<SPAN name="THE_LIFE_ATROCITIES_AND_BLOODY_DEATH_OF_BLACK_BEARD"></SPAN>
<h2>THE LIFE, ATROCITIES, AND BLOODY DEATH OF BLACK BEARD.</h2>
Edward Teach was a native of Bristol, and having gone to Jamaica,
frequently sailed from that port as one of the crew of a privateer
during the French war. In that station he gave frequent proofs of
his boldness and personal courage; but he was not entrusted with
any command until Captain Benjamin Hornigold gave him the command
of a prize which he had taken.
<p>In the spring of 1717, Hornigold and Teach sailed from
Providence for the continent of America, and on their way captured
a small vessel with 120 barrels of flour, which they put on board
their own vessel. They also seized two other vessels; from one they
took some gallons of wine, and from the other, plunder to a
considerable value. After cleaning upon the coast of Virginia, they
made a prize of a large French Guineaman bound to Martinique, and
Teach obtaining the command of her, went to the island of
Providence, and surrendered to the king's clemency.</p>
<p>Teach now began to act an independent part. He mounted his
vessel with forty guns, and named her "The Queen Anne's Revenge."
Cruising near the island of St. Vincent, he took a large ship,
called the Great Allan, and after having plundered her of what he
deemed proper, set her on fire. A few days after, Teach encountered
the Scarborough man-of-war, and engaged her for some hours; but
perceiving his strength and resolution, she retired, and left Teach
to pursue his depredations. His next adventure was with a sloop of
ten guns, commanded by Major Bonnet, and these two men co-operated
for some time: but Teach finding him unacquainted with naval
affairs, gave the command of Bonnet's ship to Richards, one of his
own crew, and entertained Bonnet on board his own vessel. Watering
at Turniff, they discovered a sail, and Richards with the Revenge
slipped her cable, and ran out to meet her. Upon seeing the black
flag hoisted, the vessel struck, and came-to under the stern of
Teach the commodore. This was the Adventure from Jamaica. They took
the captain and his men on board the great ship, and manned his
sloop for their own service.</p>
<p>Weighing from Turniff, where they remained during a week, and
sailing to the bay, they found there a ship and four sloops. Teach
hoisted his flag, and began to fire at them, upon which the captain
and his men left their ship and fled to the shore. Teach burned two
of these sloops, and let the other three depart.</p>
<p>They afterwards sailed to different places, and having taken two
small vessels, anchored off the bar of Charleston for a few days.
Here they captured a ship bound for England, as she was coming out
of the harbor. They next seized a vessel coming out of Charleston,
and two pinks coming into the same harbor, together with a
brigantine with fourteen negroes. The audacity of these
transactions, performed in sight of the town, struck the
inhabitants with terror, as they had been lately visited by some
other notorious pirates. Meanwhile, there were eight sail in the
harbor, none of which durst set to sea for fear of falling into the
hands of Teach. The trade of this place was totally interrupted,
and the inhabitants were abandoned to despair. Their calamity was
greatly augmented from this circumstance, that a long and desperate
war with the natives had just terminated, when they began to be
infested by these robbers.</p>
<p>Teach having detained all the persons taken in these ships as
prisoners, they were soon in great want of medicines, and he had
the audacity to demand a chest from the governor. This demand was
made in a manner not less daring than insolent. Teach sent
Richards, the captain of the Revenge, with Mr. Marks, one of the
prisoners, and several others, to present their request. Richards
informed the governor, that unless their demand was granted, and he
and his companions returned in safety, every prisoner on board the
captured ships should instantly be slain, and the vessels consumed
to ashes.</p>
<p>During the time that Mr. Marks was negotiating with the
governor, Richards and his associates walked the streets at
pleasure, while indignation flamed from every eye against them, as
the robbers of their property, and the terror of their country.
Though the affront thus offered to the Government was great and
most audacious, yet, to preserve the lives of so many men, they
granted their request, and sent on board a chest valued at three or
four hundred pounds.</p>
<p>Teach, as soon as he received the medicines and his fellow
pirates, pillaged the ships of gold and provisions, and then
dismissed the prisoners with their vessels. From the bar of
Charleston they sailed to North Carolina. Teach now began to
reflect how he could best secure the spoil, along with some of the
crew who were his favorites. Accordingly, under pretence of
cleaning, he ran his vessel on shore, and grounded; then ordered
the men in Hands' sloop to come to his assistance, which they
endeavoring to do, also ran aground, and so they were both lost.
