Examination, at last, it was discovered that they had taken
this
Vessel and murthered the Crew; and one of the
Spaniards, when he
came to die, confessed that he had killed twenty
English Men with
his own Hands.S.
Jago de la Vega, Febr. 20.
A Letter from his Excellency Sir
Nicolas Laws,
our Governor, to the Alcaldes of
Trinidadoon
Cuba, dated
the 26th
of Jan.
1721-2.Gentlemen,
‘
THE
frequent Depredations, Robberies, and other Acts of Hostility,
which
have been committed on the King my Royal Master’s Subjects, by a
Parcel of Banditti, who pretend to have Commissions from you, and
in
Reality are sheltered under your Government, is the Occasion of my
sending the Bearer Captain
Chamberlain,
Commander of his Majesty’s Snow
Happy, to demand
Satisfaction of you for so many notorious Robberies which your
People
have lately committed on the King’s Subjects of this Island;
particularly by those Traytors,
Nicolas Brown and
Christopher Winter,
to whom you have given Protection. Such Proceedings as these are
not
only a Breach of the Law of Nations, but must appear to the World
of
a very extraordinary Nature, when considered that the Subjects of a
Prince in Amity and Friendship with another, should give
Countenance
and encourage such vile Practices. I confess I have had long
Patience, and declined using any violent Measures to obtain
Satisfaction, hoping the Cessation of Arms, so happily concluded
upon
between our respective Sovereigns, would have put an effectual Stop
to those Disorders; but on the contrary, I now find the Port
of
Trinidado a
Receptacle to Villains of all Nations. I do therefore think fit to
acquaint you, and assure you in the King my Master’s Name, that if
I do meet with any of your Rogues for the future upon the Coast of
this Island, I will order them to be hanged directly without Mercy;
and I expect and demand of you to make ample Restitution to
Captain
Chamberlain or all
the Negroes which the said
Brown and Winter
have lately taken off from the North-Side of this Island, and also
of
such Sloops and other Effects as they have been taken and robbed
of,
since the Cessation of Arms, and that you will deliver up to the
Bearer such English
Men as are now detained, or otherwise remain at
Trinidado; and also
expect you will hereafter forbear granting any Commissions, or
suffer
any such notorious Villains to be equipp’d and fitted out from your
Port: otherwise you may depend upon it, those that I can meet with,
shall be esteemed Pyrates, and treated as such; of which I thought
proper to give you Notice, and am,
&c.A
Letter from Mr.
Joseph Laws,
Lieutenant of his Majesty’s Ship,
Happy Snow,
to the Alcaldes of
Trinidado.Genlemen,
‘
I
Am sent by Commadore
Vernon, Commander
in Chief of all his Majesty’s Ships in the
West-Indies to
demand in the King our Master’s Name, all the Vessels, with theirs
Effects, &c.
and also the Negroes taken from
Jamaica since the
Cessation of Arms; likewise all
Englishmen now
detained, or otherwise remaining in your Port of
Trinidado,
particularly
Nicholas Brown and
Christopher Winter,
both of them being Traytors, Pyrates and common Enemies to all
Nations: And the said Commadore hath ordered me to acquaint you,
that
he is surprized that the Subjects of a Prince in Amity and
Friendship
with another, should give Countenance to such notorious Villains.
In
Expectation of your immediate Compliance, I am, Gentlemen,Off
the River
Trinidado,Feb.
8. 1720.Your
humble Servant,Joseph
Laws.The
Answer of the Alcaldes of
Trinidado, to
Mr. Laws’s
Letter.Capt.
