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Henry Every – King Of Pirates

HENRY EVERY

King Of Pirates

Overview

Henry Every, (sometimes spelled Avery) born c1653-1659 in Devon was an English pirate who operated in the Atlantic and Indian oceans in the mid 1690s.

He was the most notorious pirate of his time earning him the reputation of ‘King of Pirates’, and the first international man hunt was launched after he carried out what was then the most profitable pirate raid in history.

Henry Every depicted on shore with the Fancy engaging another vessel.

Every’s flag as described in “A Copy of Verses” a ballad allegedly wrote by Henry Every himself.

In 1695 his ship, joining with other infamous pirate crews, attacked the Grand Mughal ship Ganj-i-Sawai, which was making a pilgrimage to Mecca; Every and the other pirates seized loot worth around £600,000 (over £52 million today) and escaped to New Providence, a known pirate safe haven.

While some of his crew were arrested and charged with the crime, Every’s fate is unclear. He vanished without a trace and many uncorroborated stories have been told of what happened to him. It has been suggested that he escaped and retired with his booty.

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The Legend

It is most likely that Henry Every was born 20th August 1659 in the village of Newton Ferrers as part of the Every family of Devon. This seems to be supported by witness testimonies from members of Every’s crew. One of which was William Phillips who stated that in 1696 Every was “aged about 40 years old” and that his mother lived “near Plymouth”.

It is believed that Every then became a sailor with the Royal Navy at a young age. Van Broech claims that while serving for the Royal Navy he served aboard the English fleet attacking Algiers in 1671. After this he went on to the Caribbean sea before captaining in the Bay of Cempeche onboard a log wood freighter.

Henry Every woodcut from Charles Johnson’s A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates (London: Midwinter, 1725)

Battle of Beachy Head (1690) by Theodore Gudin.

By his thirties he was married to Dorothy Arther who served as a Periwig seller in Ratcliffe Highway, London. A family man, Every worked hard aboard the HMS Rupert during the Nine Year War but sent most of his earnings home to his family. He later joined the HMS Albemarle as Master’s Mate before the Battle of Beachy Head against the French in 1690. This battle was a disaster for the English and a short time after in the same year, Every was discharged from the Royal Navy.

After his discharge from the Royal Navy in 1690 not much is known about Every until 1693. The first mention of since 1690 is in the journal of a Royal African Company agent named Thomas Phillips of the ship Hannibal. Phillips was on a mission on the Guinea Coast when he claimed “I have no where upon the coast met negroes so shy as here, which makes me fancy they have had tricks play’d them by such blades as Long Ben, alias Avery, who have seiz’d them and carry them away.” It’s possible to conclude from Phillip’s writings that he may have come across Avery on a number of occasions and may have known him on a more personal level.

In this same year Every had joined the Spanish Expedition consisting of four warships: Seventh Son, Dove, James, and Charles II. The Spanish Expedition’s intentions were to travel to the Spanish West Indies to trade goods, supply the Spanish with arms, and recover treasure from wrecked galleons while plundering the areas French possessions.

It’s unclear why but the ships took five months to arrive in Corunna from the River Thames, a journey that should have only taken two weeks. Malnourished and with provisions running low they lacked the official paperwork to go ashore at Corunna they were in a serious situation. For several more months they waited patiently for their monies and the paperwork which was constantly denied along with any support from their financiers. Tensions growing the crew began to buckle to the plans to mutiny to which Every was a prime catalyst for. William Phillips, a mariner on Dove claimed that Every went “up & down from ship to ship & persuaded the men to come on board him, & he would carry them where they should get money enough.”

Royal African Company logo.

On the night of 7th May, 1694 Every and approximately 25 others charged Charles II while O’Byrne; the Admiral of the fleet was ashore. With the Captain of Charles II asleep and the crew caught by surprise it was with no conflict that Every took the ship before vanishing into the night.

Once they were at a safe distance from the Spanish night watch non-conspirators were given a chance to leave. Every offered up the position of the ships Commander to Captain Gibson “If you have a mind to make one of us, we will receive you, and if you turn sober and attend to business, perhaps in time I may make you up of my Lieutenants. If not, here’s a boat, and you shall be set on shore.” Gibson declined the offer and was sent ashore with the others who didn’t want to join Every’s cause.

