On November 15th,
1717, six men were hanged for piracy in Boston, Massachusetts. They were:
Hendrik Quintor, Peter Cornelius Hoof, John Shuan, John Brown, Thomas Baker,
and Simon Van Vorst.
On April 26, 1717 the
above-named men (plus a man named Thomas South, who went aboard unarmed and
later was acquitted at trial as a forced man,) were sent to take charge of the Mary
Anne. This ship was a type of wooden sailing ship called a pink. The
ship had just been taken by the pirate Captain Samuel Bellamy. Their orders
were to take over operation of the ship and to send back her captain and
several crew members with the ship's papers. Each one went aboard armed with
pistols and cutlasses.
Sam Bellamy ordered them to
follow the pirate flag ship the Whydah Galley to a location on Cape Cod.
Once there, he intended to plunder the Mary Anne for the more than 7,000
gallons of Madeira wine that they had discovered was in her hold.
As the day wore on, a storm
rolled into Cape Cod. It would be one of the worst storms in the area's
history. It was preceded by dense fog and thunder and lightning.
An Arctic gale from Canada
was colliding with a warm front moving northward from the Caribbean. “According
to eye witness accounts, gusts topped 70 miles [113 kilometers] an hour and the
seas rose to 30 feet [9 meters.]1
The pirates and the
remaining original crewmen of the Mary Anne went into the hold and spent
the night there. One of the pirates, unnamed, asked one of the crewmen to read
from the Common-Prayer Book, which he did for an hour.
In the morning, the pirates
and crewmen found that they were far enough ashore that they could walk from
the ship onto the beach. There they spent the morning eating some sweetmeats
that they had found in someone's chest and washing them down with more wine.
Eventually a local, Thomas Cole, happened upon them and came across in his
canoe to rescue what he thought were ordinary mariners who had been
shipwrecked. He took them to his house. There one of the crewmen of the Mary
Anne finally blurted out that these men were pirates and members of Sam
Bellamy's crew.
The pirates left, planning
on making their way to Rhode Island, which at that time was a known pirate
haunt.
On their way there, they
stopped at a tavern in Eastham, MA for refreshment. There they were apprehended
by the local law and held in Barnstable jail overnight. The next day they were
put on horseback, along with 2 survivors of the wreck of the Whydah,
Thomas Davis and John Julian. By this time they had of course learned of the
demise of the Whydah, and were despondent over the loss of their friends
and their treasure.
Once in Boston they
languished in its foul, dark jail until their trial on October 18, 1717. But
not all of them got to go to trial. Sometime between April and October John Julian
disappeared from the jail. He is reported to have been sold under the name of
Julian The Indian to John Quincy of Braintree, MA.2 Just to make things interesting,
John Quincy's grandson, President John Quincy Adams, became a staunch
abolitionist.3
“Cotton Mather – minister
of Boston's Old North Church – was in the courtroom to hear the testimony and
verdicts. A fire-and-brimstone preacher and prolific writer, Mather had entered
Harvard at the age of 12 and had preached his first sermon at the age of 16. He
was personally committed to persuading the pirates to repent. Throughout their
months in jail, Mather regularly met with Bellamy's men. On November 15,
accompanied by Cotton Mather, the condemned men were rowed across the harbor to
Charleston, where their gallows had been set up at the water's edge.”4
In those days, pirate's
bodies were not buried after they were hanged. They were instead covered in tar
and placed inside a gibbet5,
then hung out in public where sailors coming and going from the harbor could
see them and be warned against becoming involved with pirates.
Clifford, Barry, and Kenneth
J Kinkor with Sharon Simpson, Real Pirates, The Untold Story of the Whydah
from slave ship to pirate ship, National Geographic, Washington, D.C.
Kinkor, Kenneth J, “Black
Men Under the Black Flag,” in Bandits at Sea: A Pirate Reader, edited by
C.R. Pennell, New York University, 2001.
“The Trials of Eight Persons
Indited For Piracy” in British Piracy in the Golden Age, edited by Joel
H Baer (2:289-319) Pickering and Chatto, 2007.
ENDNOTES
1Donovan
Webster, “Pirates of the Whydah” in National Geographic Magazine (May 1999.) http:www.nationalgeographic.com/whydah/story.html
2Kinkor,
Kenneth J, “Black Men Under the Black Flag,” in Bandits at Sea: A Pirate
Reader, edited by C.R. Pennell, New York University, 2001, p 203
3“John
Julian – Only Free At Sea” at Pirates of the Whydah, National
Geographic. In February 1839, John Quincy Adams successfully represented the
slaves from the Amistad rebellion. More information can be read at the
National Archives web site: http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/amistad/ http://www.nationalgeographic.com/whydah/ax/frame4.html
4Clifford,
Barry, and Kenneth J Kinkor with Sharon Simpson, Real Pirates, The Untold
Story of the Whydah from slave ship to pirate ship, National Geographic,
Washington, D.C., p 136
5A gibbet is an iron cage that encases the body. The
bodies would be left on display until they had completely decomposed.
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