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On this day – May 23rd

23rd May 2018 @ 6:06am – by Webteam
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Captain William Kidd

Kidd was born in Scotland in about 1645. After his father died when William was a child he went to live in America, growing up in the colony of New York, and mixing with the gentry there. His contribution to the building of Trinity Church in New York likewise fits ill with the big screen vision of the bloodthirsty pirate.

In the 1690s Kidd became an officially sanctioned privateer, licensed to attack pirates and the French. Kidd's ship, a sailing-galley the Adventure Galley, had 34 guns and a hand-picked crew, though early in the voyage a Royal Navy vessel relieved Kidd of much of that crew. Throughout 1696 Kidd sailed to various points of expected pirate activity but many opportunities were spurned by the fastidious Kidd, leaving a Dutch ship and a brother privateer to go their way.

He killed one of his crew who had insulted him for not attacking a Dutch vessel. Kidd lost his temper and battered the man to death with a heavy bucket, an act out of character for the careful privateer, though some might dismiss it as dealing swiftly with a mutinous crew-member.

Kidd took the Armenian merchant vessel the Queddah Merchant, with a fabulous cargo of cloth – silk, satin and muslin – as well as gold and silver, but finding the captain was English tried to persuade his crew to return the booty! When they refused he held on to the French passes the captain was sailing under as a future defence against the charge of piracy..

Learning he was a wanted man, Kidd returned by sloop to New York, burning the leaky and worm-infested Adventure Galley. The governor of New York, Bellomont, fearing for his own skin as he had invested in Kidd's voyage, lured him to Boston then clapped him in irons. Eventually sent to England Kidd was questioned by Parliament , the Tory regime hoping to implicate Whig grandees in his crimes. The Whigs distanced themselves from him in spite of Kidd's loyal silence, and the now pauperised defendant stood trial before the Admiralty Court without benefit of a barrister to represent him. The French passes that offered some defence against the charge of piracy were 'mislaid', turning up more than 200 years later in government papers.

On May 23rd 1701 having been found guilty of piracy and murder, Kidd was hanged at the second attempt at Execution Dock the rope having broken at the first try.

At the end there is finally the whiff of the storybook pirate about Kidd, for he had a record of burying treasure in his career, and on his death is supposed to have left a secret cache for which treasure hunters are searching to this day. And there would certainly have been the whiff of the pirate about his gibbeted body, left to hang in a cage for two years after his execution.

Where in London was Execution Dock?

Click here for the answer

Execution Dock was in Wapping


This article is from our news archive. As a result pictures or videos originally associated with it may have been removed and some of the content may no longer be accurate or relevant.

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