The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America have formed the laudable habit of illustrating the colonial period of United States history, in which they are especially interested, by published volumes of original historical material, previously unprinted, and relating to that period. Thus in the course of years they have made a large addition to the number of documentary sources available to the student of that period. First they published, in 1906, in two handsome volumes, the Correspondence of William Pitt, when Secretary of State, with Colonial Governors and Military and Naval Commanders in America, edited by the late Miss Gertrude Selwyn Kimball, containing material of great importance to the history of the colonies as a whole, and of the management of the French and Indian War. Next, in 1911 and 1914, they published the two volumes of Professor James C. Ballagh's valuable edition of the Letters of Richard Henry Lee. Then, in 1912, they brought out, again in two volumes, the Correspondence of Governor William Shirley, edited by Dr. Charles H. Lincoln, and illustrating the history of several colonies, particularly those of New England, during the period of what in our colonial history is called King George's War. More recently, in 1916, the Society published an entertaining volume of hitherto unprinted Travels in the American Colonies, edited by Dr. Newton D. Mereness.
It was resolved that the next volume after these should be devoted to documents relating to maritime history. In proportion to its importance, that aspect of our colonial history has in general received too little attention. In time of peace the colonists, nearly all of whom dwelt within a hundred miles of ocean or tidewater, maintained constantly a maritime commerce that had a large importance to their economic life and gave employment to no small part of their population. In time of war, their naval problems and dangers and achievements were hardly less important than those of land warfare, but have been far less exploited, whether in narrative histories or in volumes of documentary materials. Accordingly the Society's Committee on Publication readily acceded to the suggestion that a volume should be made up of documents illustrating the history of privateering and piracy as these stand related to the life of America during the colonial period—for it is agreed that few aspects of our maritime history in that period have greater importance and interest than these two. In some of our colonial wars, as later in those of the Revolution and of 1812, American privateering assumed such proportions as to make it, for brief periods, one of the leading American industries. We cannot quite say the same concerning American piracy, and indeed it might be thought disrespectful to our ancestors—or predecessors, for pirates mostly died young and left few descendants—but at least it will be conceded that piracy at times flourished in American waters, that not a few of the pirates and of those on shore who received their goods and otherwise aided them were Americans, that their activities had an important influence on the development of American commerce, and that documents relative to piracy make interesting reading.
It is a matter for regret and on the editor's part for apology, that the book should have been so long in preparation. Work on it was begun prosperously before our country was engaged in war, but the "spare time" which the editor can command, always slight in amount, was much reduced during the period of warfare. Moreover, the Society, very properly, determined that, so long as war continued, the publication of their volumes and the expenditures now attendant upon printing ought to be postponed in favor of those patriotic undertakings, especially for the relief of suffering, which have made their name grateful to all lovers of the Navy and in all places where the Comfort and the Mercy have sailed.
It may be objected against the plan of this book, that privateering and piracy should not be conjoined in one volume, with documents intermingled in one chronological order, lest the impression be created that piracy and privateering were much the same. It is true that, in theory and in legal definition, they are widely different things and stand on totally different bases. Legally, a privateer is an armed vessel (or its commander) which, in time of war, though owners and officers and crew are private persons, has a commission from a belligerent government to commit acts of warfare on vessels of its enemy. Legally, a pirate is one who commits robbery or other acts of violence on the sea (or on the land through descent from the sea) without having any authority from, and independently of, any organized government or political society. (Fighting and bloodshed and murder, it may be remarked by the way, though natural concomitants of the pirate's trade, are not, as is often supposed, essentials of the crime of piracy.) But wide as is the legal distinction between the authorized warfare of the privateer and the unauthorized violence of the pirate, in practice it was very difficult to keep the privateer and his crew, far from the eye of authority, within the bounds of legal conduct, or to prevent him from broadening out his operations into piracy, especially if a merely privateering cruise was proving unprofitable. Privateering was open to many abuses, and it was not without good reason that the leading powers of Europe, in 1856, by the Declaration of Paris, agreed to its abandonment.
The object of the following collection of documents is not to give the whole history of any episode of piracy or of the career of any privateer, but rather, by appropriate selection, to illustrate, as well as is possible in one volume, all the different aspects of both employments, and to present specimens of all the different sorts of papers to which they gave rise. Nearly all the pieces are documents hitherto unprinted, but a few that have already been printed, mostly in books not easy of access, have been included in order to round out a story or a series. The collection ends with the termination of the last colonial war in 1763. Presented in chronological order, it may have a casual, as it certainly has a miscellaneous, appearance. But variety was intended, and on closer inspection and comparison the selection will be seen to have a more methodical character than at first appears, corresponding to the systematic procedure followed in privateering, in prize cases, and in trials for piracy.
On the outbreak of war in which Great Britain was involved, it was customary for the King to issue a commission to the Lord High Admiral (or to the Lords of the Admiralty appointed to execute that office) authorizing him (or them) to empower proper officials, such as colonial governors, to grant letters of marque, or privateering commissions, to suitable persons under adequate safeguards.[1] The Lords of the Admiralty then issued warrants to the colonial governors (see doc. no. 127), authorizing them to issue such commissions or letters of marque. A specimen American privateering commission may be seen in doc. no. 144; a Portuguese letter of marque, and a paper by which its recipient purported to assign it to another, in docs. no. 14 and no. 15. Royal instructions were issued to all commanders of privateers (doc. no. 126), and each was required to furnish, or bondsmen were required to furnish on his behalf, caution or security[2] for the proper observance of these instructions and the payment of all dues to the crown or Admiralty. Relations between the commander and the crew, except as regulated by the superior authority of these instructions and of the prize acts or other statutes, were governed by the articles of agreement (doc. no. 202) signed when enlisting.
