The Lost Pirate Kingdom (2021) s01e03 Episode Script
The Price of Loyalty
[dramatic swashbuckling music]
- [shouting]
- [cannon fire]
[narrator] When the Spanish
treasure fleet spills its fortune
off the coast of Florida,
the pirates of the Caribbean clean up.
We're gonna get so rich,
we'll be shittin' gold.
[pirates laugh and cheer]
[narrator] Their humble base in Nassau
turns into a boomtown
[laughter and men cheering]
run by Benjamin Hornigold's Flying Gang,
Black Sam Bellamy, Paulsgrave Williams,
and his latest recruit, Edward Thatch,
soon to be known as Blackbeard.
- [blows landing]
- [man grunting]
But in this brutal world,
loyalty comes cheap.
It's a funny thing, loyalty.
Can flip on a coin.
[narrator] Captain Henry Jennings,
a posh pirate,
is Hornigold's archrival.
And it isn't just loyalty
to each other that's tested.
[clamor of battle]
They've got rich attacking Spanish ships.
But, when the war with Spain ends in 1714,
these British pirates
turn on their own crown.
Fuck that sausage-eating
ass-wipe, King George. [spits]
[pirates laugh]
[narrator] England's merchant ships
trade in a commodity so precious
they call it "black gold."
It's the slave trade.
You're no longer slaves!
You are now subject to the laws of piracy.
[narrator]
For many slaves, this means liberty.
But mess with the powerful slave traders
[indistinct clamor, men shouting]
at your peril.
I want them dead!
[narrator] The Empire strikes back.
[dramatic swashbuckling music]
[indistinct tavern chatter]
[narrator] Captain Henry Jennings
is on the run from the English Crown.
He's threatened the peace
with Spain by robbing their ships.
And we were having such a nice time.
[narrator] He's forced to take
refuge in Hornigold's pirate lair.
Now, now, Edward, we must be charitable.
Hello, Henry. Welcome to Nassau.
- I see you brought your lapdog with you.
- [both snicker]
[scoffs] Don't expect me
to lick my own balls, surely?
[Fox] Jennings and Hornigold
had been privateers during the war,
they'd both been employed
by Archibald Hamilton
to defend Jamaica,
um, but they had
quite different social backgrounds.
[narrator] Henry Jennings is
a plantation owner based out of Jamaica
and looks down
on Hornigold, the uncouth sailor.
It would have had to have been awkward
once Jennings was
resident full-time in Nassau,
in that Hornigold was
the founder of the pirate nest.
They represented two sort of
competing power bases and factions.
Keep him on a leash though, will you?
This is a nice establishment.
Don't want him
shitting all over the floor.
So, I hear you're a wanted man, Captain.
[Williams] Ooh, that must be frustrating,
forced to hide out here
with the likes of us. [snarls]
[narrator] Paulsgrave Williams
and Black Sam Bellamy
were once part of Jennings' crew.
[sinister music]
No, no, please. No. Please, no.
[narrator] But Bellamy can't stomach
Jennings' brutal brand of piracy
[prisoner] No. Oh.
What are you doing? Stop!
[narrator]and jumped ship
to Hornigold's Flying Gang.
Give you more time to walk your dog.
Feed him a bone.
I'll give you a fucking bone!
[dramatic music]
You will do nothing.
Thatch, you'd better
make your friend stand down.
Caesar's a free man to do as he pleases.
And if he pleases to slit your throat,
I'll be there
to mop up the floor afterwards.
[Hornigold chuckles]
[Woodward]
Jennings and Hornigold both realize that
each of them and their faction
needed the Pirate Republic to succeed,
and that meant at least tacit cooperation.
[narrator]
It makes for a volatile alliance.
Loyalty is hard won.
It's also easily lost.
Hornigold's loyalty to the English Crown
is not shared by all his men.
It's a funny thing, loyalty.
Can flip on a coin.
I mean, I've heard
your men aren't too happy
about passing up all that English loot,
and that some might be looking
to join up with young Bellamy there,
who apparently has no such qualms.
[dramatic music]
For more than a hundred years,
English pirates had attacked what
were traditionally enemies of England,
either Spanish or Portuguese ships.
But the 17-teens,
for really the first time,
uh, English pirates
actively engaged English shipping.
[female historian] Hornigold, because he's
been in a dominant leadership position
in this community,
is actually quite typical
of piracy culture at the time.
He has tried very hard
to not target British shipping,
given his history as a privateer.
I'm not attacking British ships.
I'm English.
Whatever the fuck that means out here.
[Lunsford] Bellamy doesn't
have the same prohibitions.
They want to consider any merchant ship
fair game, if the opportunity allows.
[narrator] The new British King
is a German, George I.
He doesn't even speak English.
Fuck England!
And fuck that sausage-eating
ball-bag they've stuck on the throne.
Well, they don't care about us out here.
Never have.
They just want to keep
the money rolling in.
What my good friend Paulsgrave
is trying to say is, with respect,
we're going after anything we can.
And if it's flying a Union Jack, so be it.
[indistinct tavern chatter]
We need to be careful with that one.
The most deadliest of the species.
But the most fun.
[narrator] Anne Bonny,
who will become
the most famous woman pirate,
has her own ax
to grind against the English.
As an Irish Catholic, she owes no loyalty
to the Protestant oppressors
of her homeland.
Men take what they want
when they want.
They steal, they lie,
they murder and they cheat one another.
And if you're weak,
someone steals up in the night,
fucks you, and slits your throat.
[soft music]
[chuckles softly]
What do you want?
[chuckles]
I just want to make my fortune
and go home to England a rich man.
England?
You want to go back
to the cold and the rain?
To the kings and the laws and the taxes?
Nobody in that godforsaken hole
gives one shit for you.
Hmm.
If it were me,
I'd pirate for the rest my days
and murder anyone that tried to stop me.
[sighs] You know, I love Nassau,
but one day,
they're coming for us.
[somber music]
[narrator] It's not long
before Hornigold's loyalty to England
is put to the test.
It's a merchant ship.
When faced with the actual
opportunity to take an English ship,
Hornigold demurs,
doesn't want to actually do this.
[Bellamy] To hell with him.
Bellamy, no problem at all.
Hoist the black flag!
Because this offers
a possibility for greater enrichment,
and that Hornigold is too restrictive.
[cannon fire echoing]
[clamor of battle]
[narrator] Bellamy's success
undermines Hornigold
in the eyes of his crew.
[clinking]
[clamor of battle]
It might look like a mutiny
under conventional terms,
if you saw this in
the merchant service or the naval service.
Really isn't, among pirates.
It's relatively well known
that there's this kind of idea of
democracy on board a pirate ship,
but I think it's misunderstood,
how profound it was.
Every single individual
has a vote, no matter who.
