If A Pirate I Must Be...

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If A Pirate I Must Be... Page 24

by Richard Sanders


  Main Vessel Second Vessel

  July 1719 Royal Rover —

  (formerly Marquis del Campo, inherited from Davis; 32 guns)

  Nov. 1719 Good Fortune (1)

  (formerly Princess, taken at Cayenne, French Guiana; 6-12 guns)

  Dec. 1719 Royal Rover deserts

  June 1720 Un-named vessel

  (Bristol galley, taken at Trepassey, Newfoundland; 18 guns)

  July 1720 Royal Fortune (1)

  (French fishing vessel, taken on Newfoundland Banks; 26-28 guns)

  Oct. 1720 Royal Fortune (2)

  (French ship, taken in West Indies; 34-42 guns)

  Jan. 1721 Good Fortune (2)

  (brigantine from Rhode Island, taken at St Lucia, West Indies; 18 guns)

  April 1721 Good Fortune deserts

  May 1721 Ranger (1)

  (formerly French cruiser, Count de Toulouse, taken off River Senegal; 24-36 guns)

  Aug. 1721 Royal Fortune (3)

  (formerly Onslow, taken off River Sestos, West Africa; 40 guns)

  Jan. 1722 Ranger (2)

  (formerly French slaver, St Agnes, taken at Whydah, West Africa; 32 guns)

  PRIZES

  The following are documented captures by Roberts and his men. Excluding the 150 to 250 fishing shallops taken at Newfoundland, and the six vessels taken during the brief period Thomas Anstis was captain, they come to between 136 and 141. Of these 78-82 were either from Britain or British colonies, 36-37 were from France or French colonies, 9 were Portuguese, 7 were Dutch, 1 was an indigenous fishing vessel, and 5 were of unknown nationality. Captain Johnson’s figure of 400 for the total number of prizes taken by Roberts presumably includes the shallops taken at Newfoundland.

  CREW

  A total of 147 men stood trial at Cape Coast Castle. We have the ages of 56. They ranged from 17 to 45 and the average was 28. Of the 73 men for whom we have a clearly identifiable place of origin, 30 came from the West Country, 12 from London, 8 from elsewhere in England, 9 from Scotland, 5 from Wales, 4 from Holland, 1 from Greece, 1 from Antigua, 1 from Jersey, 1 from the Isle of Man, and - despite the ban imposed in the wake of Kennedy’s desertion - 1 from Ireland.

  APPENDIX 2 THOMAS ANSTIS’S ARTICLES

  Thomas Anstis deserted Roberts in the brigantine Good Fortune in April 1721. His crew immediately agreed a new set of articles.

  ARTICLE I - That the Captain shall have one full share as the rest of the Company the Master Gunner, Carpenter and Boatswain the same.

  ARTICLE II - If any man should disobey any lawful command of the commanding officers, shall suffer punishment the company and captain shall think fit.

  ARTICLE III - If any person or persons should go on board of any prize and should break open any chest without the knowledge of the quartermaster, shall suffer what punishment the company and captain shall think fit.

  ARTICLE IV - If any person or persons shall be found guilty of thievery from one another to the value of one piece of eight, shall be marooned on an island with one bottle of powder, one bottle of water and shott equivalent.

  ARTICLE V - If any person or person should be found negligent in keeping their arms clean and fitting for an engagement, shall lose his share or shares.

  ARTICLE VI - If any person or persons should be found to snap their arms [pull the trigger of their musket or pistol] on cleaning in the hold, shall suffer Moses Law, that is forty [lashes] lacking one.

  ARTICLE VII - If any person or persons should be found backward in the time of an engagement, should be marooned.

  ARTICLE VIII - If any person or persons shall be found to game on board this privateer of the value of one Rial plate [a small silver coin, worth around sixpence] shall suffer Moses law.

  ARTICLE IX - If any person or persons shall go on board of a prize and meet with any Gentlewoman or Lady of Honour and should force them against their will to lye with them, shall suffer death.

  ARTICLE X - If any person or persons should loose a leg or a limb or a joint, shall for a limb have eight hundred pieces of eight and for one joint 200 ditto.

