Stede Bonnet

Stede Bonnet

Engraving of Bonnet from A General History of the Pyrates (1724)
Born c. 1688
Bridgetown, Barbados
Died 10 December 1718 (aged c. 30)
Charlestown, South Carolina

Piratical career

Nickname The Gentleman Pirate
Type Pirate
Allegiance None
Years active 1717–1718
Rank Captain
Base of operations Atlantic Ocean, along East Coast of the British Colonies, and Caribbean Sea
Commands Revenge, later renamed Royal James
Battles/wars Battle of Cape Fear River

Stede Bonnet (c. 1688[1] – 10 December 1718[2])[3] was an early 18th-century Barbadian pirate, sometimes called "The Gentleman Pirate"[4] because he was a moderately wealthy landowner before turning to a life of crime. Bonnet was born into a wealthy English family on the island of Barbados, and inherited the family estate after his father's death in 1694. In 1709, he married Mary Allamby, and engaged in some level of militia service. Because of marital problems, and despite his lack of sailing experience, Bonnet decided he should to turn to piracy in the summer of 1717. He bought a sailing vessel, named it Revenge, and traveled with his paid crew along the Eastern Seaboard of what is now the United States, capturing other vessels and burning other Barbadian ships.

Bonnet set sail for Nassau, Bahamas, to the haven for pirates known as the "pirates' republic", but he was seriously wounded en route during an encounter with a Spanish warship. After arriving in Nassau, Bonnet met Edward Teach, the infamous pirate Blackbeard. Incapable of leading his crew, Bonnet temporarily ceded his ship's command to Blackbeard. Before separating in December 1717, Blackbeard and Bonnet plundered and captured merchant ships along the East Coast. After Bonnet failed to capture the Protestant Caesar, his crew abandoned him to join Blackbeard aboard the Queen Anne's Revenge. Bonnet stayed on Blackbeard's ship as a guest, and did not command a crew again until summer 1718, when he was pardoned by North Carolina governor Charles Eden and received clearance to go privateering against Spanish shipping. Bonnet was tempted to resume his piracy, but did not want to lose his pardon, so he adopted the alias "Captain Thomas" and changed his ship's name to Royal James. He had returned to piracy by July 1718.

In August 1718, Bonnet anchored the Royal James on an estuary of the Cape Fear River to careen and repair the ship. In late August and September, Colonel William Rhett, with the authorisation of South Carolina governor Robert Johnson, led a naval expedition against pirates on the river. Rhett and Bonnet's men fought each other for hours, but the outnumbered pirates ultimately surrendered. Rhett arrested the pirates and brought them to Charleston in early October. Bonnet escaped on 24 October, but was recaptured on Sullivan's Island. On 10 November, Bonnet was brought to trial and charged with two acts of piracy. Judge Nicholas Trott sentenced Bonnet to death. Bonnet wrote to Governor Johnson to ask for clemency, but Johnson endorsed the judge's decision, and Bonnet was hanged in Charleston on 10 December 1718.

Pre-criminal life

Bonnet is believed to have been born in 1688, as he was christened at Christ Church parish on 29 July 1688.[5] His parents, Edward and Sarah Bonnet, owned an estate of over 400 acres (1.6 km2) southeast of Bridgetown,[6] which was bequeathed to Bonnet upon his father's death in 1694. It is not known where Bonnet received his education, but many who knew him described him as bookish, and Judge Nicholas Trott alluded to Bonnet's liberal education when sentencing him.[7][8] Bonnet married Mary Allamby in Bridgetown on 21 November 1709.[9] They had three sons—Allamby, Edward, and Stede—and a daughter, Mary. Allamby died before 1715, while the other children survived to see their father abandon them for piracy.[10] Edward's granddaughter, Anne Thomasine Clarke, was the wife of General Robert Haynes, for 36 years Speaker of the Assembly of Barbados.[11]

In A General History of the Pyrates, Charles Johnson wrote that Bonnet was driven to piracy by Mary's nagging and "[d]iscomforts he found in a married State."[12][13] Details of Bonnet's military service are unclear, but he held the rank of major in the Barbados militia. The rank was probably due to his land holdings, since deterring slave revolts was an important function of the militia. Bonnet's militia service coincided with the War of the Spanish Succession, but there is no record that he took part in the fighting.[1]

