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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXVI" id="Chapter_XXVI"></SPAN>Chapter XXVI</h2>
<h2>The Battle of the Sand Bars</h2>
<p>When that estimable private gentleman,
Mr. William Rhett, of Charles Town,
had received a commission from the Governor
to go forth on his own responsibility and meet
the dreaded pirate, the news of whose depredations
had thrown the good citizens into such a fever of
apprehension, he took possession, in the name of
the law, of two large sloops, the <i>Henry</i> and the <i>Sea-Nymph</i>,
which were in the harbor, and at his own
expense he manned them with well-armed crews, and
put on board of each of them eight small cannon.
When everything was ready, Mr. Rhett was in command
of a very formidable force for those waters,
and if he had been ready to sail a few days sooner,
he would have had an opportunity of giving his
men some practice in fighting pirates before they
met the particular and more important sea-robber
whom they had set out to encounter. Just as his
vessel was ready to sail, Mr. Rhett received news
that a pirate ship had captured two or three merchantmen
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just outside the harbor, and he put out to
sea with all possible haste and cruised up and down
the coast for some time, but he did not find this
most recent depredator, who had departed very
promptly when he heard that armed ships were
coming out of the harbor.</p>
<p>Now Mr. Rhett, who was no more of a sailor
than Stede Bonnet had been when he first began his
seafaring life, boldly made his way up the coast to
the mouth of Cape Fear River, where he had been
told the pirate vessel was lying. When he reached
his destination, Mr. Rhett found that it would not
be an easy thing to ascend the river, for the reason
that the pilots he had brought with him knew
nothing about the waters of that part of the coast,
and although the two ships made their way very
cautiously, it was not long after they had entered the
river before they got out of the channel, and it being
low tide, both of them ran aground upon sand bars.</p>
<p>This was a very annoying accident, but it was
not disastrous, for the sailing masters who commanded
the sloops knew very well that when the
tide rose, their vessels would float again. But it prevented
Mr. Rhett from going on and making an
immediate attack upon the pirate vessel, the topmasts
of which could be plainly seen behind a high
headland some distance up the river.</p>
<p>Of course Bonnet, or Captain Thomas, as he now
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chose to be called, soon became aware of the fact
that two good-sized vessels were lying aground near
the mouth of the river, and having a very natural
curiosity to see what sort of craft they were, he
waited until nightfall and then sent three armed
boats to make observations. When these boats
returned to the <i>Royal James</i> and reported that the
grounded vessels were not well-loaded trading craft,
but large sloops full of men and armed with cannon,
Bonnet (for we prefer to call him by his old name)
had good reason to fold his arms, knit his brows,
and strut up and down the deck. He was sure that
the armed vessels came from Charles Town, and there
was no reason to doubt that if the Governor of
South Carolina had sent two ships against him the
matter was a very serious one. He was penned
up in the river, he had only one fighting vessel to
contend against two, and if he could not succeed in
getting out to sea before he should be attacked by
the Charles Town ships, there would be but little
chance of his continuing in his present line of
business. If the <i>Royal James</i> had been ready to
sail, there is no doubt that Bonnet would have
taken his chance of finding the channel in the dark,
and would have sailed away that night without
regard to the cannonading which might have been
directed against him from the two stranded vessels.</p>
<p>But as it was impossible to get ready to sail,<SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></SPAN>
Bonnet went to work with the greatest energy to get
ready to fight. He knew that when the tide rose
there would be two armed sloops afloat, and that
there would be a regular naval battle on the quiet
waters of Cape Fear River. All night his men
worked to clear the decks and get everything in
order for the coming combat, and all night Mr.
Rhett and his crews kept a sharp watch for any
unexpected move of the enemy, while they loaded
their guns, their pistols, and their cannon, and put
everything in order for action.</p>
<p>Very early in the morning the wide-awake crews
of the South Carolina vessels, which were now afloat
and at anchor, saw that the topmasts of the pirate
craft were beginning to move above the distant
headland, and very soon Bonnet's ship came out
into view, under full sail, and as she veered around
they saw that she was coming toward them. Up
went the anchors and up went the sails of the
<i>Henry</i> and the <i>Sea-Nymph</i>, and the naval battle
between the retired army officer who had almost
learned to be a sailor, and the private gentleman
from South Carolina, who knew nothing whatever
about managing ships, was about to begin.</p>
<p>It was plain to the South Carolinians that the
great object of the pirate captain was to get out to
sea just as soon as he could, and that he was coming
down the river, not because he wished to make an
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immediate attack upon them, but because he hoped
to slip by them and get away. Of course they
could follow him upon the ocean and fight him if
their vessels were fast enough, but once out of the
river with plenty of sea-room, he would have twenty
chances of escape where now he had one.</p>
<p>But Mr. Rhett did not intend that the pirates
should play him this little trick; he wanted to fight
the dastardly wretches in the river, where they
could not get away, and he had no idea of letting
them sneak out to sea. Consequently as the <i>Royal
James</i>, under full sail, was making her way down
the river, keeping as far as possible from her two
enemies, Mr. Rhett ordered his ships to bear down
upon her so as to cut off her retreat and force her
toward the opposite shore of the river. This man[oe]uvre
was performed with great success. The two
Charles Town sloops sailed so boldly and swiftly
toward the <i>Royal James</i> that the latter was obliged
to hug the shore, and the first thing the pirates
knew they were stuck fast and tight upon a sand bar.