Every’s flag as depicted in Captain Charles Johnson’s A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates.

Every receiving the three chests of Treasure on board of his ship as depicted in The Pirates Own Book by Charles Ellms

After the mutiny Every was unanimously elected Captain and after likely inspiring his crew with stories of Thomas Tew’s success in the Red Sea a year earlier they agreed to set sail for the Indian Ocean as pirates, renaming Charles II the Fancy.

Along their journey to the Indian Ocean Every and his crew made several stops. First at Maio robbing three ships (and recruiting nine men), then to Guinea where they robbed the local chieftain and his peoples wealth, then at Bioko to resupply. Then they captured two Danish ships near the island of Principe taking prize of their ivory and gold. They rounded the Cape of Good Hope and stopped in the pirate safe haven of St. Augustine’s Bay to resupply again before heading to Johanna from where they rested. While here they captured a passing French pirate ship, looting the vessel and recruited more crew.

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The Treasure

In August 1695, Every of the Fancy was elected Admiral of a pirate flotilla consisting of the infamous Thomas Tew Captain of the Amity, Joseph Faro Captain of the Portsmouth Adventure, Richard Want Captain of the Dolphin, William Mayes Captain of the Pearl, and Thomas Wake Captain of the Susanna a plan was set in motion which would in turn cause havoc on England’s relations with India.

The pirate fleet occupying the straits of Bab-el-Mandeb waiting patiently for their target, a convoy of 25 Grand Mughal ships. Their main target being the Ganj-i-Sawai meaning “Exceeding Treasure”.

Thomas Tew depicted in Howard Pyle’s Book of Pirates: Fiction, Fact & Fancy Concerning the Buccaneers & Marooners of the Spanish Main, New York, United States, and London, United Kingdom, 1921.

Engraving of Every engaging the Great Mogul’s Ship depicted in The Pirates Own Book, by Charles Ellms, 1837.

The Ganj-i-Sawai also commonly known as the Gunsway had managed to slip past the pirate flotilla in the night but the pirates didn’t take long to set chase to the Indian convoy. Dolphin proved too slow for the chase so the crew joined the Fancy and Dolphin was burned. Susanna and Amity too fell behind but the later was never to rejoin the flotilla.

The Portsmouth Adventure, Fancy, and Pearl caught up with the Fatah Muhammed of the Grand Mughal’s fleet. The pirates quickly sacked the ship taking haul of between £50,000 to £60,000 worth of treasure. They didn’t waste any time, quickly setting chase for their greatest prize, the Gunsway. Catching up only a few days later when they exchanged fire which left the Ganj-i-Sawai immobilized and severely vulnerable after a shot took out their mainmast.

The pirates boarded the ship in a fury and after a violent hand to hand battle lasting several hours the ship and what remained of the crew was theirs to do with as they saw fit. I’ll spare you the grim details but know that what was done to the crew and passangers of this ship were unthinkable.

Along with the ship was it’s sensational and unfathomable amount of treasures estimated to have been worth between £200,000 and £600,000 making it the richest ship to ever have been taken by pirates.

Depiction of Captain Every’s encounter with the Emeror’s granddaughter on the Ganj-i-Sawai from The Works of Daniel Defoe by John Ward Dunsmore (1856 – 1945).

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The Vanishing Act

Following the massive success of the Gunsway Heist the treasures were divided up among the crews and their Captains proceeded by a celebration at the Pirate safe haven of Bourbon island. While they now each had “gold enough to dazzle the eyes” Every and his crew had now become marked men. Their exploits had parliament declare them ‘Hostis humani generis’ meaning “Enemies of the human race”. The bounty on Every’s head would make for the first worldwide man hunt.

A large number of the crew decided to take their chances and remain on the island while the rest are said to have left with Every to Nassau in the Caribbean, stopping along the way at Ascension Island to stock up on provisions for the long journey ahead. It’s here where a few more of the crew decided to remain instead of going ahead to Nassau.

Portrait of Aurangzeb – The Grand Moghul.

Proclamation for apprehending Henry Every, alias Bridgeman, and sundry other pirates from 1696.

