The pirate Samuel Bellamy's greatest capture comes…
April 1717 CE
The pirate Samuel Bellamy's greatest capture comes in the spring of 1717, when he and his crew chase down and board the Whydah Gally.
A three hundred-ton English slave ship, The Whydah had just finished the second leg of the Atlantic slave trade on its second voyage and is loaded with a fortune in gold and precious trade goods.
True to his reputation for generosity, Bellamy gives the Sultana to Captain Lawrence Prince of the captured Whydah, and, outfitting his new flagship as a twenty-eight-gun raiding vessel (upgraded from its original eighteen guns), sets sail northwards along the eastern coast of New England.
As the Whydah and the Mary Anne approach Cape Cod, Williams tells Bellamy that he wishes to visit his family in Rhode Island, and the two agree to meet again near Maine.
If Bellamy intended to revisit his lover Maria Hallett, he failed.
The Whydah is swept up in a violent Nor'easter storm off Cape Cod at midnight, and is driven onto the sand bar shoals in sixteen feet of water some five hundred feet from the coast of what is now Wellfleet, Massachusetts.
At fifteen minutes past midnight, the masts snap and draw the heavily loaded ship into thirty feet of water, where she capsizes and quickly sinks, taking Bellamy and all but three of the Whydah's one hundred and forty-nine-man crew with her.
One hundred and three bodies are known to have washed ashore and are buried by the town coroner, leaving forty-three bodies unaccounted for.
The Mary Anne is also wrecked that night several miles south of the Whydah, leaving six more survivors.
All nine castaways from the two ships are captured and prosecuted for piracy in Boston.
At the time of its sinking, the Whydah is the largest pirate prize ever captured, and the treasure in its hold includes huge quantities of indigo, ivory, gold, and over thirty thousand pounds sterling (approximately four and a half to five tons).
Bellamy was probably the youngest of six known children born to Stephen and Elizabeth Bellamy in the parish of Hittisleigh in Devonshire in 1689.
Elizabeth died in childbirth and was buried on February 23, 1689, three weeks before her infant son Samuel's baptism on March 18.
Becoming a sailor at a young age, Bellamy had traveled to Cape Cod, where, according to local lore, he took up an affair with a local girl named Maria Hallett.
He soon left Cape Cod—allegedly to support Hallett—by salvaging treasure from the Spanish Plate Fleet sunk off the coast of Florida, accompanied by his friend and financier Paul (or Palgrave, Paulgrave, Paulsgrave) Williams.
The treasure hunters apparently met with little success, as they had soon turned to piracy in the crew of pirate captain Benjamin Hornigold, who commands the Mary Anne (or Marianne) with his first mate Edward "Blackbeard" Teach.
Bellamy, irritated by Hornigold's unwillingness to attack ships of England, his home country, had in the summer of 1716 challenged Hornigold for the position of captain.
Hornigold had been deposed as captain of the Mary Anne and Bellamy had been elected by the crew in his place.
Upon capturing a second ship, the Sultana, Bellamy had assigned his friend Paul Williams as captain of the Mary Anne and made the Sultana his flagship.