Then Teach went into the tender with forty hands, and upon a sandy
island, about a league from shore, where there was neither bird no
beast, nor herb for their subsistence, he left seventeen of his
crew, who must inevitably have perished, had not Major Bonnet
received intelligence of their miserable situation, and sent a
long-boat for them. After this barbarous deed. Teach, with the
remainder of his crew, went and surrendered to the governor of
North Carolina, retaining all the property which had been acquired
by his fleet.</p>
<p>The temporary suspension of the depredations of Black Beard, for
so he was now called, did not proceed from a conviction of his
former errors, or a determination to reform, but to prepare for
future and more extensive exploits. As governors are but men, and
not unfrequently by no means possessed of the most virtuous
principles, the gold of Black Beard rendered him comely in the
governor's eyes, and, by his influence, he obtained a legal right
to the great ship called "The Queen Anne's Revenge." By order of
the governor, a court of vice-admiralty was held at Bath-town, and
that vessel was condemned as a lawful prize which he had taken from
the Spaniards, though it was a well-known fact that she belonged to
English merchants. Before he entered upon his new adventures, he
married a young woman of about sixteen years of age, the governor
himself attending the ceremony. It was reported that this was only
his fourteenth wife, about twelve of whom were yet alive; and
though this woman was young and amiable, he behaved towards her in
a manner so brutal, that it was shocking to all decency and
propriety, even among his abandoned crew of pirates.</p>
<p>In his first voyage, Black Beard directed his course to the
Bermudas, and meeting with two or three English vessels, emptied
them of their stores and other necessaries, and allowed them to
proceed. He also met with two French vessels bound for Martinique,
the one light, and the other laden with sugar and cocoa: he put the
men on board the latter into the former, and allowed her to depart.
He brought the freighted vessel into North Carolina, where the
governor and Black Beard shared the prizes. Nor did their audacity
and villany stop here. Teach and some of his abandoned crew waited
upon his excellency, and swore that they had seized the French ship
at sea, without a soul on board; therefore a court was called, and
she was condemned, the honorable governor received sixty hogsheads
of sugar for his share, his secretary twenty, and the pirates the
remainder. But as guilt always inspires suspicion, Teach was afraid
that some one might arrive in the harbor who might detect the
roguery: therefore, upon pretence that she was leaky, and might
sink, and so stop up the entrance to the harbor where she lay, they
obtained the governor's liberty to drag her into the river, where
she was set on fire, and when burnt down to the water, her bottom
was sunk, that so she might never rise in judgment against the
governor and his confederates.</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/354.jpg" alt="The crews of Black Beard's and Vane's vessels carousing on the coast of Carolina" height-obs="330" width-obs="584">
</center>
<h4>
<i>
The crews of Black Beard's and Vane's vessels carousing on
the coast of Carolina.
</i>
</h4>
Black Beard now being in the province of Friendship, passed several
months in the river, giving and receiving visits from the planters;
while he traded with the vessels which came to that river,
sometimes in the way of lawful commerce, and sometimes in his own
way. When he chose to appear the honest man, he made fair purchases
on equal barter; but when this did not suit his necessities, or his
humor, he would rob at pleasure, and leave them to seek their
redress from the governor; and the better to cover his intrigues
with his excellency, he would sometimes outbrave him to his face,
and administer to him a share of that contempt and insolence which
he so liberally bestowed upon the rest of the inhabitants of the
province.
<p>But there are limits to human insolence and depravity. The
captains of the vessels who frequented that river, and had been so
often harrassed and plundered by Black Beard, secretly consulted
with some of the planters what measures to pursue, in order to
banish such an infamous miscreant from their coasts, and to bring
him to deserved punishment. Convinced from long experience, that
the governor himself, to whom it belonged, would give no redress,
they represented the matter to the governor of Virginia, and
entreated that an armed force might be sent from the men-of-war
lying there, either to take or to destroy those pirates who
infested their coast.</p>
<p>Upon this representation, the Governor of Virginia consulted
with the captains of the two men-of-war as to the best measures to
be adopted. It was resolved that the governor should hire two small
vessels, which could pursue Bleak Beard into all his inlets and
creeks; that they should be manned from the men-of-war, and the
command given to Lieutenant Maynard, an experienced and resolute
officer. When all was ready for his departure, the governor called
an assembly, in which it was resolved to issue a proclamation,
offering a great reward to any who, within a year, should take or
destroy any pirate.</p>
<p>Upon the 17th of November, 1717, Maynard left James's river in
quest of Black Beard, and on the evening of the 21st came in sight
of the pirate. This expedition was fitted out with all possible
expedition and secrecy, no boat being permitted to pass that might