Having reached St Thomas the pirates entered the city of Nassau where they made contact with the island’s Governor, Sir Nicholas Trott to whom they declared their position as pirates and their misdeeds against the East India Company. They requested shore time in exchange for a heft sum of £860. At this point they identified their Captain as a Henry Bridgeman. Who was offering Trott their ship as a gift once the crew were unload their cargo.

Trott accepted this offer knowing that Nassau faced an impending threat from French forces to the South East and the presence of the pirate ships in the bay would likely prevent a French attack. This agreement allowed Every and his crew to come and go from the island as they pleased.

Word finally reached Nassau of the Fancy and the events that had transpired in the Indian Ocean as well as the true identity of the Fancy’s Captain, Henry Every. When Trott was questioned he denied ever knowing the true history of these pirates. Trott stripped the fancy of anything valuable and had it driven against the rocks likely to dispose of the evidence that he had been conspiring with the pirates or had knowledge of their presence in Nassau.

When a proclamation for the apprehension of Henry Every and his crew reached Nassau, Trott tipped Every off to this fact and warned him of what his actions would be in response. Trott issued a warrant for Every’s arrest and alerted the authorities of his whereabouts in order to save face and avoid suspicions that he ever colluded with the pirates. It was at this point that Every and 113 crew members vanished in the night.

Engraving by Aikmann depicts Avery selling his jewels from Howard Pyle’s “Buccaneers and Marooners of the Spanish Main – Second Paper” 1887.

Title page of ‘The Tryals of Joseph Dawson, Edward Forseith, William May, William Bishop, James Lewis, and Sparkes’ 1696.

While only 24 of the 113 person crew were ever captured and with 5 executed it is a complete mystery as to what happened to the other 89 members of the crew, Every, or the massive amounts of treasure they were hauling with them. They all appear to have disappeared without a trace. Or, did they?

With Every’s acts in the Indian Ocean and the havoc it caused to the British and Indian relations at the time he had become well known which combined with his vanishing act it was no surprise that over the years numerous stories began to circulate with varying degrees of credibility turning Every into something of a legend. The stories would range from Every dying in poverty in Devon, England to setting up a pirate utopia where he was king.

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Conclusion

The map below visually demonstrates the expanse and furosity of Every’s short two year career from the point of the Spanish Expedition leaving the Thames in London, England to his vanishing act in Nassau.

This intriguing document suggests Avery (or Henry Every) the pirate buried his treasure near the Lizard after his daring 1695 raid on ships in the Arabian sea.

With so many stories of what happened to Every after he vanished from Nassau and with Every having told his crew conflicting stories of where he would go and what he would do after the heist, the question of what happened to Every and his loot is a very complicated one which requires extensive and in-depth research.

In 2020 I stumbled across a letter in the Cornish Archives in England which referred to Henry Avery and gave directions to finding his hidden treasure as follows:

Avery The Pirate

On his return from India either landed or was shipwrecked near the Lizard where he buried three chests or boxes full of treasure in the sands of the sea shore.

“Environ trois milles a l’est du Lig. Pres trois pierres grises ou rochers dans une cove au Sud’Oest des trois pierres.”

[Translation from French to English: “About three miles east of Liz near three gray stones or rocks in a cove, South West of the three stones.”]

Mr K says: “Ces trois pierres sont couvertes with grass. (now nearly overgrown with furse & grass)

[Translation from French to English: “These three stones are covered in grass.”]

It is near where the earner of a high promontory juts out into the sea. 

He said the spring tides now come over the place. 

Chest haslar wood 2 feet long & 1 f wide in it were precious stones & bracelets, large rubies, sapphires, emeralds, topazes + diamonds.

Chest almost the same size & make as the first 120 ingots of gold, 40 thick flat pieces of gold as large as a round tobacco box with various characters on some of them, 25 bars of gold, some of which were 4 or 5 inches long.

Chest has 3,000 pieces of 8 besides Bullion not weighed but crammed in with pieces of brocades.

Overwhelmed with excitement I began to investigate the letter further and test the validity of the letter.

Over a year of research and planning later, Areas Grey put together an international team of treasure hunters and archeologists to investigate this possible lead which may solve this enduring mystery.

