|
Bartholomew Roberts
Plunders the Samuel
On July 13 the
(1. Vessel's Name)
Samuel was forty miles east of the banks of
Newfoundland when two ships hove in sight.
(2. Captain's
Name) Captain Cary watched their
approach with increased concern, and his worst fears were confirmed when
the two ships fired their guns and hoisted pirate flags. The larger vessel
was a three-masted ship of about 220 tons and was armed with twenty-six
guns. From her main topmast head she flew a black flag on which a skull
and cutlass were clearly visible. The flag of the dreaded pirate
Bartholomew Roberts. The smaller vessel was an 80-ton sloop of ten guns
flying a Union flag emblazoned with four blazing balls. Captain Cary
reconed that there were about one hundred men on board each of the
vessels, which meant that he and his crew were outnumbered by twenty to
one. The (1. Vessel's Name)
Samuel had only six guns mounted on carriages, so she was
completely out-gunned as well.
The pirates hailed the Samuel and ordered her captain to hoist out his
boat and come on board the pirate ship. Captain Cary did as he was told
and learned that the pirates were commanded by the formidable
(3. Pirate's
Name) Welshman
Bartholomew Roberts. For the past month Roberts had been cruising in the
(4. Pirate
Ship) Adventure Galley off the
coast of North America, leaving behind a trail of destruction. In one
harbor alone he plundered and burned no less then seventeen vessels.
The pirates swarmed aboard the
(1. Vessel's Name)
Samuel and began taking the ship apart.
They tore open the hatches and attacked the cargo like madmen, cutting
open bales, trunks and boxes with their boarding axes and cutlasses. Some
of the goods they carried off to their ship, but much of the cargo they
hacked to pieces and threw overboard. They took two of the mounted guns
and all of the spare rigging and stores, but they threw the anchor and
cables over the side. They carried off forty barrels of gunpowder and
commandeered the ship's boat. All this was done with "incessant
cursing and swearing, more like fiends than men." Captain Cary was
told that the pirates had no intention of accepting the King's Pardon, and
if they ever should be overpowered, they would set fire to the gunpowder
with a pistol, "and go all merrily to hell together."
When they had finished looting the
(1. Vessel's Name)
Samuel, the pirates turned their
attention to the crew. All except one Irishman and the captain were forced
at pistol point to leave the ship and join the pirates. The pirates were
debating whether to sink or burn the merchant ship when they spotted
another sail on the horizon and abandoned the
(1. Vessel's Name)
Samuel in order to
give chase. Captain Carey was left with the one Irishman and three
passengers. With their assistance he sailed to Boston.
|