Early career as a pirate

During the spring of 1717, Stede Bonnet decided to become a pirate, despite having no knowledge of shipboard life. He contracted a local shipyard to build him a sixty-ton sloop, which he equipped with six guns[14] and named the Revenge. This was unusual, as most pirates seized their ships by mutiny or boarding, or else converted a privateer vessel to a pirate ship. Bonnet enlisted a crew of more than seventy men. He relied on his quartermaster and officer for their knowledge of sailing, and as a result, he was not highly respected by his crew.[1] In another break from tradition, Bonnet paid his crew wages, not shares of plunder as most pirates did.[1][15] Royal Navy intelligence reported that he departed Carlisle Bay, Barbados under cover of darkness.[14]

Bonnet's initial cruise took him to the coast of Virginia near the entrance of the Chesapeake Bay, where he captured and plundered four vessels, and burned the Barbadian ship Turbet to keep news of his crimes from his home island.[16] He then sailed north to New York City, taking two more ships, and picking up naval supplies and releasing captives at Gardiners Island. By August 1717, Bonnet had returned to the Carolinas, where he attacked two more ships, a brigantine from Boston and a Barbadian sloop.[17] He stripped the brigantine, but brought the cargo-filled Barbadian sloop to an inlet off North Carolina to use for careening and repairing the Revenge.[16] After the Barbadian sloop's tackle was used to careen the Revenge, the ship was dismantled for timber, and the remains were then burned. In September 1717, Bonnet set course for Nassau, which was then an infamous pirate den on the island of New Providence in the Bahamas. En route, he encountered, fought, and escaped from a Spanish man of war. The Revenge was badly damaged, Bonnet was seriously wounded, and half the crew of the sloop was killed or wounded in the encounter. Putting in at Nassau, Bonnet replaced his casualties and refitted the Revenge, increasing the sloop's armament to twelve guns.[18]

Collaboration with Blackbeard

While at Nassau, Bonnet met Captain Benjamin Hornigold and Edward Teach for the first time; Teach, better known as Blackbeard, played a large role in the remainder of Bonnet's life. Disabled by his wounds, Bonnet temporarily ceded command of the Revenge to Blackbeard, but remained aboard as a guest of the more experienced pirate captain.[19] Blackbeard and Bonnet weighed anchor and sailed northward to Delaware Bay, where they plundered eleven ships. On 29 September 1717, the Revenge, captained by Blackbeard, plundered the sloop Betty, which had a cargo full of Madeira wine.[20] Captain Codd, whose merchant ship was taken on 12 October, described Bonnet as walking the deck in his nightshirt, lacking any command and still unwell from his wounds. The Revenge later captured and looted the Spofford and Sea Nymph, which were leaving Philadelphia. On 22 October, the Revenge stopped and robbed the Robert and Good Intent of their supplies.[21]

Blackbeard and Bonnet left Delaware Bay and returned to the Caribbean in November, where they successfully continued their piracy. On 17 November, a 200-ton ship named the Concorde was attacked by two pirate craft nearly 100 miles (160 km) away from the island of Martinique.[21] The lieutenant on board described the pirate vessels as one having 12 guns and 120 men and the other having eight guns and 30 men. The crew of the Concorde put up a fight, but surrendered after the pirates bombarded them with "two volleys of cannons and musketry."[22] Blackbeard took the Concorde and sailed south into the Grenadines, where he renamed the ship Queen Anne's Revenge, possibly as an insult to King George I of Great Britain.[23] Some time after 19 December, Bonnet and Blackbeard separated.[24] Bonnet now sailed into the western Caribbean. In March 1718, he encountered the 400-ton merchant vessel Protestant Caesar off Honduras. The ship escaped him, and his frustrated crew became restive.[25] When Bonnet encountered Blackbeard again shortly afterward, Bonnet's crew deserted him to join Blackbeard. Blackbeard put a henchman named Richards in command of the Revenge. Bonnet, surprised that his colleague had betrayed him, found himself as a guest aboard the Queen Anne's Revenge. Bonnet confided in a few loyal crew members that he was ready to give up his criminal life if he could exile himself in Spain or Portugal. Bonnet would not exercise command again until the summer of 1718.[26]

