John Avery, also called Captain Bridgeman, or…
1695 CE
John Avery, also called Captain Bridgeman, or Long Ben, one of Britain's most renowned pirates of the late seventeenth century, had reputedly served in the Royal Navy and on merchantmen, as well as on buccaneer and slave ships, before beginning a life of piracy about 1691.
Joining a ship in the service of Spain in 1694, he had helped plot a mutiny and was elected captain of his new pirate ship, renamed the Fancy.
The Fancy, after preying on various ships en route around Africa, is joined in 1695 by other pirate ships, and under Avery's leadership, the small fleet sails to the mouth of the Red Sea, where they plunder the Indian Mughal government's Mocha fleet, which is returning from Mecca.
Avery then sails to the Bahamas, where his ship is either sold or driven ashore in a storm and destroyed.
The Mughal government, outraged by Avery's depredations, has meanwhile retaliated by closing some of the (English) East India Company's trading stations in India.
The English now offer large bounties for the apprehension of Avery and his fellow pirates.
The crew scatters, with some settling in the Americas, while Avery and others returns to England, where most of them are captured and hanged or banished.
Avery himself eludes capture and disappeared (though one story asserts that he was cheated by some Bristol merchants and subsequently died in poverty.
Avery is the model for Daniel Defoe's hero in Life, Adventures, and Pyracies, of the Famous Captain Singleton, published in 1720.)