And if the organization decides that
the captain's not operating
with enough bravery or strategy,
they can depose him
and elect a new captain in.
[narrator] Hornigold's
trusted lieutenant, Edward Thatch,
organizes a democratic vote.
So, we're all agreed?
You're happy with your decision?
So it is.
The fact that Bellamy is inspiring them
and saying that he will
pursue all sorts of quarry
would be appealing
to a number of these pirates.
Yeah, you should go, Henry.
Join up with Bellamy, he's a good man.
He'll see you right.
[somber music]
The men have voted.
[clears throat]
And what's their decision?
They want Bellamy as their captain.
And Williams will be his quartermaster.
Loved and respected as he is,
Hornigold loses the vote
by approximately two thirds to one,
and, with respect, is asked to stand down,
and is no longer commodore of the fleet.
And what about you?
We're sticking with you, my friend.
Our image of pirates tends to be
of lawless men who obey no rules
and are loyal only to themselves,
and so it's surprising when
we encounter these moments of loyalty,
like that showed to Hornigold.
I won't forget this.
I'm gonna get a ship and make you captain.
And we're gonna be a force,
make no fucking mistake.
[waves splashing]
[gulls crying]
[woman moaning]
[man grunting]
[sighs, laughs]
[narrator]
Hornigold finds comfort with Anne Bonny.
She's become a pirate to escape her past.
[Hornigold]
Your husband, James, does he mind you?
[Anne] James is a spineless child.
I should have never married him.
You don't much care for men, do you, Anne?
They have their uses,
but mostly, they're weak.
My father was weak.
He had me out of wedlock
with a servant girl.
He didn't cast us out.
No,
he raised me as a little boy,
right under his wife's nose.
Brought me into the household
and introduced me
as one of his junior clerks.
Of course, it wasn't long before
his wife discovered the truth of it.
And he left her,
took me and my ma
to America to start a new life.
He goes into business and makes
more money than he ever did as a lawyer.
So, he is the head
of this prosperous estate
and Anne is, from the age of 12,
mistress of that estate.
Her mother passed away
not long after they moved
to the American colonies.
And I came into my womanhood.
And his conscience
didn't stop him
from finding his way to my bed.
Then I met James,
and he seemed like a way to escape.
But he was just a trap.
Just like all men.
- [action music]
- [clamor of battle]
[narrator]
The legend of Sam Bellamy is growing.
He's now known as Black Sam,
because of his raven-colored hair.
[Woodward] He was
a very good marine tactician,
daring and innovative,
and seems rather fearless.
Your manifest, and quick about it!
[Woodward] You get a sense,
following his career and the pace
of the vessels he attacks,
that this is somebody who's in a hurry
to get to somewhere or something.
[narrator] And that somebody
is the love of his life,
Mary Hallett,
the woman he's promised to marry,
and now the mother of his child.
[baby cooing]
At this point,
her parents abandoned her completely,
because, the shame of it.
You know, a child born out of wedlock?
Disgusting. So, she hides the baby.
[narrator]
But where there's life, there's hope.
And Black Sam is making good
on his promise to return a rich man.
"The notorious pirate, Samuel Bellamy,
did capture and rob
the vessel Morning Star off Cape Cod."
[clamor of battle]
"Much gold was taken,
along with valuable items
from passengers aboard."
His name has spread like wildfire.
He is one of the world's
most notorious pirates already,
just a few months after leaving her.
"But no man was hurt, and the vessel
was allowed to continue its journey."
They'll hang you for this.
I'll be back.
He's going to come for us.
Then we'll be together, wealthy.
- [baby coos]
- You see?
Shh, shh, shh, shh.
[narrator] But, for Bellamy,
piracy is about more than gold.
[Woodward] He was clearly driven by
the social rebellion aspect of piracy.
Think of me as a, uh, a Robin Hood.
Bellamy is renowned
for being very fair and just
when he deals with ships
that he's acquired.
Right, I need men with skills.
He really takes pride
in giving the crews that he captures
the opportunity to join him,
the opportunity to throw off
the shackles of oppression.
Unlike the merchant navy
and those scumbag businessmen
who work you to death
and flog you to ribbons
when the mood catches them, we
we will pay you like kings.
And if you don't like my decisions,
you can vote for a new captain.
That's right, every man has a vote,
and an equal share
of any treasure we take.
So, why work like a dog,
and get whipped like one, too,
just to put money
in the pockets of some rich tosser
who gives you
a handful of copper as payment?
So, any of you looking for a better life
this is your chance.
[narrator] While Bellamy is sharing out
the booty taken from British traders,
recruits flock to join him.
And they start young.
[Fox] One of the passengers
was a boy called John King.
His family were relatively wealthy,
and he was traveling with his mother.
You're Black Sam Bellamy,
the Robin Hood of the seas.
You steal from the rich
and give to the poor.
He thought that
the pirates were so exciting
and enticing and romantic
that he begged his mother
to allow him
to go and join the pirate crew.
Don't believe everything you read, boy.
Maybe we rob.
Maybe we murder.
Maybe we string up little boys
and throw 'em to the sharks.
I don't care, I want to be a pirate.
[gasps]
Then welcome aboard, John King.
John King would probably have found
that his dreams were met
with disappointment.
The majority of the time,
pirate life wasn't as exciting as
he had seen it when they'd captured him.
[narrator]
Bellamy is fast becoming a rich man
[cannon fire echoing]
and he's doing it
at the expense of England's trade
with her American colonies.
[Woodward] The Governor
of Virginia, Alexander Spotswood,
receives reports,
how the pirate nest is growing
and hatching more and more pirates,
and that the pirates are
becoming a destabilizing danger
to trade and commerce.
Spotswood is the governor
of a royal colony that's producing
an incredibly valuable
commodity in tobacco,
and so he is responsible
for protecting those tobacco fleets.
The entire economy of the Chesapeake Bay
depended on production of tobacco
and its eventual sale back in England.
[narrator] But worse is to come.
The pirates will soon target the trade
which makes the British Empire tick.
Slavery.
[men coughing]
The danger is very clear.
I mean, Spotswood
and other governors are all forwarding
increasingly urgent dispatches
back to their masters in London.
Starting to clamor
with more and more insistence
that something
is going to need to be done.
[dramatic music]
[waves splashing]
[narrator] Bellamy isn't the only member
of the Flying Gang making waves.
[breathes heavily]
They say that
if Anne Bonny takes a shine to you,
you're on the up.
Anne was always
looking to build her fortune.
She was always looking for that adventure.
Looking for that next best opportunity.
[breathes heavily]
[narrator] And the man
making quite a stir is Edward Thatch,
the Latin-speaking pirate scholar.
[romantic music]
[speaking Latin]
At a time when literacy
was the exception, not the rule,
Edward Thatch knew how to read and write.
