The Royal James and the two captured…
August 1718 CE
The Royal James and the two captured sloops sail southward from Delaware Bay on August 1, 1718.
The captured sloops lag behind, and Bonnet threatens to sink them if they do not stay closer.
During the passage, Bonnet and his crew divide their loot into shares of about ten or eleven pounds and distribute them among themselves.
This is the only time Bonnet is known to have practiced this important pirate custom, and it suggests he had by then abandoned his unorthodox practice of paying regular wages to his crew.
Twelve days out of Delaware Bay, Bonnet enters the estuary of the Cape Fear River and anchors near the mouth of a small waterway now known as Bonnet's Creek.
The Royal James has begun to leak badly and is in need of careening.
Shortly afterward, a small shallop enters the river and is captured.
Bonnet has the shallop broken up to help repair the Royal James.
The work of careening is done, in whole or in part, by the prisoners Bonnet has captured.
Bonnet threatens at least one man with marooning if he does not work the Royal James' pumps.
Bonnet will remain in the Cape Fear River for the next forty-five days.
According to Bonnet's boatswain, Ignatius Pell, the had pirates intended to wait out the hurricane season here.