These were the essential documents of a privateering voyage. There would probably be also accounts for supplies, like John Tweedy's very curious bill for medicines (doc. no. 158), and accounts between crew and owners (doc. no. 146), and general accounts of the voyage (doc. no. 159). There might be an agreement of two privateers to cruise together and divide the spoil (doc. no. 160). There might even be a journal of the whole voyage, like the extraordinarily interesting journal kept on the privateer Revenge by the captain's quartermaster in 1741 (doc. no. 145), one of the very few such narratives preserved. Other documents of various kinds, illustrating miscellaneous incidents of privateering, will be found elsewhere in the volume.
Both privateers and naval vessels belonging to the government made prize of ships and goods belonging to the enemy, but many questions were certain to arise concerning the legality of captures and concerning the proper ownership and disposal of ships and goods. Hence the necessity for prize courts, acting under admiralty law and the law of nations. The instructions to privateers required them (see doc. no. 126, section III.) to bring captured ships or goods into some port of Great Britain or her colonial dominions, for adjudication by such a court. In England, it was the High Court of Admiralty that tried such cases. At the beginning of a war, a commission under the Great Seal,[3] addressed to the Lords of the Admiralty, instructed them to issue a warrant to the judge of that court, authorizing him during the duration of the war to take cognizance of prize causes. After 1689, it was customary to provide for trial of admiralty causes in colonial ports by giving to each colonial governor, in addition to his commission as governor, a commission as vice-admiral. Before 1689, this was done in a few instances, chiefly of proprietary colonies, the earliest such instance being that exhibited in our doc. no. 1; but in the case of colonies having no royal governor (corporation colonies) we find various courts in that earlier period exercising admiralty jurisdiction (docs. no. 8, no. 25, no. 48, and no. 105, note 1). From Queen Anne's reign on (doc. no. 102), jurisdiction in prize causes was conferred, as in the case of the judge of the High Court of Admiralty in London, by warrant (doc. no. 182) from the Lord High Admiral or Lords of the Admiralty pursuant to the commission issued to them, as stated above, at the beginning of the war. In doc. no. 116 we see the judge of the High Court of Admiralty expressing the belief that it would be better if all prizes were brought to his court in London for adjudication, but the inconvenience would have been too great.
The governor's commission as vice-admiral, issued (after 1689, at any rate) under the great seal of the High Court of Admiralty, gave him authority to hold an admiralty court in person. Often the governor was not well fitted for such work, though not often so frank as Sir Henry Morgan (doc. no. 46, note 1) in admitting his deficiencies. As admiralty business increased, it became customary to appoint admiralty judges to hold vice-admiralty courts in individual colonies, or in groups of colonies. Sometimes, especially in the earlier period, they were commissioned by the governor of the colony acting under a warrant from the Lords of the Admiralty (doc. no. 69) empowering him so to do; more often they were commissioned directly by those lords, under the great seal of the Admiralty. Doc. no. 180 is a commission of the former sort, doc. no. 181 of the latter. When war broke out, authority to try prize cases was conveyed, as above, to the vice-admiral, the vice-admiralty judge, and their deputies.
In the trial of a prize case, the first essential document was the libel (docs. no. 99, no. 128, no. 165, no. 184, and no. 188), by which claim was laid to ship or goods. Witnesses were examined, chiefly by means of the systematic series of questions called standing interrogatories (doc. no. 183). Their testimony, taken down in written depositions, constitutes much the largest class of documents in this volume. Most narratives of privateering or of piracy are found in the form of depositions. Reports of trials, embracing proceedings and documents and testimony, are found in docs. no. 128, no. 143, and no. 165; sentences or decrees of the judge in docs. no. 143, no. 150, and no. 155; inventories of prizes in docs. no. 33 and no. 161; an account of sales in doc. no. 186.
If a party to a prize appealed from the sentence of the vice-admiralty court (docs. no. 151 and no. 196), he was required to give bond (doc. no. 152) for due prosecution of the appeal in England. From 1628 to 1708 such appeals were heard by the High Court of Admiralty; after 1708 they went to a body of privy councillors specially commissioned for the purpose, called the Lords Commissioners of Appeal in Prize Causes (see doc. no. 151, note 1). A specimen of a decree of that tribunal reversing the sentence of a colonial vice-admiralty court is in doc. no. 195.[4]
Piracy being from its very nature a less formal proceeding than privateering, there are fewer formal documents to present as essential to its history. In the seventeenth century, there are instances of trials for piracy by various courts: e.g., the Court of Assistants in Massachusetts in 1675 (doc. no. 41, note 1) and the Massachusetts Superior Court in 1694 (doc. no. 56, note 2). But the regular method, which came to prevail, was trial by special commissions appointed for the purpose, similar to those which were appointed for the trial of pirates in England by virtue of the statute 28 Henry VIII. c. 15 (1536). We have such a colonial commission, appointed by the governor, in doc. no. 51 (1683). In 1700 the statute 11 and 12 William III. c. 7 extended to the plantations the crown's authority to appoint such commissions (see docs. no. 104, note 1, no. 106, note 1, and no. 201). A curious signed agreement to commit piracy will be found in doc. no. 50; indictments for that crime in docs. no. 56, no. 119, and no. 120; partial records of trials in docs. no. 112, no. 113, and nos. 119-122. A full account of an execution, explicit enough to satisfy the most morbid curiosity, is presented in doc. no. 104. Nos. 123 and 124 are formal bills for the execution, the digging of the graves, and the cheering drams which the executioners found needful after their grisly work.
But if American colonial piracy presents a smaller array of legal documents than American colonial privateering, it makes up for it by its rich abundance of picturesque narrative and detail. The pieces here brought together show us piracy off Lisbon and in the East Indies and at Madagascar, at Portobello and Panama and in the South Sea, in the West Indies, and all along the Atlantic coast from Newfoundland to the coast of Guiana. They exhibit to us every relation from that of the most innocent victim to that of the most hardened pirate chief. They make it clear how narrow was sometimes the line that divided piracy and privateering, and how difficult it must have been to learn the truth from witnesses so conflicting and of such dubious characters, testifying concerning actions of lawless men in remote seas or on lonely shores.