[Anne] Where'd you learn that?
A book.
You read?
It's amazing what you can find
through some pages of Latin poetry.
He kept a journal,
which is unlike many of the pirates,
so he's educated
and literate and thoughtful,
and understands the need
to keep his thoughts.
[both breathing heavily]
Who are you?
A frustrated pirate.
A dangerous pirate.
[scoffs]
An orphaned son of plantation owners.
I'm nothin'.
I'm nobody.
[Conniff] Thatcher's career has
been relatively quiet up to this point.
He's been overlooked
for promotion once or twice.
In fact, Bellamy's been given a promotion.
Bellamy's a much younger man than he is.
Thatch has played his hand
very, very carefully,
always loyal to his mentor, Hornigold.
[narrator] He is now helping rebuild
the deposed Hornigold's pirate fleet.
Come on, Benjamin.
Bring 'em to me, Benjamin.
[cannon fire echoing]
He is thoughtful,
observant, and quite the strategist.
He knew how to manage a ship.
He knew how to manage men.
He really was a man
who knew what he was doing.
Faster! Come on!
He makes himself indispensable
to Hornigold in a short period of time.
- Load your cannons!
- [pirate] Cannons full.
[Blackbeard] Prime your weapons!
- [cannon fire echoing]
- [clamor of battle]
[narrator]
And while not every chase ends in success,
it isn't long before Hornigold
makes good on his promise to Thatch.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
It's time to introduce you
to your new captain.
[Thatch laughs]
They're all yours.
It's speech time.
Gentlemen!
[chuckles softly]
- Pirate scum!
- [pirates] Yay!
- Whore's sons!
- [pirates] Yay!
Out there is an ocean full of big,
fat fish waiting to be swallowed.
[laughs]
And we're gonna get so rich,
we'll be shittin' gold.
[pirates] Yay!
[bottle shattering]
For Thatch,
it means his first personal command.
[pirates cheering]
[narrator]
It's the beginning of a new pirate legend,
and bad news
for the English slave traders.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
So, what's the plan?
Take what we can.
No bloodshed, no deaths.
And we need
to find ourselves a bigger boat.
He's a well-respected leader and captain,
absolutely fearless as a pirate,
yet, like Bellamy,
there's no record
of him ever killing anyone.
There's some brutal violence
along the way, undoubtedly,
but there's some other acts of humanity
that speak quite outside
of the typical pirate archetype.
Which is interesting.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
I never knew you were musical, Caesar.
What you don't know
about me could fill a book.
[laughing]
[jaunty hornpipe music continues]
[Fox]
Black Caesar is one of those characters
who has all these wonderful,
wonderful stories around him.
Um, one of the best ones is,
perhaps, that he was an African prince
before he was captured
and sold into slavery.
The trouble is that, in reality,
we actually know almost nothing about him,
until he appears on Thatcher's ship.
[thunder rumbling]
[narrator] Slavery is the
dirty business that drives British trade.
The slave trade involved
taking slaves from Africa
and carrying them across to the Caribbean
and to the American colonies
and stocking up there
on goods from those regions
and bringing them back to England
in a sort of triangular trade.
[narrator] Imagine, human beings
torn from their families and home,
brutally dragged halfway across the world,
used as human currency,
the price of the West's growing addiction.
There's one word that can explain
why slaves were so necessary
to the colonies in the 18th century,
and that word is sugar,
which goes from being
a luxury to a perceived necessity
to European diets and palates.
Every European nation has
an overseas colony producing sugar.
It's being produced in Brazil,
it's being produced in Jamaica,
it's being produced in St. Domingue,
which would become Haiti.
[narrator] But slaves
are more than currency.
Once exchanged for sugar,
they are put to work growing more.
[Walker] It's really backbreaking work.
And it's work that led
to a tremendous loss of life,
and did not allow for people,
enslaved people,
to do much other than work
from sunup to sundown.
[door creaking]
[Walker] From the perspective
of the pirates, they're encountering
something they had
likely never seen before:
people in inhumanely crowded conditions
[people moaning]
who have been at sea for months.
[flies buzzing]
[moaning]
[crying, shuddering]
They were all chained together below deck,
hundreds and hundreds of them,
well beyond capacity.
They couldn't even sit upright.
They were covered in feces, urine, vomit.
This led to rampant disease going through,
particularly dysentery,
because of contaminated water.
One in five enslaved people generally died
on the travel through the middle passage.
[people sobbing, coughing]
[narrator] The slave trade
is worth billions of pounds every year
to the money men in London.
Unfortunately for them,
their ships are forced to pass through
the pirate waters of the Caribbean.
[Fox] There was no alternative route.
You couldn't just go round the pirates.
So, every ship that sailed
would be at risk from pirate attack.
And, suddenly,
the circulation flow was being cut off,
it was too dangerous for a lot of vessels
to venture along major trade routes,
especially the ones
that were immediately adjacent
to the Bahamas and their pirate lair.
[narrator] When the pirates
start targeting the slave ships,
the merchants' profits take a big hit.
And the bolder the pirates get,
the bigger the armed ships
the English merchants need
to protect their lucrative slave trade.
Slave ships required certain
characteristics. They needed to be big
so that they could hold
the largest number of slaves possible.
They needed to be fast.
Because, the longer they spent
at sea crossing the Atlantic,
the more slaves were
likely to die on the voyage.
[thunder rumbling]
But, above all, they needed
to be reasonably well armed,
so that they could defend themselves
from pirates and other attacks.
[gulls crying]
[narrator] Back at the heart
of the British Empire,
leading slave trader Humphry Morice
is admiring his latest weapon.
[Morice] Beautiful, isn't she?
The Whydah will be
one of the fastest ships on the sea.
Humphry Morice was a Member of Parliament.
He was also one of the early
governors of the Bank of England.
So, he was a very prominent
person in British society.
He was also a merchant,
and he commissioned
the building of the Whydah,
the slave ship.
The Whydah was a purpose-built slave ship.
It was swift
and could carry up to 28 guns.
Eight knots with the wind in her sails.
And she will carry
up to 500 slaves across three decks.
[Morice chuckles]
She's certainly impressive.
And a sizable investment, too, I imagine.
The ship cost 20,000.
But the slaves should make
ten times that amount at auctions.
A tidy profit.
Of course, you'll only make that profit
if Captain Prince here
comes back with your ship.
On my honor, sir.
This is just the latest report
sent back from Jamaica.
The pirates are getting bolder,
and it appears they are favoring
slaving vessels as prize targets.
The Whydah was one of
the most advanced and dangerous,
you know, weapon systems out there,
and exactly the sort of vessel
that a pirate might want to capture.
There is no way that a bunch
of pirates is going to take the Whydah.
