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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

CAPTAIN JOHN KIDD

Known as the " Wizard of the Seas," who suffered for
Piracy, at Execution Dock, 23rd of May, 1701

CAPTAIN JOHN KIDD was born at Greenock, in
Scotland, and being bred as a sailor he eventually
became known as the " Wizard of the Seas."
Having quitted his native country, he resided at New York,
where he became owner of a small vessel, with which he
traded among the pirates, obtained a thorough knowledge
of their haunts, and could give a better account of them
than any other person whatever. While in their company
he used to converse and act as they did; yet at other times
he would make singular professions of honesty, and intimate
how easy a matter it would be to extirpate these abandoned
people, and prevent their future depredations. His frequent
remarks of this kind engaged the notice of several consider-
able planters, who, forming a more favourable idea of him
than his true character would warrant, procured him the
patronage with which he was afterwards honoured. For a
series of years great complaints had been made of the
piracies committed in the West Indies, which had been
greatly encouraged by some of the inhabitants of North
America, on account of the advantage they derived from
purchasing effects thus fraudulently obtained. This coming
to the knowledge of King William III., he, in the year
1695, bestowed the government of New England and
New York on the Earl of Bellamont, an Irish nobleman
of distinguished character and abilities, who immediately
began to consider the most effectual method to redress the
evils complained of, and consulted with Colonel Levingston,
a gentleman who had great property in New York, on the
most feasible steps to obviate the evils.
   At this juncture Captain Kidd had arrived from New
York in a sloop of his own ; him, therefore, the Colonel
mentioned to Lord Bellamont as a bold and daring man,
who was very fit to be employed against the pirates, as he

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was perfectly well acquainted with the places which they
resorted to. This plan met with the fullest approbation of
his lordship, who mentioned the affair to his Majesty, and
recommended it to the notice of the Board of Admiralty.
But such were then the hurry and confusion of public affairs
that, though the design was approved, no steps were taken
towards carrying it into execution. Accordingly Colonel
Levingston made application to Lord Bellamont that as
the affair would not well admit of delay it was worthy of
being undertaken by some private persons of rank and
distinction, and carried into execution at their own expense,
notwithstanding public encouragement was denied it.
His lordship approved of this project, but it was attended
with considerable difficulty. At length, however, Lord
Chancellor Somers, the Duke of Shrewsbury, the Earl
of Romney, the Earl of Oxford and some other persons,
with Colonel Levingston and Captain Kidd, agreed to
raise six thousand pounds for the expense of the voyage;
and the Colonel and Captain were to have a fifth of the
profits of the whole undertaking. Matters being thus far
adjusted, a commission in the usual form was granted to
Captain Kidd to take and seize pirates, and bring them
to justice.
   Accordingly a vessel was purchased and manned, and
received the name of the Adventure galley; and in this
Captain Kidd sailed for New York towards the close of the
year 1695, and in his passage made prize of a French ship.
From New York he sailed to the Madeira Islands, thence
to Bonavista and St Jago, and from this last place to
Madagascar. He now began to cruise at the entrance of
the Red Sea, but not being successful in those latitudes
he sailed to Calicut, and there took a ship of one hundred
and fifty tons' burthen, which he carried to Madagascar and
disposed of there. Having sold his prize he again put to
sea, and at the expiration of five weeks took the Quedah
merchant, a ship of above four hundred tons' burthen, the
master of which was an Englishman named Wright, who
had two Dutch mates on board and a French gunner, but

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the crew consisted of Moors, natives of Africa, and were
about ninety in number. He carried the ship to St Mary's,
near Madagascar, where he burned the Adventure galley,
belonging to his owners, and divided the lading of the
Quedah merchant with his crew, taking forty shares to
himself. They then went on board the last-mentioned ship
and sailed for the West Indies. It is uncertain whether the
inhabitants of the West India Islands knew that Kidd was
a pirate, but he was refused refreshments at Anguilla and
St Thomas's, and therefore sailed to Mona, between Porto
Rico and Hispaniola, where, through the management of
an Englishman named Bolton, he obtained a supply of
provisions from Curacao.
   He now bought a sloop of Bolton, in which he stowed
great part of his ill-gotten effects, and left the Quedah
merchant, with eighteen of the ship's company, in Bolton's
care. While at St Mary's, ninety men of Kidd's crew left
him and went on board the Mocha merchant, an East India
ship, which had just then commenced as pirate. Kidd now
sailed in the sloop, and touched at several places, where he
disposed of a great part of his cargo, and then steered for
Boston, in New England. In the interim Bolton sold the
Quedah merchant to the Spaniards, and immediately sailed
as a passenger in a ship for Boston, where he arrived a con-
siderable time before Kidd, and gave information of what
had happened to Lord Bellamont. Kidd, therefore, on his
arrival, was seized, by order of his lordship; when all he had
to urge in his defence was that he thought the Quedah mer-
chant was a lawful prize, as she was manned with Moors,
though there was no kind of proof that this vessel had com-
mitted any act of piracy. Upon this, the Earl of Bellamont
immediately dispatched an account to England of the cir-
cumstances that had arisen, and requested that a ship be
sent for Kidd, who had committed several other notorious
acts of piracy. The ship Rochester was accordingly sent
to bring him to England; but this vessel, happening to
be disabled, was obliged to return-a circumstance that
greatly increased a public clamour which had for some time

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subsisted respecting this affair, and which, no doubt, took
its rise from party prejudice. It was carried to such a height
that the Members of Parliament for several places were in-
structed to move the House for an inquiry into the affair ;
and accordingly it was moved in the House of Commons
that " The letters-patent granted to the Earl of Bellamont
and others respecting the goods taken from pirates were
dishonourable to the King, against the law of nations, con-
trary to the laws and statutes of this realm, an invasion of
property, and destructive to commerce." Though a negative
was put on this motion, yet the enemies of Lord Somers and
the Earl of Oxford continued to charge those noblemen with
giving countenance to pirates ; and it was even insinuated
that the Earl of Bellamont was not less culpable than the
actual offenders.
   As soon as Kidd arrived in England he was sent for,
and examined at the bar of the House of Commons, with
a view to fix part of his guilt on the parties who had been
concerned in sending him on the expedition ; but nothing
arose to incriminate any of those distinguished persons.
Kidd, who was in some degree intoxicated, made a very
contemptible appearance at the bar of the House; on
which a member, who had been one of the most earnest
to have him examined, violently exclaimed: " This fellow
I thought had been only a knave, but unfortunately he
happens to be a fool likewise." Kidd was at length tried at
the Old Bailey, and was convicted on the clearest evidence;
but neither at that time nor afterwards charged any of his
employers with being privy to his infamous proceedings.
He suffered, with one of his companions (Darby Mullins),
at Execution Dock, on the 23rd day of May 1701. After
Kidd had been tied up to the gallows the rope broke and
he fell to the ground; but being immediately tied up again,
the ordinary, who had before exhorted him, desired to speak
with him once more; and on this second application en-
treated him to make the most careful use of the few further
moments thus providentially allotted him for the final
preparation of his soul to meet its important change. These

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exhortations appeared to have the wished-for effect; and
he was left, professing his charity to all the world, and his
hopes of salvation through the merits of his Redeemer.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. II Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar