John Rackham, an English pirate captain, derives…
1720 CE
John Rackham, an English pirate captain, derives his nickname, Calico Jack, from the colorful calico clothes he wears.
Rackham had served as quartermaster under the command of the notoriously cruel pirate, Charles Vane, until the day Vane refused to engage a French vessel in battle, upsetting the crew grew to the extent that they had mutinied and appointed Rackham as their captain.
Rackham had immediately turned the ship, engaged the French vessel, and defeated it—all, reportedly, while heavily intoxicated from rum.
Vane, cast adrift in a small sloop, had been among the pirate captains who had established a base at New Providence in the Bahamas after the British abandoned the colony in 1713.
He had subsequently set about clawing his way back up the pirate ranks by seizing ever larger ships, but after his ship was wrecked in a storm in February 1719 and he and one other survivor were washed up on an uninhabited island in the Bay of Honduras.
A ship eventually arrived, months later, but Vane had been recognized and both men had been clapped in irons, taken to Jamaica, and at Port Royal tried and hanged on March 29, 1720.
He dies without expressing the least remorse for his crimes.
Rackham had meanwhile decided to take an offer of the King's Pardon and sailed to the shore of New Providence.
Rackham during this time had met and fell in love with a married woman named Anne Bonny.
Infatuated by Anne, Rackham had lavished much of his plunder on her.
He had then joined the crew of Captain Burgess, who was himself a former pirate turned privateer roaming the Caribbean in search of Spanish ships.
When the affair between Rackham and Anne became public, the Governor of New Providence had threatened to have Anne whipped for her adultery.
The pair resolved to assemble a crew and steal a sloop rather than leave Anne behind to be flogged.
Anne, fearing that the crew would refuse to sail alongside a woman, had dressed up as a man and taken the name Adam Bonny.
Becoming a respected member of the crew, she has fought alongside her male counterparts in numerous successful engagements.
After several of the Bahamas merchants send out a heavily armed ship to capture them, Rackham and a few of his crew are forced to flee.
They are subsequently captured by a Spanish ship but manage to escape, sailing around Jamaica and taking possession of several fishing vessels and a sloop.
The governor resolves to capture Rackham and dispatches the pirate-hunter Jonathan Barnet.
It is reputed that Rackham had earlier tried to strike a deal with the governor under which he would surrender himself if clemency was given to Anne and another female pirate called Mary Read.
Barnet in October of 1720 surprises Rackham and his crew of the Revenge, catching them mostly drunk —many of the crew passed out in the ships hull.
Only the two women, Read and Bonny, put up a fight.
Rackham and his crew, brought to trial at St. Jago de la Vega in Jamaica on November 16, 1720, are found guilty of piracy and hanged the next day.
Only Anne Bonny and Mary Read survive, both claiming to be pregnant.
Mary Read will die the following year in prison, either during childbirth or from fever.
Anne Bonny, who disappears from history, is believed to have been ransomed out of prison by her wealthy father.