Most of the pirates famed in story, who had anything to do with colonial America, appear in one way or another in these papers. On the history of Henry Every, for instance, and even on the oft-told tale of William Kidd, not a little new light is cast. Kidd's letters from prison, the letter and petitions of his wife, the depositions of companions, the additional letters of Bellomont, make the story live again, even though no new evidence appears that is perfectly conclusive as to the still-debated question of his degree of guilt. The wonderful buccaneering adventures of Bartholomew Sharp and his companions, 1680-1682, at the Isthmus of Panama and all along the west coast of South America, are newly illustrated by long anonymous narratives, artless but effective. And indeed, to speak more generally, it is hoped that there are few aspects of the pirate's trade that are not somehow represented in these pages.
At least it will not be denied that the documents, whether for piracy or for privateering, show a considerable variety of origins. Their authors range from a Signer of the Declaration of Independence to an Irishwoman keeping a boarding-house in Havana, from a minister of Louis XIV. or a judge of the High Court of Admiralty to the most illiterate sailor, from Governor John Endicott, most rigid of Puritans, to the keeper of a rendezvous for pirates and receiver of their ill-gotten goods. Witnesses or writers of many nationalities appear: American, Englishmen, Scots, Irishmen, Frenchmen, Dutchmen, Spaniards, a Portuguese, a Dane or Sleswicker, a Bohemian, a Greek, a Jew. The languages of the documents are English, French, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin. Though none of them are in German or by Germans, not the least interesting pieces in the volume are those (docs. no. 43, no. 48, and no. 49) which show a curious connection of American colonial history with the very first (and characteristically illegal and unscrupulous) exploits of the Brandenburg-Prussian navy.
The range of repositories from which the documents have been procured is also considerable. Many were found in the state archives of Massachusetts, many in the files of the Supreme Judicial Court for Suffolk County, many in the collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, others in the archives of Rhode Island and New York, in the office of the surrogate of New York City, and in the New York Public Library. A very important source of material, indispensable indeed for certain classes of document, was the records and papers of the vice-admiralty courts of the colonial period. Extensive portions still remain in the case of four of these courts, at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston (see the first foot-notes to docs. no. 126, no. 184, no. 165, and no. 106, respectively). A large number of the documents, larger indeed than from any other repository but one, were drawn from the inexhaustible stores of the Public Record Office in London, namely, from the Admiralty and Colonial Office Papers. Others came from the Privy Council Office; a few, but among them two of the longest and most interesting, from among the Sloane and Harleian manuscripts in the British Museum; one whole group from the Rawlinson manuscripts in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. Three of the Kidd documents were obtained from among the manuscripts of the Duke of Portland at Welbeck Abbey. Several of the pieces, and a number of lesser extracts used in annotations, were taken from colonial newspapers, and two from printed books not often seen.
Archivists and librarians have assisted the editor with their customary and never-failing kindness. It is a pleasure to express his gratitude to Mr. J.J. Tracy and Mr. John H. Edmonds, former and present archivists of Massachusetts, Mr. Herbert O. Brigham of the Rhode Island archives, Mr. A.J.F. van Laer and Mr. Peter Nelson of those of New York; to Mr. Worthington C. Ford and Mr. Julius H. Tuttle of the Massachusetts Historical Society; to Hon. Charles M. Hough, judge of the United States Circuit Court in New York; to Miss C.C. Helm of his office; to the late Miss Josephine Murphy, custodian of the Suffolk Files; to Miss Mabel L. Webber, secretary and librarian of the South Carolina Historical Society; to Mr. Victor H. Paltsits of the New York Public Library; to Rev. Richard W. Goulding, librarian to the Duke of Portland; and to the authorities of the Public Record Office, the Privy Council Office, the British Museum, and the Bodleian Library. Special thanks are due to the officials of three libraries in which the work of annotation was mostly done—the Library of Congress, that of the Massachusetts Historical Society, and that of Bowdoin College. On a few nautical points the editor had the advice of his old friend the late Captain Charles Cate of North Edgecomb, Maine. And especially he has to thank the chairman of the Committee on Publication, Mrs. Charles E. Rieman, for her interest in the work and for the exemplary patience with which she has borne the delays in its completion.
It is perhaps needless to say that the spelling of the originals has been carefully preserved; it is hoped that it would not be thought to be that of the editor. The punctuation of the originals has not been deemed equally sacred. In general, it has been reproduced, but where small alterations would make the sense clear to the modern reader but could not change it, or where that same effect would be produced by introducing punctuation-marks, which writers nearly illiterate often omitted entirely, it has seemed the part of good sense to make reading-matter readable. Also, names of vessels have been uniformly italicized even when not underscored in the original manuscripts. Dates previous to 1752 are old-style dates unless, as in the case of Dutch or French documents, new style is indicated.
J. Franklin Jameson.
Washington, October 19, 1923.
[1] See R.G. Marsden in English Historical Review, XXI. 251-257, and a commission in Rymer's Foedera, XVIII. 12.
[2] Specimen (1762) in Anthony Stokes, A View of the Constitution of the British Colonies (London, 1783), pp. 315-317.
[3] Such a commission (1748) is printed in R.G. Marsden, Law and Custom of the Sea (Navy Records Society), II. 279, and another (1756) in Stokes, p. 278.