Under Captain Richards, the Revenge captured a Jamaican sloop, the Adventure, captained by David Herriot. Herriot joined the pirates, and Blackbeard now possessed three ships. Bonnet accompanied Blackbeard to South Carolina, where Blackbeard's four vessels blockaded the port of Charleston in the late spring of 1718.[27] Needing a place to rest and refit their vessels, Blackbeard and Bonnet headed north to Topsail Inlet, where the Queen Anne's Revenge ran aground and was lost.[28] Leaving the remaining three vessels at Topsail Inlet, Blackbeard and Bonnet went ashore and journeyed to Bath, which was then capital of North Carolina. Once there, both men accepted pardons from Governor Charles Eden under King George's Act of Grace, putatively on condition of their renouncing piracy forever.[27][29] While Blackbeard quietly returned to Topsail Inlet, Bonnet stayed in Bath to get a "clearance" to take the Revenge to Denmark's Caribbean colony of St. Thomas, where he planned to buy a letter of marque and go privateering against Spanish shipping. Eden granted Bonnet this clearance.[30]

Resumption of pirate command

Bonnet returned to Topsail Inlet to find that Blackbeard had beached the majority of their former crew, robbed the Revenge and two other vessels of the squadron of most of their supplies, and sailed away for parts unknown aboard the sloop Adventure, carrying all the loot with him. Bonnet now (probably late June or early July 1718) resumed command of the Revenge. Few, if any, of his original crew from Barbados were still aboard. Bonnet reinforced the Revenge by rescuing a number of men whom Blackbeard had marooned on a sandbar in Topsail Inlet.[31][32][33]

Shortly after Bonnet resumed command, a bumboat's crew told him that Blackbeard was moored in Ocracoke Inlet. Bonnet set sail at once to hunt down his treacherous ex-confederate, but could not find him, and Bonnet never met Blackbeard again.[34] Although Bonnet apparently never discarded his hopes of reaching St. Thomas and getting his letter of marque, two pressing problems now tempted him back into piracy. First, Blackbeard had stolen the food and supplies he and his men needed to subsist (one pirate testified at his trial that no more than ten or eleven barrels remained aboard the Revenge).[35] Second, St. Thomas was now in the midst of the Atlantic hurricane season, which would last until autumn. However, returning to freebooting meant nullifying Bonnet's pardon.[36]

Hoping to preserve his pardon, Bonnet adopted the alias "Captain Thomas" and changed the Revenge's name to the Royal James.[37] The name Royal James that Bonnet conferred on his sloop was presumably a reference to the younger Prince James Stuart, and may suggest that Bonnet or his men had Jacobite sympathies. One of Bonnet's prisoners further reported witnessing Bonnet's men drinking to the health of the Old Pretender[38] and wishing to see him king of the English nation.[39]

Bonnet further tried to disguise his return to piracy by engaging in a pretense of trade with the next two vessels he robbed. Soon afterward, Bonnet quit the charade of trading and reverted to naked piracy. In July 1718, he cruised north to Delaware Bay, pillaging another eleven vessels. He took several prisoners, some of whom joined his pirate crew.[40] While Bonnet set loose most of his prizes after looting them, he retained control of the last two ships he captured: the sloops Francis and Fortune.[41] On 1 August 1718, the Royal James and the two captured sloops sailed southward from Delaware Bay.[36] The captured sloops lagged behind, and Bonnet threatened to sink them if they did not stay closer. During the passage, Bonnet and his crew divided their loot into shares of about £10 or £11 and distributed them amongst themselves.[42] This is the only time Bonnet is known to have practiced this important pirate custom, and it suggests he had by then abandoned his unorthodox practice of paying regular wages to his crew.