[foreboding music]
[narrator] Back in the Caribbean,
Bellamy and Williams
have seized their biggest prize yet,
a ship called the Sultana,
whose captain is deathly ill.
Oh, you're not looking too good, are you?
We'll get you out of here,
and no harm will come to your crew.
Get off my ship, you guttersnipes.
[laughs]
[laughing] Where's your gratitude?
You'll be laughing
on the other side of your face.
The Royal Navy is onto you.
[Bellamy] It was only a matter of time.
Then perhaps
we should lie low for a while.
Or maybe, with this monster,
nobody is gonna wanna fuck with us, hmm?
Bellamy's capture of the Sultana allows
him to step up to yet another level.
It really increased
his capabilities for piracy.
It increased his armament enormously.
And it increased his prestige.
[narrator] But the British Navy are
on the hunt for Bellamy near St. Croix.
HMS Scarborough had received intelligence
that Sam Bellamy might be in the area,
and so it was dispatched and patrolling
and on the prowl to try to find Bellamy.
[narrator] Confident they had pirates
in their sights, the Navy lets loose.
- [cannon fire echoing]
- [sailors yelling]
[narrator] The British sail away,
convinced they've done lasting damage,
and force the pirates to shore.
[narrator] But, later that evening,
Bellamy does arrive at St. Croix
and its bloody aftermath.
[dramatic music]
- [man groaning]
- Is that you Martel?
What the fuck happened?
[in French]
The English whores sunk our fleet.
[somber music]
[in English] Navy boys did
a proper job on Martel's mob.
They are not messing around anymore.
- Do you think they were looking for us?
- That's what I was wondering.
[narrator] Before they were attacked,
Martel's gang had
captured a ship full of slaves.
There's 40 of 'em now, but Martel says
they had another 60 chained in the hold
before Scarborough sunk his ship.
[somber music]
So, what are we gonna do with them?
We can use 'em.
[Walker] For some African slaves,
it opened up a world of possibility
and the potential
for freedom and mobility,
and even adventure,
in the world of piracy.
Joining the pirate crew
wasn't necessarily great,
but it was still an awful lot
better than being a slave,
and that would have been
a very encouraging step up for them.
The idea that you could
have free African men
actually being capable
of not only sailing a ship,
but dominating British merchant vessels,
it was terrifying.
It would have destroyed
the entire economy.
[waves splashing]
[narrator] Black Sam Bellamy continues
to be the scourge of the British Empire.
Back in Cape Cod,
his lover, Mary Hallett, is struggling
to bring up their baby alone.
[somber piano music]
[softly] My love.
My love.
All right, my darling.
[gasps]
My love?
The baby didn't make it,
and, at the time, the only thing worse
than having a baby outside of wedlock
was losing one.
[sobs]
[sobbing] No. No.
[crying] No!
She was suspected
of having killed the child herself.
[whispering] I didn't kill her.
[echoing] Didn't kill her.
Didn't kill her. I didn't kill her.
[policeman]
Mary Hallett, you're under arrest.
- I didn't kill her.
- Come with me.
I didn't. Didn't kill her.
[narrator] Black Sam
is unaware of Mary's predicament.
But opportunity beckons in the Caribbean
in the form
of a colossal slave trading ship.
[dramatic music]
[Woodward]
The Whydah arrived in Port Royal
and then succeeded
in selling a human cargo of slaves.
[indistinct clamor]
When they left Port Royal
and began their final leg back to London,
their ship now loaded
with valuable treasure.
[narrator] Between Hispaniola and Cuba,
the Whydah's lookout
spots ships on the horizon.
[dramatic music]
[Woodward]
Captain Lawrence Prince at first thinks
that they must be a Royal Navy detachment.
Shit.
But, pretty soon, he realizes that,
no, he's being chased by pirates.
The black flag at the masthead
told them what they had in store.
[narrator] As Bellamy and Williams
close in on the Whydah,
they know
they have a fight on their hands.
That is a beast with teeth.
Twenty or more cannon.
The things we could do
with a ship like that.
[narrator]
The Whydah speeds towards the open ocean,
but Bellamy refuses to give up.
The chase lasts for three days
and over 300 miles
before finally Bellamy and his crew
get into cannon fire range.
There's three ships against one.
But that big bastard
could sink one of us before we take her.
Maybe.
But we have a weapon
that'll make 'em shit their pants.
[Bellamy] Sorted.
[waves splashing]
[narrator] As Bellamy's ship
pulls alongside the Whydah,
the slave ship's crew
face their worst nightmare.
Fuck me!
[men yelling]
Bellamy goes with
the psychological terror gambit,
maybe 20 or so are Africans,
unshackled and armed.
So, for a man who had just
carried slaves across the Atlantic,
this would be a terrifying prospect.
Imagine the revenge
that these men would want to wreak
on the captain of a slave ship.
[narrator] Slaves in shackles
mean nothing to Captain Prince,
but slaves with cutlasses
Drop your weapons and lower the sails.
[narrator] It is a master class
in psychological warfare.
[coins and jewelry clinking]
When pirates captured merchant ships,
often they found sugar, tobacco,
things that had some value,
but are not really exciting,
and not really valuable
unless you can trade them.
When they captured the Whydah,
they found the holds
were filled with gold.
This was the mother lode,
it was the thing
that all pirates dreamed of capturing.
Fuck me.
[laughing] Fuck!
This is enough to retire on.
[Bellamy] Almost enough.
With this much firepower,
we could take down anything.
The capture of the Whydah
made Bellamy's name.
He's got an enormous flagship.
This was the moment that not only Bellamy,
but any pirate would be building towards.
[gulls crying]
[narrator] When news gets back
to London, all hell breaks loose.
Bloody pirates! Pirates
[narrator] The soon-to-be Governor
of the Bank of England, Humphry Morice
Gentlemen.
has had enough.
[Morice] Gentlemen,
we have all suffered.
We have all lost to these heathen pirates,
these traitors
who dare to rob our ships,
take our goods
and kidnap good Christian men.
My ship, the Whydah, was taken,
and now the insurers are saying
the premium for my next
slaving expedition will be increased.
Even the people
who weren't losing ships to the pirates
were still feeling
the effects of the pirates.
[somber music]
The pirate menace was becoming such
that merchants were afraid to sail,
and that meant that
commerce wasn't just being harassed,
it was being cut off.
The pirates are becoming
an existential threat to the empires,
not merely a nuisance.
There is a very real danger
that the business of slaving
could become unprofitable,
and indeed
end.
Unless something is done.
[sinister music]
That's why I have invited
here tonight a man you all know.
A privateer.
A man who has made it his business
to hunt down pirates.
A patriot.
[narrator] And so,
the pirates' nemesis enters the tale.
Gentlemen, Captain Woodes Rogers.
[narrator] A man who seeks
one thing against the pirates.