[4] For a report of these commissioners approving the sentence of the court below, see Stokes, pp. 325-326.
page | |||
Providence Island | |||
1. | Commission from the Providence Island Company to Governor Nathaniel Butler as Vice-Admiral. Apr. 23, 1638 |
1 | |
2. | Governor Nathaniel Butler, "Diary of My Present Employment". Feb.-Mar., 1639 | 3 | |
La Garce | |||
3. | Articles of Copartnership in New Netherland Privateering. Dec. 4 (N.S.), 1646 | 9 | |
4. | Articles of Copartnership between Augustin Herrman and Wyllem Blawfelt. Dec. 4 (N.S.), 1646 | 11 | |
5. | Affidavit: the Capture of the Tabasco. July 25 (N.S.), 1649 | 13 | |
6. | Affidavit of Antonio Leon and Fyck Herry. Sept. 27 (N.S.), 1649 | 14 | |
The Holy Ghost | |||
7. | Declaration of the Massachusetts Council. July 20, 1653 | 17 | |
8. | Declaration of Governor Endicott. Aug. (?), 1653 | 18 | |
9. | Deposition of Matthew Hill. Oct. (?), 1653 | 20 | |
10. | Deposition of Francis Blackman and John Dukley. Oct. (?), 1653 | 20 | |
11. | Letter of Governor Searle of Barbados. Nov. 4, 1653 | 21 | |
12. | Order of the Massachusetts Council. Jan. 25, 1654 | 24 | |
13. | Vote of the Massachusetts House of Deputies. June 10, 1654 | 25 | |
The Blue Dove | |||
14. | Portuguese Commission (Letter of Marque) to Charles de Bils. Feb. 10 (N.S.), 1658, Sept. 10, 1662 | 27 | |
15. | Commission from de Bils to John Douglas. Sept. 20 (N.S.), 1662 | 29 | |
16. | Deposition of William Browne. June 24, 1664 | 30 | |
17. | Deposition of Marcus Claesz. June 24, 1664 | 30 | |
18. | Deposition of Bartholomew Martin. June 24, 1664 | 31 | |
19. | Commission to James Oliver and Others. July 16, 1664 | 32 | |
20. | Deposition of Daniel Sprague. July (?), 1664 | 33 | |
21. | Deposition of William Browne. July 25, 1664 | 35 | |
22. | Deposition of Robert Lord. July 26, 1664 | 36 | |
23. | Deposition of John Hunter. July 26, 1664 | 37 | |
24. | Deposition of Charles Hadsall. July 27, 1664 | 39 | |
25. | Petition of John Douglas. Aug., 1664 | 41 | |
26. | Plea of John Douglas. (Aug. 8?), 1664 | 42 | |
27. | Power of Attorney from Sir William Davidson. Sept. 13, 1664 | 44 | |
The Providence | |||
28. | Certificate of Cornelius de Lincourt. Apr. 12/22, 1673 | 46 | |
29. | Deposition of John Johnson and Henry Harris. Apr. 26, 1673 | 48 | |
30. | Petition of Edward Bant. About Apr. 28, 1673 | 48 | |
31. | Order of the Suffolk County Court. Apr. 29, 1673 | 50 | |
32. | Petition of Henry King. Apr. 30, 1673 | 50 | |
33. | Inventory of the Providence. May 5, 1673 | 51 | |
34. | Examination of John Johnson. May 5, 1673 | 61 | |
35. | Declaration of Edward Bant and Others. May 8, 1673 | 62 | |
36. | Declaration of Henry King and John Champion. May 8, 1673 | 64 | |
37. | Petition of Thomas Raddon. June 10, 1673 | 67 | |
The St. Anthony | |||
38. | Examination of John Tooly. June 17, 1673 | 68 | |
39. | Examination of William Forrest. Oct. 20, 1673 | 71 | |
40. | Petition of Allwin Child. Oct. 24, 1673 | 72 | |
Case of Rodriguez and Rhodes | |||
41. | Declaration of Thomas Mitchell. May 24, 1675 | 74 | |
42. | Declaration of Edward Youreing. May 24, 1675 | 76 | |
Brandenburg Privateers | |||
43. | Seignelay to Colbert. May 8 (N.S.), 1679 | 82 | |
Bartholomew Sharp and Others | |||
44. | The Buccaneers at Portobello. 1680 | 84 | |
45. | The Buccaneers on the Isthmus and in the South Sea. 1680-1682 | 92 | |
46. | Sir Henry Morgan to Sir Leoline Jenkins. Mar. 8, 1682 | 133 | |
47. | Deposition of Simon Calderon. 1682 | 135 | |
The Salamander | |||
48. | Petition of Paul Sherrett and Claes Pietersen. Aug. 2, 1681 | 138 | |
49. | Deposition of Samuel Button. Aug. 11, 1681 | 140 | |
The Camelion | |||
50. | Agreement to Commit Piracy. June 30, 1683 | 141 | |
51. | Court for the Trial of Piracy: Commission. Sept. 15, 20, 1683 | 143 | |
Case of William Coward | |||
52. | William Coward's Plea. 1690 | 145 | |
Case of Benjamin Blackledge | |||
53. | Declaration of Jeremiah Tay and Others. Mar., 1691 (?) | 147 | |
54. | Deposition of Epaphras Shrimpton. July, 1694 (?) | 149 | |
55. | Deposition of Jeremiah Tay. July 6, 1694 | 150 | |
56. | Indictment of Benjamin Blackledge. Oct. 30, 1694 | 151 | |
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57. | Deposition of Thomas Larimore. Oct. 28, 1695 | 152 | |
Case of Henry Every | |||
58. | Petition of the East India Company. July, 1696 | 153 | |
59. | Extract, E.I. Co. Letter from Bombay. May 28, 1695 | 155 | |
60. | Abstract, E.I. Co. Letters from Bombay. Oct. 12, 1695 | 156 | |
61. | Letter from Venice. May 25, 1696 | 159 | |
62. | Abstract, Letters from Ireland. June 16-July 7, 1696 | 160 | |
63. | Examination of John Dann. Aug. 3, 1696 | 165 | |
64. | Affidavit of Philip Middleton. Nov. 11, 1696 | 171 | |
65. | Deposition of Samuel Perkins. Aug. 25, 1698 | 175 | |
66. | Certificate for John Devin (Bahamas). Sept. (?) 20, 1698 | 178 | |
67. | Certificate for John Devin (Massachusetts). Oct. 25, 1698 | 179 | |
68. | Deposition of Adam Baldridge. May 5, 1699 | 180 | |
