Wednesday, 19 August 2015

Woodes Rogers

Woodes Rogers (ca. 1679 – 15th July 1732) was an English sea captain and privateer, best remembered for leading the royal naval campaign to stamp out piracy in the Caribbean. 




Rogers was probably born in Poole, Dorset, and came from an affluent seafaring family. His father owned shares in many ships, and died in the first years of the 18th century, leaving Rogers control of the family shipping business. During the War of the Spanish Succession, Rogers was approached by Captain William Dampier, who sought backing for a privateering voyage. Rogers led the expedition, which consisted of two well-armed ships, the Duke and the Duchess, and captained the Duke himself. Rogers spent three years travelling the world, raiding Spanish towns and capturing vessels in the Pacific. On the 1st of February, 1709, the Duke rescued the marooned Alexander Selkirk from Juan Fernandez Island, who became the inspiration for Robinson Crusoe.  When the expedition returned to England in October 1711, Rogers had circumnavigated the globe, while retaining his original ships and most of his men, and the investors in the expedition doubled their money.

Rogers was wounded and his brother killed in combat in the Pacific, and on his return was sued by his crew, who protested that they had not received a fair share of the profits, bankrupting him and his business. In 1713, Rogers attempted to rebuild his finances by leading an expedition against pirates. He sailed to Madagascar, ostensibly to buy slaves to sell in the Dutch East Indies, but used the voyage to gather intelligence about pirates in the area. Finding many of the pirates had gone native, Rogers persuaded many of them to sign a petition asking Queen Anne for clemency. On his profitable return to London in 1715, the British East India Company vetoed Rogers' appeal to lead a colonial expedition to Madagascar, believing a colony there would pose a greater threat to its monopoly than the pirates and tribes that currently inhabited the island.
Therefore, Rogers turned his attention to the West Indies, and negotiated an agreement for a company to manage the Bahamas, which was famous for being "without face or form of government" as well as being a pirate haven. In 1718, Rogers was officially appointed governor of the Bahamas, and the King's Pardon was announced, promising clemency for all pirates who surrendered within eight months. Rogers spent several months preparing the expedition, amassing a force of seven ships, 100 soldiers, 130 colonists, and a vast range of supplies including religious pamphlets to give to the pirates, whom Rogers believed would respond to spiritual teachings. On the 22nd of April 1718, the expedition, accompanied by three Royal Navy vessels, sailed out of the Thames.

The expedition arrived exactly three months later in Nassau, surprising the town's de facto ruler, Charles Vane as he was returning from sea. When negotiations failed, Vane launched a fireship at the British vessels, forcing them out of the harbour. This gave Vane time to land and gather supplies and organise their escape. Vane and his men slipped out of the harbour on a small sloop, evading Rogers' trap but surrendering the island to his control. At the time, the island's population consisted of about two hundred former pirates and several hundred fugitives who had escaped from nearby Spanish colonies. Rogers organised a local government, granted the King's Pardon to those former pirates on the island who had not yet accepted it, and started to rebuild the island's fortifications, which had fallen into ruin under the pirates.

However, Rogers didn't have time to get comfortable, and suffered a myriad of setbacks. Within a month Vane had written to him, threatening to join forces with Blackbeard to retake the island. To make matters worse, the Spanish were also mounting a force to drive the British from the Bahamas. Disease ravaged his expedition team, an unknown sickness killed almost one hundred of those who had come with him from England, but the long-standing residents of the island appeared to be almost completely immune. The three royal navy vessels, having completed their escort and having no orders to remain, eventually left the island. An envoy ship sent to conciliate with the Spanish governor of Havana failed to arrive, its crew rebelling and turning pirate mid-voyage. Renovation of the islands fortifications proved slow going, as the local residents were disinclined to work for him.

In September, Rogers sent ex-pirate Benjamin Hornigold, who had secretly accepted the King's Pardon to gather intelligence on Vane and if possible bring him to battle. Rogers also declared martial law and set all islanders to work rebuilding the fortifications. Hornigold failed to learn anything about Vane, and in December was sent to recover the ship that had turned pirate en route to Havana, and returned with ten prisoners and three corpses. Eight of the men were hanged, and one of the condemned, Thomas Morris, said as he climbed the gallows, "we have a good governor, but a harsh one." Shortly after Christmas, a conspiracy to overthrow Rogers and restore piracy brewed, but it met with little support. The conspirators were flogged and released.

Rogers ordered many supplies on credit and accrued large debts, hoping the gamble would pay off in the long term for his creditors. He redoubled the efforts to fortify the island which proved invaluable when in February of 1720, the Spanish invaded. Being wary of the fortifications Rogers had built, they landed on nearby Paradise Island, only to be driven off by Rogers' troops. Vane never returned, having been deposed by his crew, he was later recognised and captured aboard another vessel, and was hanged in Jamaica the following year. Troubled by the lack of support and communication from London, Rogers set sail for Britain in March 1721. He arrived three months later to find that a new governor had been appointed, and his company had been liquidated. Personally liable for the obligations he had contracted at Nassau, he was imprisoned for debt. Rogers spent up to two years in prison, but at some point his creditors took pity on him and absolved his debt. Rogers was reappointed governor of the Bahamas in 1728, died in Nassau on the 15th of July, 1732. "Piracy expelled, commerce restored" remained the official motto of the Bahamas until its independence in 1973.

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