Twelve days out of Delaware Bay, Bonnet entered the estuary of the Cape Fear River and anchored near the mouth of a small waterway now known as Bonnet's Creek. The Royal James had begun to leak badly and was in need of careening. Shortly afterward, a small shallop entered the river and was captured. Bonnet had the shallop broken up to help repair the Royal James.[43][44][45] The work of careening was done, in whole or in part, by the prisoners Bonnet had captured. Bonnet threatened at least one man with marooning if he did not work the Royal James' pumps.[46] Bonnet remained in the Cape Fear River for the next 45 days. According to Bonnet's boatswain, Ignatius Pell, the pirates intended to wait out the hurricane season there.[36]

Battle of Cape Fear River

Monument to Stede Bonnet in Charleston, South Carolina

By the end of August, news had reached Charleston that Bonnet's vessels were moored in the Cape Fear River. Robert Johnson, governor of South Carolina, authorised Colonel William Rhett to lead a naval expedition against the pirates, even though the Cape Fear River was in North Carolina's jurisdiction.[46] After a false start due to the appearance of another pirate ship near Charleston, Rhett arrived at the mouth of the Cape Fear River on 26 September with two eight-gun sloops, the Henry and the Sea Nymph, and a force of 130 militia men.[47] Bonnet initially mistook Rhett's squadron for merchantmen and sent three canoes to capture them.[48] Unfortunately for Rhett, his flagship Henry had run aground in the river mouth, enabling Bonnet's canoe crews to approach, recognise the heavily armed and manned sloops as hostile and return uninjured to warn Bonnet. The sun had set by the time the rising tide lifted the Henry off the river bottom.[49]

The 46 pirates were scattered among the three sloops. During the night, Bonnet brought all of them aboard the Royal James and planned to fight his way out to sea in the morning rather than risk the Cape Fear River's narrow channels in the dark. Bonnet also wrote a letter to Governor Johnson, threatening to burn all the ships in Charleston harbor. At daybreak, on 27 September 1718, Bonnet set sail toward Rhett's force, and all three sloops opened fire, initiating the Battle of Cape Fear River.[47] The two South Carolinian sloops split up in an effort to bracket the Royal James. Bonnet tried to avoid the trap by steering the Royal James close to the river's western shore, but ran aground in the process. Rhett's closing sloops also ran aground, leaving only the Henry in range of the Royal James.[50]

The battle was at a stalemate for the next five or six hours, with all the participants immobilised. Bonnet's men had the advantage that their deck was heeled away from their opponents, giving them cover, while the Henry's deck was tilted toward the pirates, thus exposing Rhett's men to punishing musket volleys. Bonnet's force suffered twelve casualties while killing ten and wounding fourteen of Rhett's 70-man crew.[49] Most of Bonnet's men fought enthusiastically, challenging their enemies to board and fight hand to hand, and tying a knot in their flag as a mock signal to come aboard and render aid. Bonnet himself patrolled the deck with a pistol drawn, threatening to kill any pirate who faltered in the fight. Nevertheless, some of the prisoners who had been forced to join the pirate crew refused to fire on Rhett's men, and one narrowly escaped death at Bonnet's hands in the confusion of the engagement.[51][52][53]

The battle was ultimately decided when the rising tide lifted Rhett's sloops free while temporarily leaving the Royal James stranded.[53] Bonnet was left helpless, watching while the enemy vessels repaired their rigging and closed to board his paralysed vessel. Outnumbered almost three to one, Bonnet's men would have had little hope of winning a boarding action. Bonnet ordered his gunner, George Ross, to blow up the Royal James's powder magazine. Ross apparently attempted this, but was overruled by the remainder of the crew, who surrendered. Rhett arrested the pirates and returned to Charleston with his prisoners on 3 October.[54][55]

Escape, recapture, and execution

The hanging of Stede Bonnet in Charleston, 10 December 1718

In Charleston, Bonnet was separated from the bulk of his crew and held for three weeks along with his boatswain, Ignatius Pell, and his sailing master, David Herriott at the home of Town Marshal Nathaniel Partridge. Pirate Edward Robinson and the remaining crew were held outside of Charleston at the Watch House, at White Point.[56] On 24 October, Bonnet and Herriott escaped, probably by colluding with local merchant Richard Tookerman. Governor Johnson at once placed a £700 bounty on Bonnet's head and dispatched search teams to track him down.[57] Bonnet and Herriott, accompanied by a slave and an Indian, obtained a boat and made for the north shore of Charleston Harbor, but foul winds and lack of supplies forced the four of them onto Sullivan's Island. Governor Johnson sent a posse under Rhett to Sullivan's Island to hunt for Bonnet.[58] The posse discovered Bonnet after an extensive search, and opened fire, killing Herriott and wounding the two slaves. Bonnet surrendered and was returned to Charleston.[59] While awaiting trial, some sort of civil uprising in his support took place within the city, an event authorities would later describe as having nearly resulted in the burning of the town and the overthrow of the government. Bonnet possibly awaited his execution in the Court of Guard, a militia guardhouse in the city where the current Exchange and Provost stands today [60]

