On April Fools Day, 1696, a mysterious ship sailed into
the port of New Providence in the Bahamas. It’s sides were pierced with gun
ports, it’s sails tattered, it’s hull low in the water from a heavy cargo. The sailors of this ship were strangely
dressed, their weather-beaten bodies covered with silks from China, satins from
Arabia, and spangled cotton gauze from India. Their captain went ashore to meet
with the island’s lawful governor, Nicholas Trott.
The captain introduced himself and proposed a bargain. He
said that his ship, the Fancy had
been trading illegally off the coast of Africa, and the crew now wanted to come
ashore, sell their cargo and take some much needed leave. To gain the governor’s
good will, they were willing to offer him a gift - £850 (three times Trott’s annual salary) and the Fancy herself, once the cargo had been
sold.
Though Trott would later testify in court that he had no proof
the newcomers were pirates, he was not a fool. The choice before him was clear –
uphold English law, as his job required, or take the money. He did not
hesitate. Captain “Bridgeman” and his crew were welcomed warmly, and given permission
to go wherever they pleased.
Even Trott did not know he faced the most wanted man in
the world. “Bridgeman” was, in fact, Henry Avery, and the Fancy had been pirating off the coast of Madagascar for nearly
five years.
Henry Avery is a legend. His name appears on every list
of famous pirates, and his story has been told everywhere from the pubs of 17th
century Jamaica to the science-fiction world of Doctor Who. Some say that Avery
began the Golden Age of Piracy single-handedly.
And Henry Avery was a real man.