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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXII" id="Chapter_XXII"></SPAN>Chapter XXII</h2>
<h2>The Great Blackbeard comes upon the Stage</h2>
<p>So long as the people of the Carolinas were
prosperous and able to capture and execute
pirates who interfered with their trade
the Atlantic sea-robbers kept away from their ports,
but this prosperity did not last. Indian wars broke
out, and in the course of time the colonies became
very much weakened and impoverished, and then it
was that the harbor of Charles Town began to be
again interesting to the pirates.</p>
<p>About this time one of the most famous of sea-robbers
was harassing the Atlantic coast of North
America, and from New England to the West
Indies, he was known as the great pirate Blackbeard.
This man, whose real name was Thatch, was a most
terrible fellow in appearance as well as action. He
wore a long, heavy, black beard, which it was his
fancy to separate into tails, each one tied with a
colored ribbon, and often tucked behind his ears.
Some of the writers of that day declared that the
sight of this beard would create more terror in any
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port of the American seaboard than would the
sudden appearance of a fiery comet. Across his
brawny breast he carried a sort of a sling in which
hung not less than three pairs of pistols in leathern
holsters, and these, in addition to his cutlass and a
knife or two in his belt, made him a most formidable-looking
fellow.</p>
<p>Some of the fanciful recreations of Blackbeard
show him to have been a person of consistent purpose.
Even in his hours of rest when he was not
fighting or robbing, his savage soul demanded some
interesting excitement. Once he was seated at
table with his mate and two or three sailors, and
when the meal was over he took up a pair of
pistols, and cocking them put them under the table.
This peculiar action caused one of the sailors to
remember very suddenly that he had something to
do on deck, and he immediately disappeared. But
the others looked at their captain in astonishment,
wondering what he would do next. They soon
found out; for crossing the pistols, still under the
table, he fired them. One ball hit the mate in the
leg, but the other struck no one. When asked
what he meant by this strange action, he replied that
if he did not shoot one of his men now and then
they would forget what sort of a person he was.</p>
<p>At another time he invented a game; he gathered
his officers and crew together and told them that
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they were going to play that they were living in the
lower regions. Thereupon the whole party followed
him down into the hold. The hatches and all the
other openings were closed, and then Blackbeard
began to illuminate the scene with fire and brimstone.
The sulphur burned, the fumes rose, a
ghastly light spread over the countenances of the
desperadoes, and very soon some of them began to
gasp and cough and implore the captain to let in
some fresh air, but Blackbeard was bound to have
a good game, and he proceeded to burn more brimstone.
He laughed at the gasping fellows about
him and declared that he would be just as willing to
breathe the fumes of sulphur as common air. When
at last he threw open the hatches, some of the men
were almost dead, but their stalwart captain had not
even sneezed.</p>
<p>In the early part of the eighteenth century Blackbeard
made his headquarters in one of the inlets on
the North Carolina coast, and there he ruled as
absolute king, for the settlers in the vicinity seemed
to be as anxious to oblige him as the captains of the
merchantmen sailing along the coast were anxious
to keep out of his way. On one of his voyages
Blackbeard went down the coast as far as Honduras,
where he took a good many prizes, and as some of
the crews of the captured vessels enlisted under him
he sailed north with a stronger force than ever
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before, having a large ship of forty guns, three
smaller vessels, and four hundred men. With this
little fleet Blackbeard made for the coast of South
Carolina, and anchored outside the harbor of Charles
Town. He well understood the present condition
of the place and was not in the least afraid that the
citizens would hang him up on the shores of the
bay.</p>
<p>Blackbeard began work without delay. Several
well-laden ships—the Carolinians having no idea
that pirates were waiting for them—came sailing
out to sea and were immediately captured. One of
these was a very important vessel, for it not only
carried a valuable cargo, but a number of passengers,
many of them people of note, who were on their
way to England. One of these was a Mr. Wragg,
who was a member of the Council of the Province.
It might have been supposed that when Blackbeard
took possession of this ship, he would have been
satisfied with the cargo and the money which he
found on board, and having no use for prominent
citizens, would have let them go their way; but he
was a trader as well as a plunderer, and he therefore
determined that the best thing to do in this case
was to put an assorted lot of highly respectable
passengers upon the market and see what he could
get for them. He was not at the time in need of
money or provisions, but his men were very much
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in want of medicines, so he decided to trade off his
prisoners for pills, potions, plasters, and all sorts of
apothecary's supplies.</p>
<p>He put three of his pirates in a boat, and with
them one of the passengers, a Mr. Marks, who was
commissioned as Blackbeard's special agent, with
orders to inform the Governor that if he did not
immediately send the medicines required, amounting
in value to about three hundred pounds, and
if he did not allow the pirate crew of the boat to
return in safety, every one of the prisoners would
be hanged from the yard-arm of his ship.</p>
<p>The boat rowed away to the distant town, and
Blackbeard waited two days for its return, and then
he grew very angry, for he believed that his messengers
had been taken into custody, and he came
very near hanging Mr. Wragg and all his companions.
But before he began to satisfy his vengeance,
news came from the boat. It had been upset in
the bay, and had had great trouble in getting to
Charles Town, but it had arrived there at last.