On 10 November 1718, Bonnet was brought to trial before Sir Nicholas Trott, sitting in his capacity as Vice-Admiralty judge. Trott had already sat in judgment on Bonnet's crew and sentenced most of them to hang.[61] Bonnet was formally charged with only two acts of piracy, against the Francis and the Fortune, whose commanders were on hand to testify against Bonnet in person.[62] Ignatius Pell had turned King's evidence in the trial of Bonnet's crew and now testified, somewhat reluctantly, against Bonnet himself.[63] Bonnet pleaded not guilty and conducted his own defence without assistance of counsel, cross-examining the witnesses to little avail, and calling a character witness in his favor. Trott rendered a damning summation of the evidence, and the jury delivered a guilty verdict. Two days later, after treating the convicted man to a stern lecture on his violation of Christian duties, Trott sentenced Bonnet to death.[64]

While awaiting his execution, Bonnet wrote to Governor Johnson, begging abjectly for clemency and promising to have his own arms and legs cut off as assurance that he would never again commit piracy.[65] Charles Johnson wrote that Bonnet's visibly disintegrating mind moved many Carolinians to pity, particularly the female population, and London papers later reported that the governor delayed his execution seven times.[66] Bonnet was eventually hanged at White Point Garden, in Charleston, on 10 December 1718.[67]

Legacy

Bonnet's authority

The actual degree of authority any pirate captain exercised over his crew was questionable, as he had no access to the procedures and sanctions of admiralty law that supported government captains. Many pirate captains were elected by their crews and could be deposed in the same manner.[68] Because of his ignorance of nautical matters, Bonnet was in an even weaker position than other pirate captains, as is demonstrated by the utter domination Blackbeard exercised over him during their collaboration. During Bonnet's early career, his crew seems to have been less than loyal to him and to have greatly preferred the more charismatic and experienced Blackbeard.[69]

At his trial, Bonnet downplayed his own authority over his pirate crew. He told the court that his crew engaged in piracy against his will, and said he had warned them that he would leave the crew unless they stopped robbing vessels.[70] He further stated that he had been asleep during the capture of the sloop Francis. The court did not accept these protestations.[71] Boatswain Ignatius Pell testified that Bonnet's quartermaster, Robert Tucker, had more power than Bonnet.[72] A powerful quartermaster appears to have been a common feature of pirate crews in the early modern era.[73]

Nevertheless, Bonnet's crew represented him as being a leader, and it appears likely that, after his rescue of Blackbeard's marooned crewmen, he became at least a co-equal commander aboard the Royal James. He appears to have been entrusted with the company's treasure, and made most major command decisions such as the direction of the ship and what vessels to attack. Most significantly, at Delaware Bay he ordered two of his crew to be flogged for breaches of discipline.[45] Pirates did not lightly submit to flogging, as they resented the frequent use of this punishment in the naval and merchant services from which most of them came,[74] and thus only a leader who commanded the obedience of his crew could successfully order such penalties.

Bonnet's pirate flag

Traditional depiction of Stede Bonnet's flag.

Bonnet's flag is traditionally represented as a white skull above a horizontal long bone between a heart and a dagger, all on a black field. Despite the frequent appearance of this flag in modern pirate literature, no known early-Georgian period source describes any such device, much less attributes it to Bonnet. This version of Bonnet's flag is probably one of a number of pirate flags appearing on an undated manuscript with unknown provenance in Britain's National Maritime Museum, which was donated by Dr. Philip Gosse in 1939. Bonnet's crew and contemporaries generally referred to him flying a "bloody flag",[75] which likely means a dark red flag. There is also a report from the 1718 Boston News-Letter of Bonnet flying a death's-head flag during his pursuit of the Protestant Caesar, with no mention of color or of any long bone, heart, or dagger.[76]