Revenge.
[dramatic swashbuckling music]
- [shouting]
- [cannon fire]
[narrator] When the Spanish
treasure fleet spills its fortune
off the coast of Florida,
the pirates of the Caribbean clean up.
We're gonna get so rich,
we'll be shittin' gold.
[pirates laugh and cheer]
[narrator] Their humble base in Nassau
turns into a boomtown
[laughter and men cheering]
run by Benjamin Hornigold's Flying Gang,
Black Sam Bellamy, Paulsgrave Williams,
and his latest recruit, Edward Thatch,
soon to be known as Blackbeard.
- [blows landing]
- [man grunting]
But in this brutal world,
loyalty comes cheap.
It's a funny thing, loyalty.
Can flip on a coin.
[narrator] Captain Henry Jennings,
a posh pirate,
is Hornigold's archrival.
And it isn't just loyalty
to each other that's tested.
[clamor of battle]
They've got rich attacking Spanish ships.
But, when the war with Spain ends in 1714,
these British pirates
turn on their own crown.
Fuck that sausage-eating
ass-wipe, King George. [spits]
[pirates laugh]
[narrator] England's merchant ships
trade in a commodity so precious
they call it "black gold."
It's the slave trade.
You're no longer slaves!
You are now subject to the laws of piracy.
[narrator]
For many slaves, this means liberty.
But mess with the powerful slave traders
[indistinct clamor, men shouting]
at your peril.
I want them dead!
[narrator] The Empire strikes back.
[dramatic swashbuckling music]
[indistinct tavern chatter]
[narrator] Captain Henry Jennings
is on the run from the English Crown.
He's threatened the peace
with Spain by robbing their ships.
And we were having such a nice time.
[narrator] He's forced to take
refuge in Hornigold's pirate lair.
Now, now, Edward, we must be charitable.
Hello, Henry. Welcome to Nassau.
- I see you brought your lapdog with you.
- [both snicker]
[scoffs] Don't expect me
to lick my own balls, surely?
[Fox] Jennings and Hornigold
had been privateers during the war,
they'd both been employed
by Archibald Hamilton
to defend Jamaica,
um, but they had
quite different social backgrounds.
[narrator] Henry Jennings is
a plantation owner based out of Jamaica
and looks down
on Hornigold, the uncouth sailor.
It would have had to have been awkward
once Jennings was
resident full-time in Nassau,
in that Hornigold was
the founder of the pirate nest.
They represented two sort of
competing power bases and factions.
Keep him on a leash though, will you?
This is a nice establishment.
Don't want him
shitting all over the floor.
So, I hear you're a wanted man, Captain.
[Williams] Ooh, that must be frustrating,
forced to hide out here
with the likes of us. [snarls]
[narrator] Paulsgrave Williams
and Black Sam Bellamy
were once part of Jennings' crew.
[sinister music]
No, no, please. No. Please, no.
[narrator] But Bellamy can't stomach
Jennings' brutal brand of piracy
[prisoner] No. Oh.
What are you doing? Stop!
[narrator]and jumped ship
to Hornigold's Flying Gang.
Give you more time to walk your dog.
Feed him a bone.
I'll give you a fucking bone!
[dramatic music]
You will do nothing.
Thatch, you'd better
make your friend stand down.
Caesar's a free man to do as he pleases.
And if he pleases to slit your throat,
I'll be there
to mop up the floor afterwards.
[Hornigold chuckles]
[Woodward]
Jennings and Hornigold both realize that
each of them and their faction
needed the Pirate Republic to succeed,
and that meant at least tacit cooperation.
[narrator]
It makes for a volatile alliance.
Loyalty is hard won.
It's also easily lost.
Hornigold's loyalty to the English Crown
is not shared by all his men.
It's a funny thing, loyalty.
Can flip on a coin.
I mean, I've heard
your men aren't too happy
about passing up all that English loot,
and that some might be looking
to join up with young Bellamy there,
who apparently has no such qualms.
[dramatic music]
For more than a hundred years,
English pirates had attacked what
were traditionally enemies of England,
either Spanish or Portuguese ships.
But the 17-teens,
for really the first time,
uh, English pirates
actively engaged English shipping.
[female historian] Hornigold, because he's
been in a dominant leadership position
in this community,
is actually quite typical
of piracy culture at the time.
He has tried very hard
to not target British shipping,
given his history as a privateer.
I'm not attacking British ships.
I'm English.
Whatever the fuck that means out here.
[Lunsford] Bellamy doesn't
have the same prohibitions.
They want to consider any merchant ship
fair game, if the opportunity allows.
[narrator] The new British King
is a German, George I.
He doesn't even speak English.
Fuck England!
And fuck that sausage-eating
ball-bag they've stuck on the throne.
Well, they don't care about us out here.
Never have.
They just want to keep
the money rolling in.
What my good friend Paulsgrave
is trying to say is, with respect,
we're going after anything we can.
And if it's flying a Union Jack, so be it.
[indistinct tavern chatter]
We need to be careful with that one.
The most deadliest of the species.
But the most fun.
[narrator] Anne Bonny,
who will become
the most famous woman pirate,
has her own ax
to grind against the English.
As an Irish Catholic, she owes no loyalty
to the Protestant oppressors
of her homeland.
Men take what they want
when they want.
They steal, they lie,
they murder and they cheat one another.
And if you're weak,
someone steals up in the night,
fucks you, and slits your throat.
[soft music]
[chuckles softly]
What do you want?
[chuckles]
I just want to make my fortune
and go home to England a rich man.
England?
You want to go back
to the cold and the rain?
To the kings and the laws and the taxes?
Nobody in that godforsaken hole
gives one shit for you.
Hmm.
If it were me,
I'd pirate for the rest my days
and murder anyone that tried to stop me.
[sighs] You know, I love Nassau,
but one day,
they're coming for us.
[somber music]
[narrator] It's not long
before Hornigold's loyalty to England
is put to the test.
It's a merchant ship.
When faced with the actual
opportunity to take an English ship,
Hornigold demurs,
doesn't want to actually do this.
[Bellamy] To hell with him.
Bellamy, no problem at all.
Hoist the black flag!
Because this offers
a possibility for greater enrichment,
and that Hornigold is too restrictive.
[cannon fire echoing]
[clamor of battle]
[narrator] Bellamy's success
undermines Hornigold
in the eyes of his crew.
[clinking]
[clamor of battle]
It might look like a mutiny
under conventional terms,
if you saw this in
the merchant service or the naval service.
Really isn't, among pirates.
It's relatively well known
that there's this kind of idea of
democracy on board a pirate ship,
but I think it's misunderstood,
how profound it was.
Every single individual
has a vote, no matter who.
And if the organization decides that
the captain's not operating
with enough bravery or strategy,
they can depose him
and elect a new captain in.