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69. | Warrant for Commissioning of Admiralty Judge. Apr. 29, 1697 | 187 | |
70. | Proclamation of Lieut.-Gov. Stoughton. June 4, 1698 | 188 | |
Case of William Kidd | |||
71. | Deposition of Benjamin Franks. Oct. 20, 1697 | 190 | |
72. | The President and Council of the Leeward Islands to Secretary Vernon. May 18, 1699 | 195 | |
73. | Examination of Edward Buckmaster. June 6, 1699 | 197 | |
74. | Deposition of Theophilus Turner. June 8, 1699 | 200 | |
75. | Memorial of Duncan Campbell. June 19, 1699 | 202 | |
76. | Narrative of William Kidd. July 7, 1699 | 205 | |
77. | Lord Bellomont to the Board of Trade. July 8, 1699 | 213 | |
78. | Petition of Sarah Kidd. July 16 (?), 1699 | 218 | |
79. | Narrative of John Gardiner. July (17), 1699 | 220 | |
80. | Sarah Kidd to Thomas Payne. July 18, 1699 | 223 | |
81. | Petition of Sarah Kidd. July 25, 1699 | 224 | |
82. | Lord Bellomont to the Board of Trade. July 26, 1699 | 224 | |
83. | The Danish Governor of St. Thomas to Lord Bellomont. Sept. 1, 1699 | 232 | |
84. | Declaration of William Kidd. Sept. 4, 1699 | 236 | |
85. | Lord Bellomont to the Board of Trade. Nov. 29, 1699 | 237 | |
86. | Information of Henry Bolton. Feb. 4, 1701 | 245 | |
87. | William Kidd to the Speaker of the House of Commons (Robert Harley). Apr. (?), 1701 | 250 | |
88. | William Kidd to Robert Harley (?). May 12, 1701 | 252 | |
89. | Captain Kid's Farewel to the Seas; or, The Famous Pirate's Lament. 1701 | 253 | |
The Fidelia | |||
90. | Examination of William Sims. Oct. 22, 1699 | 257 | |
La Paix | |||
91. | Orders of Governor Nicholson to County Officers. Apr. 28, 1700 | 259 | |
92. | Deposition of William Fletcher. May 2, 1700 | 262 | |
93. | Charles Scarburgh to Governor Nicholson. May 3, 1700 | 264 | |
94. | John and Adam Thorowgood to Captain Passenger. May 3, 1700 | 266 | |
95. | Benjamin Harrison, jr., to Governor Nicholson. May 4, 1700 | 267 | |
96. | Governor Nicholson to Captain Passenger. May 4, 1700 | 268 | |
97. | William Wilson to Governor Nicholson. May 5, 1700 | 269 | |
98. | Captain Michael Cole to William Wilson. May 5, 1700 | 270 | |
99. | Libel by Captain William Passenger. May 11, 1700 | 271 | |
100. | Deposition of William Woolgar and Others. (June 11, 1700) | 272 | |
101. | Deposition of Joseph Man. (June 11, 1700) | 273 | |
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102. | Report of Dr. George Bramston. Nov. 27, 1702 | 275 | |
Privateers at Martinique | |||
103. | Letter to Boston News Letter. May 8, 1704 | 276 | |
Case of John Quelch and His Fellow Pirates | |||
104. | Account of their Execution. June 30, 1704 | 278 | |
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105. | Deposition of Paul Dudley. Aug. 15, 1705 | 285 | |
106. | Commission for Trial of Piracy. Nov. 1, 1716 | 286 | |
The Pirates of the Whidah | |||
107. | Cyprian Southack to Governor Samuel Shute. May 5 (?), 1717 | 290 | |
108. | Examination of John Brown. May 6, 1717 | 293 | |
109. | Deposition of Thomas FitzGerald and Alexander Mackonochie. May 6, 1717 | 296 | |
110. | Cyprian Southack to Governor Samuel Shute. May 8, 1717 | 299 | |
111. | Deposition of Ralph Merry and Samuel Roberts. May 11, 16, 1717 | 301 | |
112. | Trial of Simon van Vorst and Others. (Oct.), 1717 | 303 | |
113. | Trial of Thomas Davis. Oct. 28, 1717 | 307 | |
114. | Memorial of Thomas Davis. 1717 | 309 | |
115. | Petition of William Davis. 1717 | 311 | |
Prize Courts | |||
116. | Sir Henry Penrice to the Secretary of the Admiralty. Nov. 29, 1718 | 312 | |
Piracy of Bartholomew Roberts | |||
117. | Extract from the Boston News-Letter. Aug. 22, 1720 | 313 | |
Admiralty Courts | |||
118. | John Menzies to the Secretary of the Admiralty. July 20, 1721 | 318 | |
Cases of John Rose Archer and Others | |||
119. | Trial of John Fillmore and Edward Cheesman. May 12, 1724 | 323 | |
120. | Trial of William Phillips and Others. May 12, 1724 | 330 | |
121. | Trial of William White, John Rose Archer, and William Taylor. May 13, 1724 | 338 | |
122. | Trial of John Baptis and Peter Taffery. May 13, 1724 | 342 | |
123. | Bill of Robert Dobney. June 2, 1724 | 344 | |
124. | Bill of Edward Stanbridge. June 2, 1724 | 345 | |
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125. | Petition of Nicholas Simons. May, 1725 | 346 | |
126. | Instructions of George II. to Captains of Privateers. Nov. 30, 1739 | 347 | |
127. | (Draft of) Warrant to Governors to issue Letters of Marque. Apr. 26, 1740 | 355 | |
Dumaresq vs. The Amsterdam Post | |||
128. | Record of the Admiralty Court, and Libel. July 23, Aug. 30, 1740 | 356 | |
129. | Sea-letter of the Amsterdam Post. Sept. 22, 1739 (N.S.) | 364 | |
130. | Let-pass of the Amsterdam Post. Sept. 23, 1739 (N.S.) | 365 | |
131. | Tonnage Certificate of the Amsterdam Post. Sept. 24, 1739 (N.S.) | 365 | |
132. | Aeneas Mackay's Oath as a Burgher of Amsterdam. Sept. 16, 1739 (N.S.) | 366 | |
133. | Lease to Aeneas Mackay. Oct. 2, 1739 (N.S.) | 366 | |