  ARTICLE XI - If any time we shall come in company with any other marooner [pirate] [he that] shall offer to sign their articles without the consent of the company shall be marooned. [Any] runaway shall receive the same.

  ARTICLE XII - But if at any time we shall hear from England and have an account of an act of grace [pardon] they that are minded to receive it shall go with their money and goods and the rest have the privateer [i.e. keep the ship].

  SELECTED SOURCES

  PRIMARY SOURCES

  BRITISH LIBRARY

  The Lives of the Most Remarkable Criminals, London, 1735

  A New General Collection of Voyages, vols 1 and 3, Thomas Astley, London 1745-7

  A Select and Impartial Account of the Lives, Behaviour and Dying Words of the Most Remarkable Convicts, vol. 1, Charles March, London, 1745

  Anonymous (manuscript), Voyage to Guinea, Bay of Campeachy, Cuba, Barbados & co. 1714-23

  Atkins, John, The Navy Surgeon, C. Ward and R. Chandler, London, 1734

  ——, A Voyage to Guinea, Brazil and the West Indies in His Majesty’s Ships, C. Ward and R. Chandler, London, 1735

  Bosman, Willem. A New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea, J. Knapton, London, 1704

  Boyer, Abel, The Political State of Great Britain, vols 21 and 28, T. Cooper, London, 1733

  Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series, America and West Indies, 1716-1725

  Charlevoix, Pierre Francois Xavier, Histoire de L’Isle Espagnole, Francois Barois, 1731

  Churchill (ed.), Collection of Voyages and Travels, vols 5-6, Henry Lintot and John Osborn, London, 1744-6

  Downing, Clement, A Compendious History of the Indian Wars, London, 1737

  Executive Journals of the Council of Colonial Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, 1925

  Exquemelin, Alexander, The Buccaneers of America, William Crooke, London, 1684

  Falconbridge, Alexander, An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa, James Phillips, London, 1788

  Fenton, Richard, A Historical Tour Through Pembrokeshire, Longman, London, 1811

  Frezier, Amadée Francois, A Voyage to the South Sea, and Along the Coasts of Chile and Peru in 1712, 1713 and 1714, London, 1717

  Houston, James, Some New and Accurate Observations of the Coast of Guinea, London, 1725

  Johnson, Charles, A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pirates, Rivington, London, 1724

  Labat, Jean Baptiste, The Memoirs of Pere Labat, 1693-1705, Constable & Co., London, 1931

  Owen, George. Description of Pembrokeshire, Cymmrodorion Society, London, 1892

  Smith, William, A New Voyage to Guinea, J. Nourse, London, 1744

  Snelgrave, William, A New Account of Some Parts of Guinea and the Slave Trade, Knapton, London, 1734

  Spotswood, Alexander. The Official Letters of Alexander Spotswood, vol. 2, Virginia Historical and Philosophical Society, 1882 du Tertre, Jean Baptiste, Histoire Generale des Antilles Habites par Les Français, Paris, 1667

  Voyage des Chevaliers des Marchais en Guinee etc., Saugrain, Paris, 1730

  NEWSPAPERS

  Applebee’s Original Weekly Journal, The Boston Gazette, The Boston Newsletter, The Post Boy, The Weekly Journal or British Gazetteer, The Weekly Journal or Saturday Post

  THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES

  Admiralty Series (ADM): 1/1472/11, 1/1597/1, 1/1694/9, 1/1880/3, 1/2242/5, 1/2242/6, 1/2282/2, 1/2378, 1/2452, 1/2649, 1/2650/10, 1/4102-4, 2/50, 8/14+15, 51/954/6+7, 51/4394/2, 52/296, 52/316

  Chancellery Series (C): 113/165, 113/274+5

  Colonial Office Series (CO): 5/1319, 28/17, 31/15, 31/16, 37/10, 137/14, 152/13+14, 194/6, 323/8, 324/34, 388/25

  High Court of the Admiralty Series (HCA): 1/17+18, 1/32 1/54+55, 1/99

  State Papers Series (SP): 42/17, 89/28 Treasury Series (T): 52/32, 70/ 4, 70/7, 70/27, 70/922, 70/1225