[narrator] Hornigold's
trusted lieutenant, Edward Thatch,
organizes a democratic vote.
So, we're all agreed?
You're happy with your decision?
So it is.
The fact that Bellamy is inspiring them
and saying that he will
pursue all sorts of quarry
would be appealing
to a number of these pirates.
Yeah, you should go, Henry.
Join up with Bellamy, he's a good man.
He'll see you right.
[somber music]
The men have voted.
[clears throat]
And what's their decision?
They want Bellamy as their captain.
And Williams will be his quartermaster.
Loved and respected as he is,
Hornigold loses the vote
by approximately two thirds to one,
and, with respect, is asked to stand down,
and is no longer commodore of the fleet.
And what about you?
We're sticking with you, my friend.
Our image of pirates tends to be
of lawless men who obey no rules
and are loyal only to themselves,
and so it's surprising when
we encounter these moments of loyalty,
like that showed to Hornigold.
I won't forget this.
I'm gonna get a ship and make you captain.
And we're gonna be a force,
make no fucking mistake.
[waves splashing]
[gulls crying]
[woman moaning]
[man grunting]
[sighs, laughs]
[narrator]
Hornigold finds comfort with Anne Bonny.
She's become a pirate to escape her past.
[Hornigold]
Your husband, James, does he mind you?
[Anne] James is a spineless child.
I should have never married him.
You don't much care for men, do you, Anne?
They have their uses,
but mostly, they're weak.
My father was weak.
He had me out of wedlock
with a servant girl.
He didn't cast us out.
No,
he raised me as a little boy,
right under his wife's nose.
Brought me into the household
and introduced me
as one of his junior clerks.
Of course, it wasn't long before
his wife discovered the truth of it.
And he left her,
took me and my ma
to America to start a new life.
He goes into business and makes
more money than he ever did as a lawyer.
So, he is the head
of this prosperous estate
and Anne is, from the age of 12,
mistress of that estate.
Her mother passed away
not long after they moved
to the American colonies.
And I came into my womanhood.
And his conscience
didn't stop him
from finding his way to my bed.
Then I met James,
and he seemed like a way to escape.
But he was just a trap.
Just like all men.
- [action music]
- [clamor of battle]
[narrator]
The legend of Sam Bellamy is growing.
He's now known as Black Sam,
because of his raven-colored hair.
[Woodward] He was
a very good marine tactician,
daring and innovative,
and seems rather fearless.
Your manifest, and quick about it!
[Woodward] You get a sense,
following his career and the pace
of the vessels he attacks,
that this is somebody who's in a hurry
to get to somewhere or something.
[narrator] And that somebody
is the love of his life,
Mary Hallett,
the woman he's promised to marry,
and now the mother of his child.
[baby cooing]
At this point,
her parents abandoned her completely,
because, the shame of it.
You know, a child born out of wedlock?
Disgusting. So, she hides the baby.
[narrator]
But where there's life, there's hope.
And Black Sam is making good
on his promise to return a rich man.
"The notorious pirate, Samuel Bellamy,
did capture and rob
the vessel Morning Star off Cape Cod."
[clamor of battle]
"Much gold was taken,
along with valuable items
from passengers aboard."
His name has spread like wildfire.
He is one of the world's
most notorious pirates already,
just a few months after leaving her.
"But no man was hurt, and the vessel
was allowed to continue its journey."
They'll hang you for this.
I'll be back.
He's going to come for us.
Then we'll be together, wealthy.
- [baby coos]
- You see?
Shh, shh, shh, shh.
[narrator] But, for Bellamy,
piracy is about more than gold.
[Woodward] He was clearly driven by
the social rebellion aspect of piracy.
Think of me as a, uh, a Robin Hood.
Bellamy is renowned
for being very fair and just
when he deals with ships
that he's acquired.
Right, I need men with skills.
He really takes pride
in giving the crews that he captures
the opportunity to join him,
the opportunity to throw off
the shackles of oppression.
Unlike the merchant navy
and those scumbag businessmen
who work you to death
and flog you to ribbons
when the mood catches them, we
we will pay you like kings.
And if you don't like my decisions,
you can vote for a new captain.
That's right, every man has a vote,
and an equal share
of any treasure we take.
So, why work like a dog,
and get whipped like one, too,
just to put money
in the pockets of some rich tosser
who gives you
a handful of copper as payment?
So, any of you looking for a better life
this is your chance.
[narrator] While Bellamy is sharing out
the booty taken from British traders,
recruits flock to join him.
And they start young.
[Fox] One of the passengers
was a boy called John King.
His family were relatively wealthy,
and he was traveling with his mother.
You're Black Sam Bellamy,
the Robin Hood of the seas.
You steal from the rich
and give to the poor.
He thought that
the pirates were so exciting
and enticing and romantic
that he begged his mother
to allow him
to go and join the pirate crew.
Don't believe everything you read, boy.
Maybe we rob.
Maybe we murder.
Maybe we string up little boys
and throw 'em to the sharks.
I don't care, I want to be a pirate.
[gasps]
Then welcome aboard, John King.
John King would probably have found
that his dreams were met
with disappointment.
The majority of the time,
pirate life wasn't as exciting as
he had seen it when they'd captured him.
[narrator]
Bellamy is fast becoming a rich man
[cannon fire echoing]
and he's doing it
at the expense of England's trade
with her American colonies.
[Woodward] The Governor
of Virginia, Alexander Spotswood,
receives reports,
how the pirate nest is growing
and hatching more and more pirates,
and that the pirates are
becoming a destabilizing danger
to trade and commerce.
Spotswood is the governor
of a royal colony that's producing
an incredibly valuable
commodity in tobacco,
and so he is responsible
for protecting those tobacco fleets.
The entire economy of the Chesapeake Bay
depended on production of tobacco
and its eventual sale back in England.
[narrator] But worse is to come.
The pirates will soon target the trade
which makes the British Empire tick.
Slavery.
[men coughing]
The danger is very clear.
I mean, Spotswood
and other governors are all forwarding
increasingly urgent dispatches
back to their masters in London.
Starting to clamor
with more and more insistence
that something
is going to need to be done.
[dramatic music]
[waves splashing]
[narrator] Bellamy isn't the only member
of the Flying Gang making waves.
[breathes heavily]
They say that
if Anne Bonny takes a shine to you,
you're on the up.
Anne was always
looking to build her fortune.
She was always looking for that adventure.
Looking for that next best opportunity.
[breathes heavily]
[narrator] And the man
making quite a stir is Edward Thatch,
the Latin-speaking pirate scholar.
[romantic music]
[speaking Latin]
At a time when literacy
was the exception, not the rule,
Edward Thatch knew how to read and write.
[Anne] Where'd you learn that?
A book.
You read?
