<SPAN name="THE_ADVENTURES_AND_EXECUTION_OF_CAPTAIN_JOHN_RACKAM"></SPAN>
<h2>THE ADVENTURES AND EXECUTION OF CAPTAIN JOHN RACKAM.</h2>
This John Rackam, as has been reported in the foregoing pages, was
quarter-master to Vane's company, till the crew were divided, and
Vane turned out of it for refusing to board a French man-of-war,
Rackam being voted captain of the division that remained in the
brigantine. The 24th of November 1718, was the first day of his
command; his first cruise was among the Carribbee Islands, where he
took and plundered several vessels.
<p>We have already taken notice, that when Captain Woods Rogers
went to the island of Providence with the king's pardon to such of
the pirates as should surrender, this brigantine, which Rackam
commanded, made its escape through another passage, bidding
defiance to the mercy that was offered.</p>
<p>To the windward of Jamaica, a Madeira-man fell into the pirate's
way, which they detained two or three days, till they had their
market out of her, and then they gave her back to the master, and
permitted one Hosea Tidsel, a tavern keeper at Jamaica, who had
been picked up in one of their prizes, to depart in her, she being
bound for that island.</p>
<p>After this cruise they went into a small island, and cleaned,
and spent their Christmas ashore, drinking and carousing as long as
they had any liquor left, and then went to sea again for more. They
succeeded but too well, though they took no extraordinary prize for
above two months, except a ship laden with convicts from Newgate,
bound for the plantations, which in a few days was retaken, with
all her cargo, by an English man-of-war that was stationed in those
seas.</p>
<p>Rackam stood towards the island of Bermuda, and took a ship
bound to England from Carolina, and a small pink from New England,
both of which he brought to the Bahama Islands, where, with the
pitch, tar and stores they cleaned again, and refitted their own
vessel; but staying too long in that neighborhood, Captain Rogers,
who was Governor of Providence, hearing of these ships being taken,
sent out a sloop well manned and armed, which retook both the
prizes, though in the mean while the pirate had the good fortune to
escape.</p>
<p>From hence they sailed to the back of Cuba, where Rackam kept a
little kind of a family, at which place they stayed a considerable
time, living ashore with their Delilahs, till their money and
provisions were expended, and they concluded it time to look out
for more. They repaired their vessel, and were making ready to put
to sea, when a guarda de costa came in with a small English sloop,
which she had taken as an interloper on the coast. The Spanish
guard-ship attacked the pirate, but Rackam being close in behind a
little island, she could do but little execution where she lay; the
Dons therefore warped into the channel that evening, in order to
make sure of her the next morning. Rackam finding his case
desperate, and that there was hardly any possibility of escaping,
resolved to attempt the following enterprise. The Spanish prize
lying for better security close into the land, between the little
island and the Main, our desperado took his crew into the boat with
their cutlasses, rounded the little island, and fell aboard their
prize silently in the dead of the night without being discovered,
telling the Spaniards that were aboard her, that if they spoke a
word, or made the least noise, they were all dead men; and so they
became masters of her. When this was done he slipped her cable, and
drove out to sea. The Spanish man-of-war was so intent upon their
expected prize, that they minded nothing else, and as soon as day
broke, they made a furious fire upon the empty sloop; but it was
not long before they were rightly apprised of the matter, when they
cursed themselves sufficiently for a company of fools, to be bit
out of a good rich prize, as she proved to be, and to have nothing
but an old crazy hull in the room of her.</p>
<p>Rackam and his crew had no occasion to be displeased at the
exchange, as it enabled them to continue some time longer in a way
of life that suited their depraved minds. In August 1720, we find
him at sea again, scouring the harbours and inlets of the north and
west parts of Jamaica, where he took several small crafts, which
proved no great booty to the rovers; but they had but few men, and
therefore were obliged to run at low game till they could increase
their company and their strength.</p>
<p>In the beginning of September, they took seven or eight fishing
boats in Harbour Island, stole their nets and other tackle, and
then went off to the French part of Hispaniola, where they landed,
and took the cattle away, with two or three Frenchmen whom they
found near the water-side, hunting wild hogs in the evening. The
Frenchmen came on board, whether by consent or compulsion is not
certainly known. They afterwards plundered two sloops, and returned
to Jamaica, on the north coast of which island, near Porto Maria
Bay, they took a schooner, Thomas Spenlow, master, it being then
the 19th of October. The next day Rackam seeing a sloop in Dry
Harbour Bay, stood in and fired a gun; the men all ran ashore, and
he took the sloop and lading; but when those ashore found that they
were pirates, they hailed the sloop, and let them know they were
all willing to come on board of them.</p>
<p>Rackam's coasting the island in this manner proved fatal to him;
for intelligence of his expedition came to the governor by a canoe
which he had surprised ashore in Ocho Bay: upon this a sloop was
immediately fitted out, and sent round the island in quest of him,
commanded by Captain Barnet, and manned with a good number of
hands. Rackam, rounding the island, and drawing round the western
point, called Point Negril, saw a small pettiaga, which, at the
sight of the sloop, ran ashore and landed her men, when one of them
hailed her. Answer was made that they were Englishmen, and begged
the pettiaga's men to come on board and drink a bowl of punch,
which they prevailed upon them to do. Accordingly, the company, in
an evil hour, came all aboard of the pirate, consisting of nine
persons; they were armed with muskets and cutlasses, but what was
their real design in so doing we will not pretend to say. They had
no sooner laid down their arms and taken up their pipes, than
Barnet's sloop, which was in pursuit of Rackam's, came in
sight.</p>
<p>The pirates, finding she stood directly towards them, feared the
event, and weighed their anchor, which they had but lately let go,
and stood off. Captain Barnet gave them chase, and, having
advantage of little breezes of wind which blew off the land, came
up with her, and brought her into Port Royal, in Jamaica.</p>
<p>About a fortnight after the prisoners were brought ashore, viz.
November 16, 1720, Captain Rackam and eight of his men were
condemned and executed. Captain Rackam and two others were hung in
chains.</p>
<p>But what was very surprising, was the conviction of the nine men
that came aboard the sloop on the same day she was taken. They were
tried at an adjournment of the court on the 24th of January, the
magistracy waiting all that time, it is supposed, for evidence to
prove the piratical intention of going aboard the said sloop; for
it seems there was no act or piracy committed by them, as appeared
by the witnesses against them, two Frenchmen, taken by Rackam off
the island of Hispaniola, who merely deposed that the prisoners
came on board without any compulsion.</p>
<p>The court considered the prisoners' cases, and the majority of
the commissioners being of opinion that they were all guilty of the
piracy and felony they were charged with, viz. the going over with
a piratical intent to John Rackam, &c. then notorious pirates,
and by them known to be so, they all received sentence of death,
and were executed on the 17th of February at Gallows Point at Port
Royal.</p>
<p>Nor holy bell, nor pastoral bleat,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
In former days within the
vale.
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
Flapped in the bay the pirate's
sheet,
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Curses were on the gale;</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
Rich goods lay on the sand, and
murdered men,
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
Pirate and wreckers kept their
revels there.
</span></p>
<p>THE BUCCANEER.</p>
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