134. | Certificates of Master and Mate and Register. Oct. 8, 1739 (N.S.) | 367 | |
135. | Extract from Capt. Mackay's Journal. Nov. 14, 1739 | 368 | |
136. | Protest of Capt. Mackay. Nov. 15, 1739 | 369 | |
137. | Extract from Capt. Mackay's Journal. Nov. 16, 1739 | 370 | |
138. | Certificate of Clearance. Dec. 4, 1739 | 370 | |
139. | Declarations of Sailors. 1740 | 371 | |
140. | Certificate of British Consul in Madeira. Mar. 9, 1740 (N.S.) | 372 | |
141. | Receipt for Mediterranean Pass. May 29, 1740 (N.S.) | 373 | |
142. | Certificate of British-Dutch Vice-Consul in Teneriffe. Apr. 26, 1740 (N.S.) | 373 | |
143. | Sentence of Admiralty Judge. Sept. 1, 1740 | 375 | |
The Revenge | |||
144. | Commission of Capt. Benjamin Norton as a Privateer. June 2, 1741 | 378 | |
145. | Journal of the Sloop Revenge. June 5-Oct. 5, 1741 | 381 | |
146. | Account of the Crew with the Owners. Oct. 30, 1741 | 429 | |
147. | Petition and Complaint of John Freebody. Nov. 5, 1741 | 431 | |
148. | Deposition of Jeremiah Harriman. Nov. 25, 1741 | 434 | |
149. | Deposition of Thomas Smith. Nov. 30, 1741 | 436 | |
150. | Decree of Vice-Admiralty Judge. Dec. 7, 1741 | 439 | |
151. | Appeal in Prize Case. Dec. 8, 1741 | 442 | |
152. | Bond for Appeal in Prize Case. Dec. 19, 1741 | 443 | |
153. | Case (Freebody c. Sarah) and Opinions of Civilians, May 17, July 10, 1742 | 444 | |
154. | Letters to Owner from London Agents. June 10, July 17, 1742 | 448 | |
155. | Decree of Vice-Admiralty Judge. July 7, 1742 | 450 | |
156. | Letters to Owner from London Agents. July 27, Aug. 13, 1742, Feb. 16, 1743 | 451 | |
157. | Account rendered by a Proctor in London. Feb. 10, 1744 | 453 | |
158. | John Tweedy's Bill for Medicines. Nov. 8, 1743 | 456 | |
159. | Account for the Revenge. June, 1744 | 461 | |
160. | Agreement: The Revenge and the Success. Nov. 10, 1744 | 463 | |
161. | Inventory and Appraisement of the Prize Willem. June 8, 1745 | 465 | |
162. | A Proctor's Account. 1745 | 468 | |
163. | A List of Gunner's Stores | 470 | |
164. | Suggestions as to plundering Hispaniola | 471 | |
The Princess of Orange | |||
165. | Record of Trial (Libel, Bill of Sale, Owner's Letter, Bills of Lading, Declaration, Affidavit, Portledge Bill, Depositions). June 11, 1741 |
473 | |
The Young Eagle | |||
166. | Petition of John Jones. Dec. 30, 1741 | 492 | |
The Hawk | |||
167. | Vote of Privateering Crew. June 29, 1744 | 494 | |
168. | Petition of William Ward. 1744 | 495 | |
169. | Deposition of John Flood and Zechariah Foss. Aug. 3, 1744 | 496 | |
170. | Testimony concerning William Ward. Aug. 4, 1744 | 498 | |
171. | Protest of Sailors. Aug. 13, 1744 | 499 | |
172. | Petition of Henry Johnson. Aug. 27, 1744 | 501 | |
The Lewis Joseph and the St. Anne | |||
173. | Deposition of Jacques Piegnon. Jan. 24, 1745 | 502 | |
The Apollo | |||
174. | Deposition of John Brown. Aug. 2, 1745 | 506 | |
175. | Deposition of Diego de Prada y Nieto. Aug. 2, 1745 | 508 | |
The Prince Charles of Lorraine | |||
176. | Deposition of Benjamin Munro and William Kipp. Apr. 23, 1746 | 510 | |
177. | Deposition of Daniel Vaughan. Sept. 1, 1746 | 513 | |
The Elizabeth | |||
178. | Deposition of William Dunbar. May 7, 1747 | 514 | |
————————— | |||
179. | Petition of Edward Winter. May, 1749 | 516 | |
180. | Commission of a Vice-Admiralty Judge. Sept. 23, 1752 | 517 | |
181. | Commission of a Vice-Admiralty Judge. June 16, 1753 | 519 | |
182. | Warrant to try Prizes. June 5, 1756 | 524 | |
183. | Standing Interrogatories. 1756 | 525 |
La Virgen del Rosario y el Santo Cristo de Buen Viage | |||
184. | Libel of Richard Haddon. Mar. 9, 1757 | 529 | |
185. | Deposition of Francisco Raphe. Mar. 31, 1757 | 533 | |
186. | Account of Sales. July 26, 1757 | 534 | |
187. | Deposition of Don Felipe Ybañez. Sept. 2, 1758 | 535 | |
188. | Libel of Felipe Ybañez. Sept. 27, 1758 | 542 | |
189. | Certificate of Captain-General Cagigal. Nov. 4, 1758 | 554 | |
190. | Deposition of William Haddon. Nov. 16, 1759 | 556 | |
191. | Declaration of Don Gerónimo de Medrano. Nov. 19, 1759 | 560 | |
192. | Declaration of Don Joseph de la Vega. Nov. 19, 1759 | 561 | |
193. | Declaration of Domingo de Armas. Nov. 20, 1759 | 563 | |
194. | Declaration of Elizabeth Berrow. Nov. 22, 1759 | 564 | |
195. | Reversal of Sentence by Appellate Court. Dec. 19, 1760 | 567 | |
196. | Appeal of Miller and Simpson. July 7, 1761 | 569 | |
The Dageroed | |||
197. | Bill of Health. Nov. 9, 1757 | 570 | |
————————— | |||
198. | News of Privateers. May 19, 1757 | 571 | |
199. | Letter of William Smith, jr. Apr. 8, 1757 | 573 | |
200. | Letter of Stephen Hopkins. Jan. 15, 1759 | 575 | |
201. | Notes on Commissions for Trying Pirates. Mar. 10, 1762, Aug. 26, 1772 | 577 | |
202. | Articles of Agreement; the Mars. June 23, 1762 | 581 | |
203. | Certificate of a Negro's Freedom. June 26, 1762 | 586 |
INDEX
1. Commission from the Providence Island Company to Governor Nathaniel Butler as Vice Admiral. April 23, 1638.[1]
Commission to Captain Butler[2] for the Admiraltie of the Island.
