The Royal Navy had captured a total…
February 1722 CE
The Royal Navy had captured a total of two hundred and seventy-two men, of whom seventy-five are black, and these are sold into slavery.
The remainder, apart from those who die on the voyage back, are taken to Cape Coast Castle.
Fifty-four are condemned to death, of whom fifty-two are hanged and two reprieved.
Another twenty are allowed to sign indentures with the Royal African Company; Burl comments that they "exchanged an immediate death for a lingering one". (Burl, Aubrey (2006) Black Barty: Bartholomew Roberts and his pirate crew 1718-1723.pp. 254-5 Sutton Publishing.)
Seventeen men are sent to the Marshalsea prison in London for trial, while over a third of the total were acquitted and released.
Of the captured pirates who gave their place of birth, forty-two percent were from Cornwall, Devon and Somerset and another nineteen percent from London.
There were smaller numbers from northern England and from Wales, and another quarter from a variety of countries including Ireland, Scotland, the West Indies, the Netherlands and Greece.
After problems with mutinous Irishmen early in his pirate career, Roberts was known to generally avoid recruiting Irishmen, to the extent that captured merchant sailors would sometimes affect an Irish accent to discourage Roberts from forcing them into his pirate crew.
Captain Chaloner Ogle is rewarded with a knighthood, the only British naval officer to be honored specifically for his actions against pirates.
He also profits financially, taking gold dust from Roberts' cabin, and eventually becomes an Admiral.
Roberts' death shocks the pirate world, as well as the Royal Navy.
The local merchants and civilians had thought him invincible, and some had considered him a hero.
Roberts' death is seen by many historians as the end of the Golden Age of Piracy.