convey any intelligence, while care was taken to discover where the
pirates were lurking. His excellency the governor of Bermuda, and
his secretary, however, having obtained information of the intended
expedition, the latter wrote a letter to Black Beard, intimating,
that he had sent him four of his men, who were all he could meet
within or about town, and so bade him be on his guard. These men
were sent from Bath-town to the place where Black Beard lay, about
the distance of twenty leagues.</p>
<p>The hardened and infatuated pirate, having been often deceived
by false intelligence, was the less attentive to this information,
nor was he convinced of its accuracy until he saw the sloops sent
to apprehend him. Though he had then only twenty men on board, he
prepared to give battle. Lieutenant Maynard arrived with his sloops
in the evening, and anchored, as he could not venture, under cloud
of night, to go into the place where Black Beard lay. The latter
spent the night in drinking with the master of a trading-vessel,
with the same indifference as if no danger had been near. Nay, such
was the desperate wickedness of this villain, that, it is reported,
during the carousals of that night, one of his men asked him, "In
case any thing should happen to him during the engagement with the
two sloops which were waiting to attack him in the morning, whether
his wife knew where he had buried his money?" when he impiously
replied, "That nobody but himself and the devil knew where it was,
and the longest liver should take all."</p>
<p>In the morning Maynard weighed, and sent his boat to sound,
which coming near the pirate, received her fire. Maynard then
hoisted royal colors, and made directly towards Black Beard with
every sail and oar. In a little time the pirate ran aground, and so
also did the king's vessels. Maynard lightened his vessel of the
ballast and water, and made towards Black Beard. Upon this he
hailed him in his own rude style, "D--n you for villains, who are
you, and from whence come you?" The lieutenant answered, "You may
see from our colors we are no pirates." Black Beard bade him send
his boat on board, that he might see who he was. But Maynard
replied, "I cannot spare my boat, but I will come on board of you
as soon as I can with my sloop." Upon this Black Beard took a glass
of liquor and drank to him, saying, "I'll give no quarter nor take
any from you." Maynard replied, "He expected no quarter from him,
nor should he give him any."</p>
<p>During this dialogue the pirate's ship floated, and the sloops
were rowing with all expedition towards him. As she came near, the
pirate fired a broadside, charged with all manner of small shot,
which killed or wounded twenty men. Black Beard's ship in a little
after fell broadside to the shore; one of the sloops called the
Ranger, also fell astern. But Maynard finding that his own sloop
had way, and would soon be on board of Teach, ordered all his men
down, while himself and the man at the helm, who he commanded to
lie concealed, were the only persons who remained on deck. He at
the same time desired them to take their pistols, cutlasses, and
swords, and be ready for action upon his call, and, for greater
expedition, two ladders were placed in the hatchway. When the
king's sloop boarded, the pirate's case-boxes, filled with powder,
small shot, slugs, and pieces of lead and iron, with a quick-match
in the mouth of them, were thrown into Maynard's sloop.
Fortunately, however, the men being in the hold, they did small
injury on the present occasion, though they are usually very
destructive. Black Beard seeing few or no hands upon deck, cried to
his men that they were all knocked on the head except three or
four; "and therefore," said he, "let us jump on board, and cut to
pieces those that are alive."</p>
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<ANTIMG src="./images/358.jpg" alt="Death of Black Beard." height-obs="600" width-obs="488">
</center>
<h4><i>Death of Black Beard.</i></h4>
Upon this, during the smoke occasioned by one of these case-boxes,
Black Beard, with fourteen of his men, entered, and were not
perceived until the smoke was dispelled. The signal was given to
Maynard's men, who rushed up in an instant. Black Beard and the
lieutenant exchange shots, and the pirate was wounded; they then
engaged sword in hand, until the sword of the lieutenant broke, but
fortunately one of his men at that instant gave Black Beard a
terrible wound in the neck and throat. The most desperate and
bloody conflict ensued:--Maynard with twelve men, and Black Beard
with fourteen. The sea was dyed with blood all around the vessel,
and uncommon bravery was displayed upon both sides. Though the
pirate was wounded by the first shot from Maynard, though he had
received twenty cuts, and as many shots, he fought with desperate
valor; but at length, when in the act of cocking his pistol, fell
down dead. By this time eight of his men had fallen, and the rest
being wounded, cried out for quarter, which was granted, as the
ringleader was slain. The other sloop also attacked the men who
remained in the pirate vessels, until they also cried out for
quarter. And such was the desperation of Black Beard, that, having
small hope of escaping, he had placed a negro with a match at the
gunpowder door, to blow up the ship the moment that he should have
been boarded by the king's men, in order to involve the whole in
general ruin. That destructive broadside at the commencement of the
action, which at first appeared so unlucky, was, however, the means
of their preservation from the intended destruction.
