Charles Vane's history is not well documented,…
February 1718 CE
Charles Vane's history is not well documented, but he had most likely started his career aboard one of Lord Archibald Hamilton's privateers.
He had turned to piracy in 1716 while raiding Spanish salvage ships, sent to retrieve silver from the sunken Spanish treasure fleet off the coast of Florida.
Vane had successfully raided the Spanish ships and landed crews, stealing a great deal of goods and riches.
Vane is infamous for his cruelty toward the crews of captured vessels.
After his first act as a pirate, he had been reported to the governor of Bermuda for torturing men on rival vessels while on a salvage mission.
He also shows scant respect for the pirate code, cheating his own crews out of their fair share of plunder and killing surrendered sailors after promising them mercy.
Vane subsequently trades up ships by capturing first a Barbados sloop, then a large twelve-gun brigantine, which he renames the Ranger.
His brutal attacks have become well known, and Captain Vane is cornered in February 1718 by Vincent Pearse, commander of the HMS Phoenix, which had sailed to Nassau to offer the Royal Pardon to pirates in exchange for a guarantee they would quit plundering.
Word has recently spread of the king’s pardon, and Vane claims he'd actually been en route to surrender to Pearse.
He accepts the pardon on the spot, gaining his freedom though losing his captured ship "the Lark".
As soon as he is free of Pearse, Vane ignores the pardon and resumes his depredations.