It's amazing what you can find
through some pages of Latin poetry.
He kept a journal,
which is unlike many of the pirates,
so he's educated
and literate and thoughtful,
and understands the need
to keep his thoughts.
[both breathing heavily]
Who are you?
A frustrated pirate.
A dangerous pirate.
[scoffs]
An orphaned son of plantation owners.
I'm nothin'.
I'm nobody.
[Conniff] Thatcher's career has
been relatively quiet up to this point.
He's been overlooked
for promotion once or twice.
In fact, Bellamy's been given a promotion.
Bellamy's a much younger man than he is.
Thatch has played his hand
very, very carefully,
always loyal to his mentor, Hornigold.
[narrator] He is now helping rebuild
the deposed Hornigold's pirate fleet.
Come on, Benjamin.
Bring 'em to me, Benjamin.
[cannon fire echoing]
He is thoughtful,
observant, and quite the strategist.
He knew how to manage a ship.
He knew how to manage men.
He really was a man
who knew what he was doing.
Faster! Come on!
He makes himself indispensable
to Hornigold in a short period of time.
- Load your cannons!
- [pirate] Cannons full.
[Blackbeard] Prime your weapons!
- [cannon fire echoing]
- [clamor of battle]
[narrator]
And while not every chase ends in success,
it isn't long before Hornigold
makes good on his promise to Thatch.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
It's time to introduce you
to your new captain.
[Thatch laughs]
They're all yours.
It's speech time.
Gentlemen!
[chuckles softly]
- Pirate scum!
- [pirates] Yay!
- Whore's sons!
- [pirates] Yay!
Out there is an ocean full of big,
fat fish waiting to be swallowed.
[laughs]
And we're gonna get so rich,
we'll be shittin' gold.
[pirates] Yay!
[bottle shattering]
For Thatch,
it means his first personal command.
[pirates cheering]
[narrator]
It's the beginning of a new pirate legend,
and bad news
for the English slave traders.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
So, what's the plan?
Take what we can.
No bloodshed, no deaths.
And we need
to find ourselves a bigger boat.
He's a well-respected leader and captain,
absolutely fearless as a pirate,
yet, like Bellamy,
there's no record
of him ever killing anyone.
There's some brutal violence
along the way, undoubtedly,
but there's some other acts of humanity
that speak quite outside
of the typical pirate archetype.
Which is interesting.
[jaunty hornpipe music]
I never knew you were musical, Caesar.
What you don't know
about me could fill a book.
[laughing]
[jaunty hornpipe music continues]
[Fox]
Black Caesar is one of those characters
who has all these wonderful,
wonderful stories around him.
Um, one of the best ones is,
perhaps, that he was an African prince
before he was captured
and sold into slavery.
The trouble is that, in reality,
we actually know almost nothing about him,
until he appears on Thatcher's ship.
[thunder rumbling]
[narrator] Slavery is the
dirty business that drives British trade.
The slave trade involved
taking slaves from Africa
and carrying them across to the Caribbean
and to the American colonies
and stocking up there
on goods from those regions
and bringing them back to England
in a sort of triangular trade.
[narrator] Imagine, human beings
torn from their families and home,
brutally dragged halfway across the world,
used as human currency,
the price of the West's growing addiction.
There's one word that can explain
why slaves were so necessary
to the colonies in the 18th century,
and that word is sugar,
which goes from being
a luxury to a perceived necessity
to European diets and palates.
Every European nation has
an overseas colony producing sugar.
It's being produced in Brazil,
it's being produced in Jamaica,
it's being produced in St. Domingue,
which would become Haiti.
[narrator] But slaves
are more than currency.
Once exchanged for sugar,
they are put to work growing more.
[Walker] It's really backbreaking work.
And it's work that led
to a tremendous loss of life,
and did not allow for people,
enslaved people,
to do much other than work
from sunup to sundown.
[door creaking]
[Walker] From the perspective
of the pirates, they're encountering
something they had
likely never seen before:
people in inhumanely crowded conditions
[people moaning]
who have been at sea for months.
[flies buzzing]
[moaning]
[crying, shuddering]
They were all chained together below deck,
hundreds and hundreds of them,
well beyond capacity.
They couldn't even sit upright.
They were covered in feces, urine, vomit.
This led to rampant disease going through,
particularly dysentery,
because of contaminated water.
One in five enslaved people generally died
on the travel through the middle passage.
[people sobbing, coughing]
[narrator] The slave trade
is worth billions of pounds every year
to the money men in London.
Unfortunately for them,
their ships are forced to pass through
the pirate waters of the Caribbean.
[Fox] There was no alternative route.
You couldn't just go round the pirates.
So, every ship that sailed
would be at risk from pirate attack.
And, suddenly,
the circulation flow was being cut off,
it was too dangerous for a lot of vessels
to venture along major trade routes,
especially the ones
that were immediately adjacent
to the Bahamas and their pirate lair.
[narrator] When the pirates
start targeting the slave ships,
the merchants' profits take a big hit.
And the bolder the pirates get,
the bigger the armed ships
the English merchants need
to protect their lucrative slave trade.
Slave ships required certain
characteristics. They needed to be big
so that they could hold
the largest number of slaves possible.
They needed to be fast.
Because, the longer they spent
at sea crossing the Atlantic,
the more slaves were
likely to die on the voyage.
[thunder rumbling]
But, above all, they needed
to be reasonably well armed,
so that they could defend themselves
from pirates and other attacks.
[gulls crying]
[narrator] Back at the heart
of the British Empire,
leading slave trader Humphry Morice
is admiring his latest weapon.
[Morice] Beautiful, isn't she?
The Whydah will be
one of the fastest ships on the sea.
Humphry Morice was a Member of Parliament.
He was also one of the early
governors of the Bank of England.
So, he was a very prominent
person in British society.
He was also a merchant,
and he commissioned
the building of the Whydah,
the slave ship.
The Whydah was a purpose-built slave ship.
It was swift
and could carry up to 28 guns.
Eight knots with the wind in her sails.
And she will carry
up to 500 slaves across three decks.
[Morice chuckles]
She's certainly impressive.
And a sizable investment, too, I imagine.
The ship cost 20,000.
But the slaves should make
ten times that amount at auctions.
A tidy profit.
Of course, you'll only make that profit
if Captain Prince here
comes back with your ship.
On my honor, sir.
This is just the latest report
sent back from Jamaica.
The pirates are getting bolder,
and it appears they are favoring
slaving vessels as prize targets.
The Whydah was one of
the most advanced and dangerous,
you know, weapon systems out there,
and exactly the sort of vessel
that a pirate might want to capture.
There is no way that a bunch
of pirates is going to take the Whydah.
[foreboding music]
[narrator] Back in the Caribbean,
Bellamy and Williams
have seized their biggest prize yet,
a ship called the Sultana,
whose captain is deathly ill.