To all to whome theis presents shall come, we the Governor and Company etc. send greetinge. Wheras our gracious Soveraigne Lord King Charles hath by his Letters patent bearing date the 4th day of December in the 6th yeare of his Raigne,[3] for himselfe, his heires and successors, given and graunted to us and our successors, assignes and deputies for ever All Admirall rights, benefits and jurisdiccions and likewise all priviledges and Comodityes to the said Admirall jurisdiccion in any wise appertayneinge or belonging, in and upon the seas rivers and Coastes of the Island of Providence, Henrietta[4] and all other Islands within the Limits of his Majestys grant to us made and everie or any of them within 40 Leagues of any the said Islands and in and upon all other Rivers and Creekes within the said Limits, And likewise power to hold and determine all manner of Causes and pleas for and Concerning the same,[5] Now know ye that we the said Governor and Company confiding in the Fidelitie and Judgment of Captain Nathaniel Butler, now bound in a voyage to the Island of Providence, have elected, Constituted and deputed and doe hereby elect, constitute and depute the said Captain Nathaniel Butler, to be Admirall of the said Island of Providence, Hereby giveing and graunting to the said Captain Nathaniel Butler full power and authority to doe and execute (with the advise of the Counsell of warre which shall from time to time be established by us in the said Island) all matters and things concerning the said place of Admirall according to the Instruccions that we or our successors shall from time to time give and direct for and Concerning the execucion thereof, Nevertheless reserving to our selves all such Admirall duties as shall be payable and accomptable for or in respect of the same, other then[6] such priviledges and benefits as shall upon agreement betweene us and the said Captain Butler be assigned and appropriated to him, To have, hould and exercise the said place of Admirall of the said Island untill we shall otherwise dispose of the same. And we do require all persons whatsoever from time to time resideing in the said Island that shall at any tyme abide or be in the harbours, ports or Creeks of the same, to yeild and give all due obedience and respect to the lawfull Commands of the said Captain Butler as Admirall of the said Island, as they will answer the Contrary at their perills. Given under our Common Seale this 23th day of Aprill In the XIIII yeare of the raigne of our Soveraigne Lord Charles, by the grace of God King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defendor of the Faith, etc. And in the yeare of our Lord God 1638.
H. Darley, Deputy.[7] | Ro. Warwick. | |
W. Say and Seale. | E. Mandeville. | |
Ro. Brook. | Jo. Pym. | Jo. Gourden. |
[1] Public Record Office of Great Britain, C.O. 124:1, p. 118. This document and the next take us back to an almost-forgotten colonial experiment of the English Puritans, contemporary with their undertakings in New England but far removed from them in locality. Old Providence Island—to be distinguished from New Providence (Nassau) in the Bahamas—is an isolated little island in the western Caribbean lying off the coast of Nicaragua. It now belongs to Colombia, and is often called Santa Catalina. In 1630 a company of English investors, desiring to found a Puritan colony, and also to oppose Spain in the Caribbean, obtained from Charles I. a patent for a large area including Providence and other islands. John Pym was their leading member. The history of their colony is interestingly recounted in Professor A.P. Newton's The Colonizing Activities of the English Puritans (New Haven, 1914). The colony became merely a base for privateering against the Spaniards, who conquered and suppressed it in 1641. Thomas Gage, who passed by the island in a Spanish ship in 1637, says, "The greatest feare that I perceived possessed the Spaniards in this Voyage, was about the Island of Providence, called by them Sta. Catarina or St. Catharine, from whence they feared lest some English Ships should come out against them with great strength. They cursed the English in it, and called the Island the den of theeves and Pirates." The English American, or A New Survey of the West-India's (London, 1648), p. 199. For the whole matter of West Indian buccaneering, see Miss Violet Barbour's article, "Privateers and Pirates of the West Indies", in the American Historical Review, XVI. 529-566.
[2] Nathaniel Butler, third governor of Providence Island, sent out with a considerable expedition in April, 1638, had earlier been governor of Bermuda and then a member of the royal council for Virginia.
[3] December 4, 1630. The patent is summarized by Newton, pp. 86-90, and the part conferring admiralty rights is printed in R.G. Marsden, Law and Custom of the Sea (Navy Records Society), I. 470-472.
[4] Henrietta lay some sixty miles southwest of Providence.
[5] A very exceptional grant of power, including the right to grant letters of marque. R.G. Marsden, "Early Prize Jurisdiction and Prize Law in England," in English Historical Review, XXV. 257.
[6] Than.
[7] The signers are as follows. Henry Darley, deputy treasurer, a Yorkshire squire, was a conspicuous Puritan and an intimate friend of Pym. Robert Rich (1587-1658), second earl of Warwick, afterward a chief leader of the Puritans in the Civil War, and lord high admiral under Parliament, had before this been conspicuous in privateering and colonial ventures, and president of the Council for New England. Viscount Saye and Sele (1582-1662) and Lord Brooke (1608-1643), eminent Puritan and Parliamentarian lords, are best known in American history as patentees of the Saybrook colony, but were much more deeply interested in the Providence Island venture. Edward viscount Mandeville (courtesy title borne until his father's death in 1642) is better known as the second earl of Manchester (1602-1671), the celebrated Parliamentarian general. John Pym needs no identification. John Gourdon or Gurdon was an East Anglian squire, neighbor of John Winthrop of Groton.