  NATIONAL LIBRARY OF WALES

>   SP/CPD/5, SD/1744/44

  NATIONAL ARCHIVES OF SCOTLAND

  AC 16/1

  NATIONAL MARITIME MUSEUM

  ADM/L/S/563+4, 341.362.1:094

  SECONDARY SOURCES

  Bolster, W. Jeffery, Black Jacks: African American Seamen in the Age of Sail, Harvard University Press, London, 1997

  Boxer, C.R., The Golden Age of Brazil, 1695-1750, Carcanet, Manchester, 1995

  Burg, B.R., Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition, New York University Press, New York, 1984

  Carr Laughton, L.G., ‘Shantying and Shanties’, in Mariner’s Mirror, vol. 9, 1923

  Clifford, Barry, The Black Ship: The Quest to Recover an English Pirate Ship and Its Lost Treasure, Headline, London, 1999

  Cordingly, David, Life Among the Pirates: The Romance and the Reality, Little Brown, London, 1995

  Craton, Michael, A History of the Bahamas, 2nd edn, Collins, London, 1968

  Dictionary of National Biography, vols 2 and 42, 1885

  Dunn, Richard S., Sugar and Slaves: The Rise of the Planter Class in the English West Indies, University of North Carolina Press, London, 1972

  Earle, Peter, Sailors; English Merchant Seamen 1650-1775, Methuen, London, 1998

  ——, The Pirate Wars, Methuen, London, 2003

  Edwards, Rev. Richard, Hanes Llangloffan (The History of Llangloffan), W.H. John and Son, Solva, Pembrokeshire, 1932

  Eltis, David, ‘Volume and Structure of the Slave Trade’, in William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 58, No. 1, January 2001

  Eltis, D., S.D. Behrendt, D. Richardson, and H.S. Klein, The Transatlantic Slave Trade, database on CD-Rom

  Engerman, Stanley L. and Eugene D. Genovese (eds), Race and Slavery in the Western Hemisphere: Quantitative Studies, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1974

  Fuller, Basil and Alexander Ronald Leslie-Melville, Pirate Harbours and Their Secrets, Stanley Paul & Co., London, 1935

  Gilkerson, William, Boarders Away, vols I & II, A. Mowbray Inc., Providence, RI, 1991

  Hornsby, Stephen, British Atlantic, American Frontier, University of New Hampshire, Hanover, NH, 2004

  Hughes, B.H.J., More Names in the History of Pembrokeshire, Hearth Tax, 1670, B.H.J. Hughes, Pennar, 1999

  Innis, Harold A., The Cod Fisheries, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1940

  Jameson, John Franklin, Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period: Illustrated Documents, Macmillan, New York, 1923

  Kelly, James, ‘That Damn’d Thing Called Honour’: Duelling in Ireland, 1570-1860, Cork University Press, Cork, 1995

  Lang, James, Portuguese Brazil: The King’s Plantation, Academic Press, London, 1979

  Lucie-Smith, Edward, Outcasts of the Sea: Pirates and Piracy, Paddington Press, London, 1978

  Mannix, Daniel Pratt, Black Cargoes: A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1518-1865, Longmans, London, 1963

  May, Commander W.E., ‘The Mutiny of the Chesterfield’, in Mariner’s Mirror, vol. 47, 1961

  Preston, Diana and Michael, A Pirate of Exquisite Mind: The Life of William Dampier: Explorer, Naturalist and Buccaneer, Corgi, London, 2004

  Rediker, Marcus, Between The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Merchant Seamen, Pirates and the Anglo-American Maritime World, 1700-1750, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987

  ——, Villains of All Nations, Verso, London, 2004

  Roberts, Walter Adolphe, The French in the West Indies, Bobbs-Merrill Co, New York, 1942

  Sheridan, Richard, Sugar and Slavery: An Economic History of the British West Indies, University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, 1986

  Thomas, Hugh, The Slave Trade, Picador, London, 1997

  Williams, Eric, From Columbus to Castro: The History of the Caribbean, 1492-1969, Andre Deutsch, London, 1970

  INDEX

  Accra

  Act of Union (1535)

