<p><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXX" id="Chapter_XXX"></SPAN>Chapter XXX</h2>
<h2>The Pirate of the Gulf</h2>
<p>At the beginning of this century there was a
very able and, indeed, talented man living
on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico,
who has been set down in the historical records
of the times as a very important pirate, and who is
described in story and in tradition as a gallant and
romantic freebooter of the sea. This man was Jean
Lafitte, widely known as "The Pirate of the Gulf,"
and yet who was, in fact, so little of a pirate, that it
may be doubted whether or not he deserves a place
in these stories of American pirates.</p>
<p>Lafitte was a French blacksmith, and, while still
a young man, he came with his two brothers to
New Orleans, and set up a shop in Bourbon Street,
where he did a good business in horseshoeing and
in other branches of his trade. But he had a soul
which soared high above his anvil and his bellows,
and perceiving an opportunity to take up a very
profitable occupation, he gave up blacksmithing, and
with his two brothers as partners became a superintendent
<SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></SPAN>
of privateering and a general manager
of semi-legalized piracy. The business opportunity
which came to the watchful and clear-sighted Lafitte
may be briefly described.</p>
<p>In the early years of this century the Gulf of
Mexico was the scene of operations of small vessels
calling themselves privateers, but in fact pirates.
War had broken out between England and Spain,
on the one side, and France on the other, and consequently
the first-named nations were very glad to commission
privateers to prey upon the commerce of
France. There were also privateers who had been
sent out by some of the Central American republics
who had thrown off the Spanish yoke, and these,
considering Spanish vessels as their proper booty,
were very much inclined to look upon English
vessels in the same light, as the English and
Spanish were allies. And when a few French privateers
came also upon the scene, they helped to
make the business of legitimate capture of merchantmen,
during the time of war, a very complicated
affair.</p>
<p>But upon one point these privateers, who so
often acted as pirates, because they had not the
spare time in which to work out difficult problems
of nationality, were all agreed: when they had
loaded their ships with booty, they must sail to
some place where it would be safe to dispose of it.<SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></SPAN>
So, in course of time, the bay of Barrataria, about
forty miles south of New Orleans and very well
situated for an illegal settlement, was chosen as a
privateers' port, and a large and flourishing colony
soon grew up at the head of the bay, to which came
privateers of every nationality to dispose of their
cargoes.</p>
<p>Of course there was no one in the comparatively
desolate country about Barrataria who could buy the
valuable goods which were brought into that port,
but the great object of the owners of this merchandise
was to smuggle it up to New Orleans and
dispose of it. But there could be no legitimate
traffic of this sort, for the United States at the very
beginning of the century was at peace with England,
France, and Spain, and therefore could not receive
into any of her ports, goods which had been captured
from the ships of these nations. Consequently
the plunder of the privateering pirates of
Barrataria was brought up to New Orleans in all
sorts of secret and underhand fashions, and sold to
merchants in that city, without the custom house
having anything to do with the importations.</p>
<p>Now this was great business; Jean Lafitte had
a great business mind, and therefore it was not
long after his arrival at Barrataria before he was the
head man in the colony, and director-in-chief of all
its operations. Thus, by becoming a prominent
<SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></SPAN>
figure in a piratical circle, he came to be considered
a pirate, and as such came down to us in the pages
of history.</p>
<p>But, in fact, Lafitte never committed an act of
piracy in his life; he was a blacksmith, and knew
no more about sailing a ship or even the smallest
kind of a boat than he knew about the proper construction
of a sonnet. He did not even try, like the
celebrated Bonnet, to find other people who would
navigate a vessel for him, for he had no taste for the
ocean wave, and all that he had to do he did upon
firm, dry land. It is said of him that he was never