Oh, you're not looking too good, are you?
We'll get you out of here,
and no harm will come to your crew.
Get off my ship, you guttersnipes.
[laughs]
[laughing] Where's your gratitude?
You'll be laughing
on the other side of your face.
The Royal Navy is onto you.
[Bellamy] It was only a matter of time.
Then perhaps
we should lie low for a while.
Or maybe, with this monster,
nobody is gonna wanna fuck with us, hmm?
Bellamy's capture of the Sultana allows
him to step up to yet another level.
It really increased
his capabilities for piracy.
It increased his armament enormously.
And it increased his prestige.
[narrator] But the British Navy are
on the hunt for Bellamy near St. Croix.
HMS Scarborough had received intelligence
that Sam Bellamy might be in the area,
and so it was dispatched and patrolling
and on the prowl to try to find Bellamy.
[narrator] Confident they had pirates
in their sights, the Navy lets loose.
- [cannon fire echoing]
- [sailors yelling]
[narrator] The British sail away,
convinced they've done lasting damage,
and force the pirates to shore.
[narrator] But, later that evening,
Bellamy does arrive at St. Croix
and its bloody aftermath.
[dramatic music]
- [man groaning]
- Is that you Martel?
What the fuck happened?
[in French]
The English whores sunk our fleet.
[somber music]
[in English] Navy boys did
a proper job on Martel's mob.
They are not messing around anymore.
- Do you think they were looking for us?
- That's what I was wondering.
[narrator] Before they were attacked,
Martel's gang had
captured a ship full of slaves.
There's 40 of 'em now, but Martel says
they had another 60 chained in the hold
before Scarborough sunk his ship.
[somber music]
So, what are we gonna do with them?
We can use 'em.
[Walker] For some African slaves,
it opened up a world of possibility
and the potential
for freedom and mobility,
and even adventure,
in the world of piracy.
Joining the pirate crew
wasn't necessarily great,
but it was still an awful lot
better than being a slave,
and that would have been
a very encouraging step up for them.
The idea that you could
have free African men
actually being capable
of not only sailing a ship,
but dominating British merchant vessels,
it was terrifying.
It would have destroyed
the entire economy.
[waves splashing]
[narrator] Black Sam Bellamy continues
to be the scourge of the British Empire.
Back in Cape Cod,
his lover, Mary Hallett, is struggling
to bring up their baby alone.
[somber piano music]
[softly] My love.
My love.
All right, my darling.
[gasps]
My love?
The baby didn't make it,
and, at the time, the only thing worse
than having a baby outside of wedlock
was losing one.
[sobs]
[sobbing] No. No.
[crying] No!
She was suspected
of having killed the child herself.
[whispering] I didn't kill her.
[echoing] Didn't kill her.
Didn't kill her. I didn't kill her.
[policeman]
Mary Hallett, you're under arrest.
- I didn't kill her.
- Come with me.
I didn't. Didn't kill her.
[narrator] Black Sam
is unaware of Mary's predicament.
But opportunity beckons in the Caribbean
in the form
of a colossal slave trading ship.
[dramatic music]
[Woodward]
The Whydah arrived in Port Royal
and then succeeded
in selling a human cargo of slaves.
[indistinct clamor]
When they left Port Royal
and began their final leg back to London,
their ship now loaded
with valuable treasure.
[narrator] Between Hispaniola and Cuba,
the Whydah's lookout
spots ships on the horizon.
[dramatic music]
[Woodward]
Captain Lawrence Prince at first thinks
that they must be a Royal Navy detachment.
Shit.
But, pretty soon, he realizes that,
no, he's being chased by pirates.
The black flag at the masthead
told them what they had in store.
[narrator] As Bellamy and Williams
close in on the Whydah,
they know
they have a fight on their hands.
That is a beast with teeth.
Twenty or more cannon.
The things we could do
with a ship like that.
[narrator]
The Whydah speeds towards the open ocean,
but Bellamy refuses to give up.
The chase lasts for three days
and over 300 miles
before finally Bellamy and his crew
get into cannon fire range.
There's three ships against one.
But that big bastard
could sink one of us before we take her.
Maybe.
But we have a weapon
that'll make 'em shit their pants.
[Bellamy] Sorted.
[waves splashing]
[narrator] As Bellamy's ship
pulls alongside the Whydah,
the slave ship's crew
face their worst nightmare.
Fuck me!
[men yelling]
Bellamy goes with
the psychological terror gambit,
maybe 20 or so are Africans,
unshackled and armed.
So, for a man who had just
carried slaves across the Atlantic,
this would be a terrifying prospect.
Imagine the revenge
that these men would want to wreak
on the captain of a slave ship.
[narrator] Slaves in shackles
mean nothing to Captain Prince,
but slaves with cutlasses
Drop your weapons and lower the sails.
[narrator] It is a master class
in psychological warfare.
[coins and jewelry clinking]
When pirates captured merchant ships,
often they found sugar, tobacco,
things that had some value,
but are not really exciting,
and not really valuable
unless you can trade them.
When they captured the Whydah,
they found the holds
were filled with gold.
This was the mother lode,
it was the thing
that all pirates dreamed of capturing.
Fuck me.
[laughing] Fuck!
This is enough to retire on.
[Bellamy] Almost enough.
With this much firepower,
we could take down anything.
The capture of the Whydah
made Bellamy's name.
He's got an enormous flagship.
This was the moment that not only Bellamy,
but any pirate would be building towards.
[gulls crying]
[narrator] When news gets back
to London, all hell breaks loose.
Bloody pirates! Pirates
[narrator] The soon-to-be Governor
of the Bank of England, Humphry Morice
Gentlemen.
has had enough.
[Morice] Gentlemen,
we have all suffered.
We have all lost to these heathen pirates,
these traitors
who dare to rob our ships,
take our goods
and kidnap good Christian men.
My ship, the Whydah, was taken,
and now the insurers are saying
the premium for my next
slaving expedition will be increased.
Even the people
who weren't losing ships to the pirates
were still feeling
the effects of the pirates.
[somber music]
The pirate menace was becoming such
that merchants were afraid to sail,
and that meant that
commerce wasn't just being harassed,
it was being cut off.
The pirates are becoming
an existential threat to the empires,
not merely a nuisance.
There is a very real danger
that the business of slaving
could become unprofitable,
and indeed
end.
Unless something is done.
[sinister music]
That's why I have invited
here tonight a man you all know.
A privateer.
A man who has made it his business
to hunt down pirates.
A patriot.
[narrator] And so,
the pirates' nemesis enters the tale.
Gentlemen, Captain Woodes Rogers.
[narrator] A man who seeks
one thing against the pirates.
Revenge.
[dramatic swashbuckling music]