  Admiralty

  Admiralty Courts

  Admiralty, Scottish High Court of

  Africans

  Davis and

  dealing with Europeans

  Roberts and

  Anamaboe

  Angola

  Anguilla

  Annobón

  Anstis, Thomas

  candidate for captaincy

  captain

  death

  limitations

  mock trial

  plundering

  Roberts’ relationship with

  Antigua

  Armstrong, David

  articles

  Ashplant, Valentine

  Atkins, John

  on Africans

  as chaplain

  dealing with disease

  explosion on board Ranger

  maintains meticulous notes of trial

  memoirs

  on need for discipline

  observes sailor almost eaten by crocodile

  thunder at sea

  Atlantic

  Aurangzeb, Mughal Emperor

  Avery, Henry

  Axim

  Babidge, Captain

  Bahamas

  Bahia

  Ball, Roger

  Baptists

  Barbados

  authorities in

  British power base

  Captain Rogers

  English acquire

  Good Fortune arrives

  Kennedy in

  navigating to

  Roberts’ early career in

  Roberts’ flag

  Royal Navy protection of

  slavery

  Barbuda

  Barlow, Edward

  Barnsely, Lieutenant

  Barnstaple

  Basques

  Basseterre

  Bay of Campechy

  Bay of Samaná

  Beggar’s Opera, The (John Gay)

  Bellamy, Captain

  Benin

  Benjamin

  Bennet, Governor Benjamin

  Bennett, Thomas

  Beothuk Indians

  Bermuda

  Bernard, Monsieur

  Bideford

  Bideford Merchant

  Bight of Biafra

  Bird

  Blackbeard

  Bonny, Anne

  booty, division of

  Bordeaux

  Boston

  Boston Gazette

  Boston Newsletter

  Boye, Francis

  Bradish, Joseph

  Brazil

  Bridgetown

  Bristol

  Britain

  British Leeward Islands

  brothels

  Buccaneers

  bullion raiders

  Cayenne

  guns of

  Hispaniola

  history of

  matelotage

  Morgan

  St Bartholomew

  Buck

  Bunce, Charles

  Cabinda

  Cadogan

  Callis, John

  Cane, Captain

  Cape Apollonia

  Cape Coast Castle

  gold mine

  King Solomon bound for

  pirates approach

  Royal Navy ships at

  trial at

  Cape Lahou

  Cape Lopez

  Hill at

  Roberts’ death

  Royal Navy patrols at

  watering hole

  winds and currents around

  Cape Mesurado

  Cape Three Points

  Cape Verde

  Cape Verde Islands

  Davis in

  Kennedy in

  Newfoundland cod and

  Roberts bound for

  winds and currents

  Capuchins

  Cardiff

  careening

  Carew

  Carib Indians

  Caribbean

  news spreading in

  periaguas

  piracy in

  Roberts and

  Royal Navy and

  slavery

  Carriacou

  Cary, Captai
n

  Casnewydd Bach, see Little Newcastle

  Cayenne

  Channel, English

  Charles II, King

  Charon

  Chesapeake Bay

  Chesterfield

  Child, William

  coal

  Cocklyn, Jeremiah

  appearance of

  Davis and

  Roberts and

  cod

  Coleman, John

  Columbus, Christopher

  Congo

  cooks

  Cornwall

  Cornwall

  Côte d’Ivoire

  Council of Trade and Plantations

  Cox, Samuel

  creoles

  Cuba

  cutlasses

  Dartmouth

  Dartmouth Inn

  Davies, William

  Davis, Howel

  Africa

  avoids coercion

  background and character

  crew of after Davis’s death

  death

  division of crew

  drinking and debauchery

  launches career as pirate

  Roberts learns from

  seeks pirate crew

  slaves engaged by

  source material

  Davis, William

  De Fouquières, Governor

  Defoe, Daniel

  Dennis, John

  Depp, Johnny

  Deptford

  Devil’s Islands

  culpability for desertion at

  Norton and

  Roberts at

  slaves lost at

  Diamond

  diet

  Diligence

  Discovery of the Large, Rich and Beautiful Empire of Guiana, The (Sir Walter Raleigh)

  disease

  Divine, John

  Dodson, Henry

  Dominica

  Dominican Republic

  Drake, Francis

  drinking

  Du Tertre, Jean-Baptiste

  Dunne, Richard

  Durrel, Captain Thomas

  Dutch

  Eagle

  Edinburgh

  Elizabeth

  England, Edward

 

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