at sea but twice in his life: once when he came from
France, and once when he left this country, and on
neither occasion did he sail under the "Jolly Roger,"
as the pirate flag was sometimes called. For these
reasons it seems scarcely right to call Lafitte a pirate,
but as he has been so generally considered in that
light, we will admit him into the bad company, the
stories of whose lives we are now telling.</p>
<p>The energy and business abilities of Jean Lafitte
soon made themselves felt not only in Barrataria,
but in New Orleans. The privateers found that he
managed their affairs with much discretion and considerable
fairness, and, while they were willing to
depend upon him, they were obliged to obey him.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the trade of New Orleans was
very much influenced by the great quantities of
<SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281"></SPAN>
goods which under Lafitte's directions were smuggled
into the city. Many merchants and shopkeepers
who possessed no consciences to speak of were glad
to buy these smuggled goods for very little money
and to sell them at low prices and large profits, but
the respectable business men, who were obliged to
pay market prices for their goods, were greatly disturbed
by the large quantities of merchandise which
were continually smuggled into New Orleans and
sold at rates with which they could not compete.</p>
<p>It was toward the end of our war with England,
which began in 1812, that the government of the
United States, urged to speedy action by the increasing
complaints of the law-abiding merchants of New
Orleans, determined to send out a small naval force
and entirely break up the illegitimate rendezvous at
Barrataria.</p>
<p>Lafitte's two brothers were in New Orleans acting
as his agents, and one of them, Dominique, was
arrested and thrown into prison, and Commodore
Patterson, who was commanding at that station, was
ordered to fit out an expedition as quickly as possible
to sail down to Barrataria to destroy the ships found
in the bay, to capture the town, and to confiscate
and seize upon all goods which might be found in
the place.</p>
<p>When Jean Lafitte heard of the vigorous methods
which were about to be taken against him, his prospects
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must have been very gloomy ones, for of course
he could not defend his little colony against a regular
naval force, which, although its large vessels could
not sail into the shallow bay, could send out boats
with armed crews against which it would be foolish
for him to contend. But just about this time a
very strange thing happened.</p>
<p>A strong English naval force had taken possession
of Pensacola, Florida, and as an attack upon New
Orleans was contemplated, the British commander,
knowing of Lafitte's colony at Barrataria, and believing
that these hardy and reckless adventurers would
be very valuable allies in the proposed movement
upon the city, determined to send an ambassador to
Lafitte to see what could be done in the way of
forming an alliance with this powerful leader of semi-pirates
and smugglers.</p>
<p>Accordingly, the sloop of war <i>Sophia</i>, commanded
by Captain Lockyer, was sent to Barrataria to treat
with Lafitte, and when this vessel arrived off the
mouth of the harbor, which she could not enter, she
began firing signal guns in order to attract the attention
of the people of the colony. Naturally
enough, the report of the <i>Sophia's</i> guns created a
great excitement in Barrataria, and all the people
who happened to be at the settlement at that time
crowded out upon the beach to see what they could
see. But the war-vessel was too far away for them
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to distinguish her nationality, and Lafitte quickly
made up his mind that the only thing for him to do
was to row out to the mouth of the harbor and see
what was the matter. Without doubt he feared
that this was the United States vessel which had
come to break up his settlement. But whether this
was the case or not, he must go out and try the
effect of fair words, for he had no desire whatever
to defend his interests by hard blows.</p>
<p>Before Lafitte reached the vessel he was surprised
to find it was a British man-of-war, not an American,
and very soon he saw that a boat was coming
from it and rowing toward him. This boat contained
Captain Lockyer and two other officers, besides
the men who rowed it; when the two boats
met, the captain told who he was, and asked if Mr.
