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Pirates! Fact- Well Known Pirates: Stede Bonnet
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This alliance however, soon proved a big mistake on the part of Bonnet. Teach became aware of his inexperience, and invited Bonnet aboard the Queen Anne�s Revenge, where Bonnet became pretty much a prisoner. Teach tried to convince him that a man of his education and mannerisms, should not be forced to the rigors of commanding a ship like the Revenge, and to transfer himself to the more comfortable and spacious quarters of the Queen Anne�s Revenge. There was little Bonnet could do or say, and soon one of Blackbeard�s lieutenants, by the name of Richards, took over command of the Revenge, and quickly stifled the threat of mutiny by imposing stern discipline, and gaining the crew�s confidence. Eventually Bonnet convinced Blackbeard to allow him to command the Revenge again. Soon after, the two parted, and Bonnet left his ship for the town of Bath and surrendered himself as a reformed pirate to the Governor of North Carolina, Charles Eden. This act however did not subside Bonnet�s desire for Piracy, and he continued to scour the sea for vessels until his capture by Colonel William Rhett, from whom he escaped only to be recaptured, and brought to trial under a Court of Vice-Admiralty in Charles Town (Charleston), South Carolina. Sir Nicholas Trott Esq., who at that time was the judge of the Vice-Admiralty Court, sentenced Bonnet to death on the gallows. Stede Bonnet was hung for piracy on December 10, 1718.� Please help the Pirates! web site grow and contribute your pirate content for inclusion on one of our sections. Credit is always given to the author of the submitted content. Want more information on Sir Francis "The Gentleman Pirate" Drake? Visit the Pirates! discussion board to discuss pirate related matters and ask pirate related questions. Visit the rest of our site by following this link to the Pirates! Main Page. |
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