Three minutes afterward the <i>Henry</i> ran upon a
sand bar, and there being enough of these obstructions
in that river to satisfy any ordinary demand,
the <i>Sea-Nymph</i> very soon grounded herself upon
another of them. But unfortunately she took up
her permanent position at a considerable distance
from her consort.</p>
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<p>Here now were the vessels which were to conduct
this memorable sea-fight, all three fast in the sand
and unable to move, and their predicament was
made the worse by the fact that it would be five
hours before the tide would rise high enough for
any one of them to float. The positions of the
three vessels were very peculiar and awkward; the
<i>Henry</i> and the <i>Royal James</i> were lying so near to
each other that Mr. Rhett could have shot Major
Bonnet with a pistol if the latter gentleman had
given him the chance, and the <i>Sea-Nymph</i> was so
far away that she was entirely out of the fight, and
her crew could do nothing but stand and watch
what was going on between the other two vessels.</p>
<p>But although they could not get any nearer each
other, nor get away from each other, the pirates and
Mr. Rhett's crew had no idea of postponing the
battle until they should be afloat and able to fight
in the ordinary fashion of ships; they immediately
began to fire at each other with pistols, muskets, and
cannon, and the din and roar was something that
must have astonished the birds and beasts and fishes
of that quiet region.</p>
<p>As the tide continued to run out of the river, and
its waters became more and more shallow, the two
contending vessels began to careen over to one side,
and, unfortunately for the <i>Henry</i>, they both careened
in the same direction, and in such a manner that the
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deck of the <i>Royal James</i> was inclined away from the
<i>Henry</i>, while the deck of the latter leaned toward
her pirate foe. This gave a great advantage to
Bonnet and his crew, for they were in a great measure
protected by the hull of their vessel, whereas
the whole deck of the <i>Henry</i> was exposed to the fire
of the pirates. But Mr. Rhett and his South
Carolinians were all brave men, and they blazed
away with their muskets and pistols at the pirates
whenever they could see a head above the rail of
the <i>Royal James</i>, while with their cannon they kept
firing at the pirate's hull.</p>
<p>For five long hours the fight continued, but the
cannon carried by the two vessels must have been
of very small calibre, for if they had been firing at
such short range and for such a length of time with
modern guns, they must have shattered each other
into kindling wood. But neither vessel seems
to have been seriously injured, and although there
were a good many men killed on both sides, the
combat was kept up with great determination and
fury. At one time it seemed almost certain that
Bonnet would get the better of Mr. Rhett, and he
ordered his black flag waved contemptuously in the
air while his men shouted to the South Carolinians
to come over and call upon them, but the South
Carolina boys answered these taunts with cheers
and fired away more furiously than ever.</p>
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<p>The tide was now coming in, and everybody on
board the two fighting vessels knew very well that
the first one of them which should float would have
a great advantage over the other, and would probably
be the conqueror. In came the tide, and still the
cannons roared and the muskets cracked, while the
hearts of the pirates and the South Carolinians
almost stood still as they each watched the other
vessel to see if she showed any signs of floating.</p>
<p>At last such signs were seen; the <i>Henry</i> was further
from the shore than the <i>Royal James</i>, and she
first felt the influence of the rising waters. Her
masts began to straighten, and at last her deck was
level, and she floated clear of the bottom while her
antagonist still lay careened over on her side. Now
the pirates saw there was no chance for them; in a
very short time the other Carolina sloop would be
afloat, and then the two vessels would bear down
upon them and utterly destroy both them and their
vessel. Consequently upon the <i>Royal James</i> there
was a general disposition to surrender and to make
the best terms they could, for it would be a great
deal better to submit and run the chance of a trial
than to keep up the fight against enemies so much
superior both in numbers and ships, who would
soon be upon them.</p>
<p>But Bonnet would not listen to one word of
surrender. Rather than give up the fight he declared
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he would set fire to the powder magazine of
the <i>Royal James</i> and blow himself, his ship, and his
men high up into the air. Although he had not a
sailor's skill, he possessed a soldier's soul, and in
spite of his being a dastardly and cruel pirate he was
a brave man. But Bonnet was only one, and his
crew numbered dozens, and notwithstanding his furiously
dissenting voice it was determined to surrender,
and when Mr. Rhett sailed up to the <i>Royal
James</i>, intending to board her if the pirates still
showed resistance, he found them ready to submit
to terms and to yield themselves his prisoners.</p>
<p>Thus ended the great sea-fight between the private
gentlemen, and thus ended Stede Bonnet's career.
He and his men were taken to Charles Town, where
most of the pirate crew were tried and executed.
The green-hand pirate, who had wrought more
devastation along the American coast than many a
skilled sea-robber, was held in custody to await his
trial, and it seems very strange that there should
have been a public sentiment in Charles Town which
induced the officials to treat this pirate with a certain
degree of respect simply from the fact that his station
in life had been that of a gentleman. He was a
much more black-hearted scoundrel than any of his
men, but they were executed as soon as possible
while his trial was postponed and he was allowed
privileges which would never have been accorded a
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common pirate. In consequence of this leniency he
escaped and had to be retaken by Mr. Rhett. It
was so long before he was tried that sympathy for
his misfortunes arose among some of the tender-hearted
citizens of Charles Town whose houses he
would have pillaged and whose families he would
have murdered if the exigencies of piracy had rendered
such action desirable.</p>
<p>Finding that other people were trying to save his
life, Bonnet came down from his high horse and tried
to save it himself by writing piteous letters to the
Governor, begging for mercy. But the Governor
of South Carolina had no notion of sparing a pirate
who had deliberately put himself under the protection
of the law in order that he might better pursue
his lawless and wicked career, and the green hand,
with the black heart, was finally hung on the same
spot where his companions had been executed.</p>
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