Walking the plank

Bonnet is alleged to have been one of the few pirates to make his prisoners walk the plank.[77] No contemporary source makes any mention of Bonnet forcing prisoners to walk the plank, and modern scholars such as Marcus Rediker, Professor of History at the University of Pittsburgh, generally agree that the whole concept of pirates forcing prisoners to walk the plank belongs to a later age than Bonnet's.[78]

Popular culture

Bonnet and his fictional daughter, Kate (Arthur Ignatius Keller, 1902)

Bonnet has been portrayed several times in literature. He is a major character in Tim Powers' On Stranger Tides, along with other famous piratical characters, particularly Blackbeard. In this novel, Bonnet takes up piracy after having been framed by Blackbeard, who has used Bonnet's hatred for his wife (only married two years in the novel) against him. Kate Bonnet: The Romance of a Pirate's Daughter, by 19th century author Frank Stockton, is a satirical novel relating the adventures of a fictional daughter of Bonnet named Kate.[79] Portrayals of Bonnet also extend to video games, such as Sid Meier's Pirates![80] and Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag.

A plaque commemorating Bonnet stands near Bonnet's Creek in Southport, North Carolina, on the Cape Fear River. The Yacht Basin Provision Company also holds an annual Stede Bonnet Regatta near Southport, commemorating the infamous pirate's dash for the ocean.[81]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Butler, Lindley S. (2000). Pirates, Privateers, and Rebel Raiders of the Carolina Coast. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. p. 55. ISBN 0-87169-240-6.
  2. Snow, Edward R. (1944). Pirates and Buccaneers of the Atlantic Coast. Dublin, New Hampshire: Yankee Publishing Co. p. 272.
  3. All dates in this article are in the Old Style form used in Britain and her colonies during Bonnet's life, except that the new year is dated from 1 January.
  4. Pringle, Patrick (2001). Jolly Roger: The Story of the Great Age of Piracy. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. p. 191. ISBN 0-486-41823-5.
  5. Sanders, Joanne McRee, eds. (1984). Barbados Records: Baptisms, 1637–1800. Baltimore: Genealogical Publications. p. 43.
  6. Butler (2000), p54.
  7. Butler (2000), p52.
  8. Johnson, Charles (1724). A General History of the Pyrates, from their First Rise and Settlement in the Island of Providence, to the Present Time (2 ed.). London: T. Warner. p. 91.
  9. Sanders, Joanne McRee, eds. (1982). Barbados Records: Marriages, 1693–1800. Houston: Sanders Historical Publications. Vol. 1, p114.
  10. Butler (2000), pp55–56.
  11. Sanders, Joanne McRee, eds. (1982). Barbados Records: Baptisms, 1693–1800. Houston: Sanders Historical Publications. Vol. 1.
  12. Johnson (1724), p95.
  13. Seitz, Don Carlos; Howard F. Gospel; Stephen Wood (2002). Under the Black Flag: Exploits of the Most Notorious Pirates (2 ed.). Mineola, New York: Courier Dover Publications. p. 134. ISBN 0-486-42131-7.
  14. 1 2 Letters of Capt Benjamin Candler as discussed at The Republic of Pirates blog.
  15. Cordingly, David (1996). Under the Black Flag: The Romance and Reality of Life Among the Pirates. New York: Random House. p. 97. ISBN 0-679-42560-8.
  16. 1 2 Butler (2000), p56.
  17. Johnson (1724), pp91–92.
  18. Butler (2000), pp56–57.
  19. Johnson (1724), p71.
  20. Butler (2000), p33.
  21. 1 2 Butler (2000), p34.
  22. Butler (2000), pp34–35.
  23. Butler (2000), p35.
  24. Butler (2000), p57.
  25. Butler (2000), p59.
  26. Butler (2000), pp58–59.
  27. 1 2 Butler (2000), p60.
  28. Butler (2000), p39.
  29. Seitz (2002), p135.
  30. Johnson (1724), pp72–75, 93.
  31. The Tryals of Major Stede Bonnet, and Other Pirates. London. 1719. p. 17.
  32. David Herriott, one of the rescued men, said that Bonnet picked up 17 men. Neal Paterson, also marooned, placed the number at 25.