Lafitte could be found in Barrataria, stating that he
had an important document to deliver to him. The
cautious Frenchman did not immediately admit that
he was the man for whom the document was intended,
but he said that Lafitte was at Barrataria,
and as the two boats rowed together toward shore,
he thought it would be as well to announce his
position, and did so.</p>
<p>When the crowd of privateersmen saw the officers
in British uniform landing upon their beach, they
were not inclined to receive them kindly, for an
attack had been made upon the place by a small<SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></SPAN>
British force some time before, and a good deal of
damage had been done. But Lafitte quieted the
angry feelings of his followers, conducted the officers
to his own house, and treated them with great hospitality,
which he was able to do in fine style, for
his men brought into Barrataria luxuries from all
parts of the world.</p>
<p>When Lafitte opened the package of papers which
Captain Lockyer handed to him, he was very much
surprised. Some of them were general proclamations
announcing the intention of Great Britain if
the people of Louisiana did not submit to her demands;
but the most important document was one
in which Colonel Nichols, commander-in-chief of
the British forces in the Gulf, made an offer to
Lafitte and his followers to become a part of the
British navy, promising to give amnesty to all the
inhabitants of Barrataria, to make their leader a
captain in the navy, and to do a great many other
good things, provided they would join his forces, and
help him to attack the American seaports. In case,
however, this offer should be refused, the Barratarians
were assured that their place would speedily
be attacked, their vessels destroyed, and all their
possessions confiscated.</p>
<p>Lafitte was now in a state of great perplexity.
He did not wish to become a British captain, for
his knowledge of horseshoeing would be of no service
<SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285"></SPAN>
to him in such a capacity; moreover, he had
no love for the British, and his sympathies were
all on the side of the United States in this war.
But here he was with the British commander asking
him to become an ally, and to take up arms
against the United States, threatening at the same
time to destroy him and his colony in case of refusal.
On the other hand, there was the United
States at that moment preparing an expedition
for the purpose of breaking up the settlement at
Barrataria, and to do everything which the British
threatened to do, in case Lafitte did not agree to
their proposals.</p>
<p>The chief of Barrataria might have made a poor
show with a cutlass and a brace of pistols, but he
was a long-headed and sagacious man, with a strong
tendency to practical diplomacy. He was in a bad
scrape, and he must act with decision and promptness,
if he wanted to get out of it.</p>
<p>The first thing he did was to gain time by delaying
his answer to the proposition brought by Captain
Lockyer. He assured that officer that he must
consult with his people and see what they would do,
and that he must also get rid of some truculent
members of the colony, who would never agree to
act in concert with England, and that therefore he
should not be able to give an answer to Colonel
Nichols for two weeks. Captain Lockyer saw for
<SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286"></SPAN>
himself that it would not be an easy matter to induce
these independent and unruly fellows, many of whom
already hated England, to enter into the British
service. Therefore he thought it would be wise to
allow Lafitte the time he asked for, and he sailed
away, promising to return in fifteen days.</p>
<p>The diplomatic Lafitte, having finished for a time
his negotiations with the British, lost no time in
communicating with the American authorities. He
sent to Governor Claiborne, of Louisiana, all the
documents he had received from Captain Lockyer,
and wrote him a letter in which he told him everything
that had happened, and thus gave to the
United States the first authentic information of the
proposed attack upon Mobile and New Orleans.
He then told the Governor that he had no intention
of fighting against the country he had adopted;
that he was perfectly willing and anxious to aid her
in every manner possible, and that he and his followers
would gladly join the United States against the
British, asking nothing in return except that all
proceedings against Barrataria should be abandoned,
that amnesty should be given to him and his men,
that his brother should be released from prison,
and that an act of oblivion should be passed by
which the deeds of the smugglers of Barrataria
should be condoned and forgotten.</p>
<p>Furthermore, he said that if the United States
<SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></SPAN>
government did not accede to his proposition, he
would immediately depart from Barrataria with all
his men; for no matter what loss such a proceeding
might prove to him he would not remain in a place
where he might be forced to act against the United
States. Lafitte also wrote to a member of the
Louisiana Legislature, and his letters were well
calculated to produce a very good effect in his favor.</p>
<p>The Governor immediately called a council, and
submitted the papers and letters received from
Lafitte. When these had been read, two points
were considered by the council, the first being that
the letters and proclamations from the British might
be forgeries concocted by Lafitte for the purpose of
averting the punishment which was threatened by
the United States; and the second, whether or not
it would be consistent with the dignity of the government
to treat with this leader of pirates and
smugglers.</p>
<p>The consultation resulted in a decision not to
have anything to do with Lafitte in the way of
negotiations, and to hurry forward the preparations
which had been made for the destruction of the
dangerous and injurious settlement at Barrataria.