On this scouting expedition Areas Grey joined forces with:

Rob Jenner of the CodeBar Live Podcast

Lisa Finch of Enigma Treasure Hunts

Rob & Toni Frey of Rob Frey Explorer

& Pirate Treasure Hunter – Tyrone Leech

The team worked relentlessly investigating and fact checking every bit of information we had uncovered and in late 2022 we were convinced we were onto something big, we were even joined by Discovery Channel’s Expedition Unknown and its host Josh Gates. You can find Expedition Unknown’s coverage of our expedition on the Discovery Channel on June 14th 2023 – 9:00pm (EST).

Trailer for Discovery Channel’s Expedition Unknown starring Josh Gates airing June 14th 2023 at 9:00pm (EST) don’t miss it!.

Some of the shots taken during our expedition in Cornwall, October 2022 in search of Henry Every’s long lost treasure and the legend of the mysterious letter.

After a solid week of endless scouting and investigating the southern Cornish coastline we walked away knowing that this was just the beginning and that we were not done here yet.

The mystery of Henry Every and his missing treasure endures but we are one step closer to finding the truth. After careful review of the information we gathered on the last expedition along with the research we have conducted we believe we have identified the exact location where Henry Every would have hidden his treasure in regards to the information provided in the letter. As such, we are now gearing up for a second expedition out to the site to locate and retrieve this long lost pirate loot. This second expedition will conclusively tell us if the treasure tale is real or that of fantasy. If the treasure is found it is believed to be worth over one hundred million!

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ADAM L C

Director of Areas Grey

Adam is an avid treasure hunter, seeker of adventure and the creator of Areas Grey. After travelling for almost half his life and cataloguing over 100 treasure legends along the way. He decided this was simply far too much treasure for one person to chase! As a result he created Areas Grey so he could share his stories, connect with other treasure hunters and put a little more adventure in the lives of the treasure hunting community.

Adam is a Private Investigator and former Wilderness Guide with a passion for history and archaeology. With the skills, knowledge and gear, Adam is always eager to go on the next fortune seeking adventure and connect with fellow treasure hunters along the way.

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Ann Bonny’s Mysterious Disappearance

ANN BONNY’S

Mysterious Disappearance & Hidden Treasures

Overview

Henry Every is not the only pirate known to have vanished without a trace. Anne Bonny, one of the few recorded female pirates, may have also performed an equally puzzling disappearing act around 1721 after her capture.

Anne was married and living in Nassau in the Bahamas when she met the English pirate captain Calico Jack Rackham with whom she ran away to live a life of piracy operating in the Caribbean. In 1720 Bonny was captured alongside Rackham and fellow female pirate Mary Read. While Rackham met his fate at the end of a noose, Mary Read and Anne Bonny escaped execution.

Records show that Mary Read died in prison from a fever and was buried in church grounds in Jamaica. However, there is no record of Bonny’s release and there was no record of her execution which has led to a lot of speculation since.

Does a death record in a ledger from the same town in Jamaica where she was tried for an “Ann Bonny” in 1733 put an end to this legend?

Bonny from a Dutch version of Charles Johnson’s book of pirates.

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Origins

Sketch of Old Head of Kinsale with de Courcy’s castles by NEWENHAM, Robert O’Callaghan.

While what official records exist about Anne Bonny’s life are scant at best it is believed that she was born around 1700 in Old Head of Kinsale, Ireland to a lawyer named WIlliam Cormac and his servant Mary Brennan.

After Anne was born William moved them to London where he attempted to pass Anne off as a lawyer’s clerk, dressing her as a boy and calling her “Andy”. Shortly after William, Mary and Anne moved to Charles Town in the Province of Carolina. With William’s knowledge of the laws and ability to buy and sell goods, prospered greatly from joining the merchant business.

When Anne was 12 her mother died which may have been the catalyst for what was to come. At 13 she allegedly stabbed a servant girl with a knife.

At 14 she married a small-time pirate by the name James Bonny who had hoped to win possession of William’s sizable estate. However, as Anne’s father disapproved of James as a suitable husband for his daughter, he kicked her out of the house and effectively disowned her.

1700’s map of Charlestown South Carolina by Bellin, