The Crime Book

(Wang) #1
21
See also: The Hawkhurst Gang 136–37

BANDITS, ROBBERS, AND ARSONISTS


combined crews after he voted
against a decision to attack any
ship they wanted, including British
ships – took the King’s pardon and
parted ways with Blackbeard.
Eventually, Bonnet’s men
deserted him, choosing to serve
under Blackbeard’s command.
Blackbeard put a surrogate in
charge of the Revenge and kept
Bonnet as a “guest” on his ship.
Soon after, Blackbeard sailed to
North Carolina, where he blockaded
the port of Charleston, capturing
nine ships and ransoming a
wealthy merchant and politician.
Upon sailing away from
Charleston, the Queen Anne’s
Revenge ran aground. Anchoring
their fleet at Topsail Inlet, Bonnet
and Blackbeard travelled by land to
Bath, North Carolina, in June 1718
where they were granted pardons
by Governor Charles Eden.
However, while Bonnet remained
there, Blackbeard crept back to the
fleet, plundered the Revenge and
two other ships in the fleet and
transferred the goods to his sloop,
the Adventure.

Having violated the conditions
of his pardon, Blackbeard now
had a sizable bounty on his head.
On 22 November, 1718, two Royal
Navy sloops commanded by
Lieutenant Robert Maynard
caught up with the Adventure at
Ocracoke Harbor.

Last stand
Outmanoeuvring the Royal Navy’s
ships, Blackbeard lured them onto a
sandbar. Rather than escaping, he
fired two broadside attacks at

Maynard’s ship. When the smoke
cleared, only the lieutenant and a
few crew members remained on
deck. Blackbeard ordered his band
of 23 pirates to board the vessel.
As his men clambered onto the
ship, 30 armed sailors emerged
from below decks. A bloody battle
ensued. Maynard and Blackbeard
both aimed their flintlock pistols at
each other and fired. Blackbeard’s
shot missed but Maynard’s struck
Blackbeard in the abdomen.
Blackbeard recovered, however,
and broke Maynard’s sword in two
with a mighty blow of his cutlass.
Before he could capitalize on his
brief advantage, though, one of
Maynard’s men drove a pike into
Blackbeard’s shoulder. Outgunned
and outnumbered, Blackbeard’s
crew surrendered, but he continued
to fight. He finally fell dead after
taking five gunshot wounds and
20 sword wounds.
Maynard ordered his men to
hang Blackbeard’s head from the
bowsprit. Later, it was mounted on
a stake near the Hampton River as
a warning to other pirates. ■

“Legal” piracy


Sociologists have long recognized
that crime and deviance are
situational – that they change over
time and from one location to the
next. Piracy is a good example of
this phenomenon.
In the mid-13th century,
Henry III of England started to
issue licences, called “privateering
commissions”, which allowed
sailors to attack and plunder
foreign vessels. After 1295, these
licences were known as letters of
marque. Privateers became much
more numerous in the 16th to 18th

centuries, with some working
without royal consent, including
Francis Drake, who carried out
raids on Spanish shipping.
During Queen Anne’s War,
British privateers regularly
plundered French and Spanish
ships. However, when hostilities
between the nations ended,
these same professional
plunderers suddenly found
themselves on the other side
of the law. Clearly, what is
considered criminal depends on
shifting social structures, which
are in turn dictated by larger
political and economic realities.

Privateer Sir Henry Morgan
attacks and captures the town of
Puerto del Principe in Cuba in this
engraving from 1754.

Let’s jump on board, and
cut them to pieces.
Edward “Blackbeard”
Teach

020-021_Blackbeard.indd 21 02/12/2016 14:39

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