In consequence of this action of the council, Commodore
Patterson sailed in a very few days down
the Mississippi and attacked the pirate settlement
at Barrataria with such effect that most of her ships
<SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288"></SPAN>
were taken, many prisoners and much valuable
merchandise captured, and the whole place utterly
destroyed. Lafitte, with the greater part of his
men, had fled to the woods, and so escaped capture.</p>
<p>Captain Lockyer at the appointed time arrived
off the harbor of Barrataria and blazed away with
his signal guns for forty-eight hours, but receiving
no answer, and fearing to send a boat into the
harbor, suspecting treachery on the part of Lafitte,
he was obliged to depart in ignorance of what had
happened.</p>
<p>When the papers and letters which had been sent
to Governor Claiborne by Lafitte were made public,
the people of Louisiana and the rest of the country
did not at all agree with the Governor and his
council in regard to their decision and their subsequent
action, and Edward Livingston, a distinguished
lawyer of New York, took the part of
Lafitte and argued very strongly in favor of his
loyalty and honesty in the affair.</p>
<p>Even when it was discovered that all the information
which Lafitte had sent was perfectly correct,
and that a formidable attack was about to be made
upon New Orleans, General Jackson, who was in
command in that part of the country, issued a very
savage proclamation against the British method of
making war, and among their wicked deeds he mentioned
nothing which seemed to him to be worse
<SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289"></SPAN>
than their endeavor to employ against the citizens
of the United States the band of "hellish banditti"
commanded by Jean Lafitte!</p>
<p>But public opinion was strongly in favor of the
ex-pirate of the Gulf, and as things began to look
more and more serious in regard to New Orleans,
General Jackson was at last very glad, in spite of
all that he had said, to accept the renewed offers
of Lafitte and his men to assist in the defence of
the city, and in consequence of his change of mind
many of the former inhabitants of Barrataria fought
in the battle of New Orleans and did good work.
Their services were so valuable, in fact, that when
the war closed President Madison issued a proclamation
in which it was stated that the former
inhabitants of Barrataria, in consequence of having
abandoned their wicked ways of life, and having
assisted in the defence of their country, were now
granted full pardon for all the evil deeds they had
previously committed.</p>
<p>Now Lafitte and his men were free and independent
citizens of the United States; they could live
where they pleased without fear of molestation, and
could enter into any sort of legal business which
suited their fancy, but this did not satisfy Lafitte.
He had endeavored to take a prompt and honest
stand on the side of his country; his offers had
been treated with contempt and disbelief; he had
<SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN>
been branded as a deceitful knave, and no disposition
had been shown to act justly toward him until his
services became so necessary to the government
that it was obliged to accept them.</p>
<p>Consequently, Lafitte, accompanied by some of
his old adherents, determined to leave a country
where his loyalty had received such unsatisfactory
recognition, and to begin life again in some other
part of the American continent. Not long after
the war he sailed out upon the Gulf of Mexico,—for
what destination it is not known, but probably
for some Central American port,—and as nothing
was ever heard of him or his party, it is believed by
many persons that they all perished in the great
storm which arose soon after their departure. There
were other persons, however, who stated that he
reached Yucatan, where he died on dry land in 1826.</p>
<p>But the end of Lafitte is no more doubtful than
his right to the title given to him by people of a
romantic turn of mind, and other persons of a still
more fanciful disposition might be willing to suppose
that the Gulf of Mexico, indignant at the undeserved
distinction which had come to him, had swallowed
him up in order to put an end to his pretension to
the title of "The Pirate of the Gulf."</p>
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