Blackbeard now waited a day or two longer; but
as no news came from Mr. Marks, he vowed he
would not be trifled with by the impudent people
of Charles Town, and swore that every man,
woman, and child among the prisoners should
immediately prepare to be hanged.</p>
<p>Of course the unfortunate prisoners in the pirate
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ship were in a terrible state of mind during the
absence of Mr. Marks. They knew very well that
they could expect no mercy from Blackbeard if the
errand should be unsuccessful, and they also knew
that the Charles Town people would not be likely
to submit to such an outrageous demand upon
them; so they trembled and quaked by day and
by night, and when at last they were told to get ready
to be hanged, every particle of courage left them, and
they proposed to Blackbeard that if he would spare
their lives, and that if it should turn out that their
fellow-citizens had decided to sacrifice them for the
sake of a few paltry drugs, they would take up the
cause of the pirates; they would show Blackbeard
the best way to sail into the harbor, and they would
join with him and his men in attacking the city
and punishing the inhabitants for their hard-hearted
treatment of their unfortunate fellow-citizens.</p>
<p>This proposition pleased Blackbeard immensely; it
would have been like a new game to take Mr. Wragg
to the town and make him fight his fellow-members
of the Council of the Province, and so he rescinded
his order for a general execution, and bade his prisoners
prepare to join with his pirates when he
should give the word for an assault upon their
city.</p>
<p>In the meantime there was a terrible stir in
Charles Town. When the Governor and citizens
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received the insolent and brutal message of Blackbeard
they were filled with rage as well as consternation,
and if there had been any way of going out
to sea to rescue their unhappy fellow-citizens, every
able-bodied man in the town would have enlisted in
the expedition. But they had no vessels of war, and
they were not even in a position to arm any of the
merchantmen in the harbor. It seemed to the
Governor and his council that there was nothing
for them to do but to submit to the demands of
Blackbeard, for they very well knew that he was a
scoundrel who would keep his word, and also that
whatever they did must be done quickly, for there
were the three swaggering pirates in the town, strutting
about the streets as if they owned the place.
If this continued much longer, it would be impossible
to keep the infuriated citizens from falling
upon these blustering rascals and bringing their impertinence
to a summary end. If this should happen,
it would be a terrible thing, for not only would
Mr. Wragg and his companions be put to death,
but the pirates would undoubtedly attack the town,
which was in a very poor position for defence.</p>
<p>Consequently the drugs were collected with all
possible haste, and Mr. Marks and the pirates were
sent with them to Blackbeard. We do not know
whether or not that bedizened cutthroat was satisfied
with the way things turned out; for having
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had the idea of going to Charles Town and obliging
the prisoners to help him confiscate the drugs and
chemicals, he may have preferred this unusual proceeding
to a more commonplace transaction; but as
the medicine had arrived he accepted it, and having
secured all possible booty and money from the ships
he had captured, and had stripped his prisoners of
the greater part of their clothing, he set them on
shore to walk to Charles Town as well as they
could. They had a miserably difficult time, making
their way through the woods and marshes, for there
were women and children among them who were
scarcely equal to the journey. One of the children
was a little boy, the son of Mr. Wragg, who afterward
became a very prominent man in the colonies.
He rose to such a high position, not only among
his countrymen, but in the opinion of the English
government, that when he died, about the beginning
of the Revolution, a tablet to his memory was placed
in Westminster Abbey, which is, perhaps, the first
instance of such an honor being paid to an
American.</p>
<p>Having now provided himself with medicines
enough to keep his wild crew in good physical
condition, no matter how much they might feast
and frolic on the booty they had obtained from
Charles Town, Blackbeard sailed back to his North
Carolina haunts and took a long vacation, during
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which time he managed to put himself on very good
terms with the Governor and officials of the country.
He had plenty of money and was willing to spend
it, and so he was allowed to do pretty much as he
pleased, provided he kept his purse open and did
not steal from his neighbors.</p>
<p>But Blackbeard became tired of playing the part
of a make-believe respectable citizen, and having
spent the greater part of his money, he wanted to
make some more. Consequently he fitted out a
small vessel, and declaring that he was going on a
legitimate commercial cruise, he took out regular
papers for a port in the West Indies and sailed
away, as if he had been a mild-mannered New England
mariner going to catch codfish. The officials
of the town of Bath, from which he sailed, came
down to the ship and shook hands with him and
hoped he would have good success.</p>
<p>After a moderate absence he returned to Bath,
bringing with him a large French merchant vessel,
with no people on board, but loaded with a valuable
cargo of sugar and other goods. This vessel he
declared he had found deserted at sea, and he therefore
claimed it as a legitimate prize. Knowing the
character of this bloody pirate, and knowing how
very improbable it was that the captain and all the
crew of a valuable merchant vessel, with nothing
whatever the matter with her, would go out into
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their boats and row away, leaving their ship to become
the property of any one who might happen
along, it may seem surprising that the officials of
Bath appeared to have no doubt of the truth of
Blackbeard's story, and allowed him freely to land
the cargo on the French ship and store it away as
his own property.</p>
<p>But people who consort with pirates cannot be
expected to have very lively consciences, and although
there must have been persons in the town
with intelligence enough to understand the story of
pitiless murder told by that empty vessel, whose
very decks and masts must have been regarded as
silent witnesses that her captain and crew did not
leave her of their own free will, no one in the town
interfered with the thrifty Blackbeard or caused any
public suspicion to fall upon the propriety of his
actions.</p>
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