Laws,
‘
IN
Answer to yours, this serves to acquaint you, that neither in this
City, nor Port, are there any Negroes or Vessels which have been
taken at your Island of
Jamaica, nor on
that Coast, since the Cessation of Arms; and what Vessels have been
taken since that Time, have been for trading in an unlawful
Commerce
on this Coast; and as for those English Fugitives you mention, they
are here as other Subjects of our Lord the King, being brought
voluntarily to our holy Catholick Faith, and have received the
Water
of Baptism; but if they should prove Rogues, and should not comply
with their Duty, in which they are bound at present, then they
shall
be chastized according to the Ordinances of our King, whom God
preserve. And we beg you will weigh Anchor as soon as possible, and
leave this Port and its Coasts, because upon no Account you shall
be
suffered to trade, or any Thing else; for we are resolved not to
admit thereof. God preserve you. We kiss your Hand.Trinidado,Feb.
8, 1722.Signed,
Hieronimo de Fuentes,Benette
Alfonso del Manzano.Mr.
Laws’s
Reply to the Alcaldes Letter.Gentlemen,
‘
YOUR
refusing to deliver up the Subjects of the King my Master, is
somewhat surprizing, it being in a Time of Peace, and the detaining
them consequently against the Law of Nations. Notwithstanding your
trifling Pretence (for which you have no Foundation but to forge an
Excuse) to prevent my making any Enquiry into the Truth of the
Facts
I have alledged in my former, I must tell you my Resolutions are,
to
stay on the Coast till I have made Reprizals; and should I meet any
Vessels belonging to your Port, I shall not treat them as the
Subjects of the Crown of Spain, but as Pyrates, finding it a Part
of
your Religion in this Place to protect such Villains.Off
the River
Trinidado,Feb.
8. 1720.Your
humble Servant,Joseph
Laws.The
Answer of one of the Alcaldes to Mr.
Laws’s
Reply.Captain
Laws,
‘
YOU
may assure your self, I will never be wanting in the Duty of my
Post.
The Prisoners that are here are not in Prison, but only kept here
to
be sent to the Governor of the
Havana: If you (as
you say) command at Sea, I command on Shoar: If you treat
the
Spaniards, you
should happen to take, as Pyrates, I will do the same by every one
of
your People I can take up: I will not be wanting to good Manners,
if
you will do the same. I can likewise act the Soldier, if any
Occasion
should offer that way, for I have very good People here for that
purpose. If you pretend any Thing else, you may execute it on this
Coast. God preserve you. I kiss your Hand.Trinidado,Feb.
20. 1720.Signed,Bennette
Alfonso del Menzano.The
last Advices we have received from our Plantations in
America, dated
June 9th, 1724,
gives us the following Account,
viz. That Captain
Jones in the Ship
John and
Mary, on the 5th of
the said Month, met with, near the Capes of
Virginia, a
Spanish Guard del Coast,
commanded by one Don
Benito, said to be
commissioned by the Governor of
Cuba: She was
manned with 60
Spaniards, 18
French Men and 18
English, and had an
English Captain as
well as Spanish,
one Richard Holland,
who formerly belonged to the
Suffolk Man of War,
which he deserted at
Naples, and took
Shelter in a Convent. He served on Board the
Spanish Fleet under
Admiral Cammock,
in the War in the
Mediterranean; and
after the Cessation of Arms with Spain, settled with several of his
Countrymen (Irish)
in the Spanish
West-Indies. This
Guard del Coast
made Prize of Captain
Jones’s Ship, and
kept Possession of her from 5th to the 8th, during which Time she
took also the
Prudent Hannah of
Boston,
Thomas Mousell
Master, and the
Dolphin of
Topsham,
Theodore Bare
Master, both laden and bound for
Virginia: The
former they sent away together with three Men and the Mate, under
the
Command of a Spanish
Officer and Crew, the same Day she was taken; the latter they
carried
off with them, putting the Master and all the Crew aboard
Captain
Jones’s Ship.
They plundered Captain
Jones of thirty six
Men Slaves, some Gold-Dust, all his Cloaths, four great Guns and
small Arms, and about four hundred Gallons of Rum, besides his
Provisions and Stores, computed in all to 1500
l. Sterling.