2. Governor Nathaniel Butler, “Diary of my Present Employment”. February-March, 1639.[1]
[February] 13. Wee hadd an alarme this morneinge, and in regard that the sayle that wee made came to an Anchor close without our Rocks called the Breakers, wee sone found that she was a stranger and in perill: wherupon I sent out two shalopes well manned and followed myself in the thirde: and by the waye wee mett with her bote being only a Canow in which all of her men wer come off from her and left her alone; But wee tooke two of her men backe with us to the shypp; and sent two of my Botes to bring her into the Harbour;[2] the which was done: Wee founde her to be a Spanish Frigate, taken by a man of Warre of Flushinge off of Cuba. she was laden with mantega de Porco,[3] Hides and tallowe; their resolution was to have carried her to St. Christophers,[4] and ther to have sold her Goods, but being not able to fetch itt, she was forced to beare up for our Iland; and but for us had wracked upon our rocks; shee was manned with eight men; and the man of warre that tooke her haveinge dispatched her as he thought for St. Christophers, remained upon the Coast of Hispaniola to looke out for more purchase:[5] and in the meantime, little knows what is become of his Prize.
14. I dined at Captain Morgan's. After dinner the Councell of Warre wer assembled at my house; wher some propositions wer considered off touchinge the new come Dutche; as alsoe about some redresses in respect of wronngs pretended to be offred by our Pillageinge seamen.
15. I was att Warwicke Fort[6] this morneinge, wher I called a Counsell of warre; and the new come in Dutche presented a coppy of their Commission signed by the Prince of Orange and the Dutche West India Company. After dinner being newly returned home, wee hadd an alarme, upon the discovery of a sayle; and I went presently out in my shalope and sent Captaine Axe out in his shalope to make a discoverye upon her; she proved to be another smale man of warre of Holland which had bin long upon the coast of the terra firma;[7] and hadd gotten nothinge; towards the eveninge she came to an Anchor in our Harbour. This vessell comeinge to the Ronchadores (it being only a desolate barren rocky sande twentie leagues to the eastwards of Providence, which is the nearest land unto itt)[8] found ther an Englishman the which with some others being in a smale frigate wer shypwracked upon itt, some of them gott awaye upon two rafts of which the one of them was never hearde off; Thoes upon the other raft wer driven upon the maine-land of the West-Indies, and soe att last gott home. This man with some others remained upon the sande and rocks; wher att last all of them died save this man only; who after he hadd remained ther two yeares and a halfe of which for ten monethes space, after the deathe of all the rest, he lived solitarily and all alone, being only fedd with such sea foules as resorted to the place, and sometimes some fish, he was thus taken and brought home unto us in good healthe and very lusty.
16. I went very early this mornenige to the greate Baye, wher my worcks went forwards well and almost to my wish. In the afternoone being returned home, I spent some houres in the hearinge of divers controversies amongst the Inhabitants. Towards night the Commander of the Dutche Vessel that came into our Harbour the daye before presented himself unto me and shewed me his Commission signed by the Prince of Aurenge:[9] His errand hither was to find and stoppe a leake; haveinge bin foure or five monethes upon the coast, and gotten noethinge. This morneing also, another of the new Companyes was in their Armes, upon the great Baye; and exercised by Captain Carter[10] in my presence, and did well.
17. Upon this Lorde's daye I was in the morneinge and eveninge at Mr. Sherrard's Churche,[11] who preached unto us, at both times. After the afternoone's sermon, the poore man that was soe hapely recovered from the Ronchadores, was introduced by Mr. Sherrarde to make a publicke thanksgiveinge to God for his deliverance with a confession in generall tearmes of his former vicious life, and a promise of future amendment. An act very commendable in itselfe, and a Course fully approvable: Though itt now brought to every man's minde and observation, that whereas the apparent evidence of God's mercye in as highe or higher a nature hadd been manifested towards Captain Axe and his company in his escape from the enemie, to thoes five persons that came safe unto us, in an extreme leakinge bote, from St. Christophers; And towards the fortie nine persons that arrived safely with us from the Barbadoes;[12] And all this done within the space of foure monethes; that none of all this should have bin remembered by Mr. Sherrard, in the same kinde; as if the safe-being of this one only man, had either bin of more remarkableness in itselfe, or of more acceptableness with him than all the others putt togither....
21. Early this morneinge I went out in my shalope to Darlies Fort[13] to looke out for the vessells that wer made the eveninge before and by sunne riseinge wee againe made them five leagues out to sea standeinge in with our Harbour; and by ten of the clocke they came ther to an Anchor: and one of them proved to be the Pinnace called the Queene of Bohemia[14] that I had sent out about five weekes before to looke out for Purchase upon the coasts of the maine; the other was a Spanish Frigate which she hadd made her Prize. I dined this daye at a weddinge.
22. The Captaine of our last arrived Pinnace came unto me and certified me concerneinge his voiage, and the takeinge of his Prize; and I gave him some Advices about the orderinge of every man's shares: And upon this daye all the montega de Porco, and the Tallow that came in the first Dutche was sold to the people att reasonable rates....
25. One of our new Companys was exercised upon this daye, by Captaine Hunt;[15] I went aborde our new prize, to sett downe orders, upon the Breakeinge of Bulke; And the Prize Goods began this morneinge to be unshypped, into our Store House. I hadd many Bussinesses brought afore me this daye, and found trouble ynough in decideinge of them.
26. Our new erected Company of Voluntiers exercised this morneinge, att our new exerciseinge place, and all the Captaines dined with me: In the afternoone, I called a Counsell of warre, where orders wer sett downe and given to the Captaines of the Fortes about makeing of all shotts att the comeinge in of shypps: Witnesses wer also examined in the Court of Admiraltie[16] about the new come in Prize, and a preparation made to an Adjudication. I hearde, determined and appeased divers differences, which might have produced ill bloud.
wer first layde aside; and then my dues as Admirall, and Captaine Axe's as Vice Admirall; and then some shares wer delivered accordinge to every man's part, to the common marriner[s]; and all the Tobacco belonginge to them, was shared and delivered.