<p>Maynard severed the pirate's head from his body, suspended it
upon his bowsprit-end, and sailed to Bath-town, to obtain medical
aid for his wounded men. In the pirate sloop several letters and
papers were found, which Black Beard would certainly have destroyed
previous to the engagement, had he not determined to blow her up
upon his being taken, which disclosed the whole villainy between
the honorable governor of Bermuda and his honest secretary on the
one hand, and the notorious pirate on the other, who had now
suffered the just punishment of his crimes.<br/>
</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/360.jpg" alt="Black Beard's Head on the end of the Bowsprit" height-obs="600" width-obs="573">
</center>
<h4><i>Black Beard's Head on the end of the Bowsprit.</i></h4>
Scarcely was Maynard returned to Bath-town, when he boldly went and
made free with the sixty hogsheads of sugar in the possession of
the governor, and the twenty in that of his secretary.
<p>After his men had been healed at Bath-town, the lieutenant
proceeded to Virginia, with the head of Black Beard still suspended
on his bowsprit-end, as a trophy of his victory, to the great joy
of all the inhabitants. The prisoners were tried, condemned, and
executed; and thus all the crew of that infernal miscreant, Black
Beard, were destroyed, except two. One of these was taken out of a
trading-vessel, only the day before the engagement, in which he
received no less than seventy wounds, of all which he was cured.
The other was Israel Hands, who was master of the Queen Anne's
Revenge; he was taken at Bath-town, being wounded in one of Black
Beard's savage humors. One night Black Beard, drinking in his cabin
with Hands, the pilot, and another man, without any pretence, took
a small pair of pistols, and cocked them under the table; which
being perceived by the man, he went on deck, leaving the captain,
Hands, and the pilot together. When his pistols were prepared, he
extinguished the candle, crossed his arms, and fired at his
company. The one pistol did no execution, but the other wounded
Hands in the knee. Interrogated concerning the meaning of this, he
answered with an imprecation, "That if he did not now and then kill
one of them, they would forget who he was." Hands was eventually
tried and condemned, but as he was about to be executed, a vessel
arrived with a proclamation prolonging the time of his Majesty's
pardon, which Hands pleading, he was saved from a violent and
shameful death.</p>
<p>In the commonwealth of pirates, he who goes the greatest length
of wickedness, is looked upon with a kind of envy amongst them, as
a person of a most extraordinary gallantry; he is therefore
entitled to be distinguished by some post, and, if such a one has
but courage, he must certainly be a great man. The hero of whom we
are writing was thoroughly accomplished in this way, and some of
his frolics of wickedness were as extravagant as if he aimed at
making his men believe he was a devil incarnate. Being one day at
sea, and a little flushed with drink; "Come," said he, "let us make
a hell of our own, and try how long we can bear it." Accordingly
he, with two or three others, went down into the hold, and closing
up all the hatches, filled several pots full of brimstone, and
other combustible matter; they then set it on fire, and so
continued till they were almost suffocated, when some of the men
cried out for air; at length he opened the hatches, not a little
pleased that he had held out the longest.</p>
<p>Those of his crew who were taken alive, told a story which may
appear a little incredible. That once, upon a cruise, they found
out that they had a man on board more than their crew; such a one
was seen several days amongst them, sometimes below, and sometimes
upon deck, yet no man in the ship could give any account who he
was, or from whence he came; but that he disappeared a little
before they were cast away in their great ship, and, it seems, they
verily believed it was the devil.</p>
<p>One would think these things should have induced them to reform
their lives; but being so many reprobates together, they encouraged
and spirited one another up in their wickedness, to which a
continual course of drinking did not a little contribute. In Black
Beard's journal, which was taken, there were several memoranda of
the following nature, all written with his own hand.--"Such a day,
rum all out;--our company somewhat sober;--a d--d confusion amongst
us!--rogues a plotting;--great talk of separation. So I looked
sharp for a prize;--such a day took one, with a great deal of
liquor on board; so kept the company hot, d--d hot, then all things
went well again."</p>
<p>We shall close the narrative of this extraordinary man's life by
an account of the cause why he was denominated Black Beard. He
derived this name from his long black beard, which, like a
frightful meteor, covered his whole face, and terrified all America
more than any comet that had ever appeared. He was accustomed to
twist it with ribbon in small quantities, and turn them about his
ears. In time of action he wore a sling over his shoulders with
three brace of pistols. He stuck lighted matches under his hat,
which appeared on both sides of his face and eyes, naturally fierce
and wild, made him such a figure that the human imagination cannot
form a conception of a fury more terrible and alarming; and if he
had the appearance and look of a fury, his actions corresponded
with that character.</p>
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