  33. Johnson (1724), pp93–94.
  34. Johnson (1724), p94.
  35. Tryals (1719), p15.
  36. 1 2 3 Tryals (1719), p47.
  37. Butler (2000), p61.
  38. Prince James Francis Edward Stuart was nicknamed the Old Pretender because at the time of his birth, opponents of King James II of England falsely claimed that the real child of James II and his wife Mary of Modena had died at birth, which meant James Stuart was not the real son of the king. Another reason for the nickname was because he had twice failed to make his ascent to the English throne. Prince Stuart's son, Charles Edward Stuart, was nicknamed the Young Pretender.
  39. Tryals (1719), p13.
  40. Seitz (2002), p136.
  41. Johnson (1724), pp95–96.
  42. Johnson (1724), p106.
  43. Johnson (1724), p97.
  44. Tryals (1719), pp30, 47.
  45. 1 2 Butler (2000), p63.
  46. 1 2 Butler (2000), p64.
  47. 1 2 Butler (2000), p65.
  48. Seitz (2002), p136–137.
  49. 1 2 Seitz (2002), p137.
  50. Johnson (1724), pp97–99.
  51. Tryals (1719), pp18–19.
  52. Johnson (1724), p99.
  53. 1 2 Butler (2000), p66.
  54. Johnson (1724), pp99–100.
  55. Tryals (1719), p18.
  56. Brown, Paul. "The Lost Pirate of Blackbeard's Golden Age". en.expostmagazine.com. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  57. Butler (2000), p67.
  58. Seitz (2002), p138.
  59. Johnson (1724), pp100–101.
  60. Woodard (2007), pp299-300
  61. Butler (2000), p67–68.
  62. Butler (2000), p69.
  63. Johnson (1724), pp105–106.
  64. Tryals (1719), pp37–43.
  65. Johnson (1724), pp111–113.
  66. Woodard (2007), p301
  67. Butler (2000), pp71–72.
  68. Cordingly (1996), p96.
  69. The crew's preference for Blackbeard, the more able-bodied pirate captain, is seen when Bonnet's crew deserts him after the failure to capture the Protestant Caesar in March 1718.
  70. Butler (2000), pp69–70.
  71. Tryals (1719), pp40–41.
  72. Tryals (1719), p38.
  73. Cordingly (1996), p98.
  74. Botting, Douglas (1978). The Pirates. Time-Life Books. p. 50. ISBN 0-8094-2652-8.
  75. Tryals (1719), p16.
  76. Ed Foxe (2005-01-17). "Pirate Flags". Retrieved 2007-07-12.
  77. Gosse, Philip. The Pirates' Who's who. New York: Burt Franklin. p. 30. ISBN 1-60303-284-3.
  78. Roth, Mark (2006-07-23). "Real pirates bore little resemblance to the legends, Pitt scholar says". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2007-10-22.; for evidence of post-Bonnet plank walking see The Times, 14 February 1829, pg.3; David Cordingly. Under the Black Flag: The Romance and Reality of Life Among the Pirates, Harvest Books, 1997, p. 130-31.
  79. Stockton, Frank R. Kate Bonnet: The Romance of a Pirate's Daughter. Plain Label Books. ISBN 1-60303-275-4.
  80. "The Pirates of Pirates!". IGN. 2004-11-11. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
  81. "History Of The Cape Fear Yacht Club". Cape Fear Yacht Club. 2004. Archived from the original on 18 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-12.

References

  • Botting, Douglas. The Pirates. Time-Life Books, Inc., 1978. ISBN 0-8094-2652-8.
  • Butler, Lindley S. Pirates, Privateers, and Rebel Raiders of the Carolina Coast, Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 2000. ISBN 0-87169-240-6.
  • Cordingly, David. Under the Black Flag: The Romance and Reality of Life Among the Pirates. New York: Random House, 1996. ISBN 0-679-42560-8.
  • Johnson, Charles. A General History of the Pyrates, from their First Rise and Settlement in the Island of Providence, to the Present Time.... 2nd ed. London: Printed for, and sold by, T. Warner, 1724.
  • The Tryals of Major Stede Bonnet, and Other Pirates. London, Printed for Benj. Cowse at the Rose and Crown in St Paul's Church-Yard, 1719.
  • Woodard, Colin. The Republic of Pirates. New York: Harcourt, 2007. ISBN 978-0-15-603462-3.

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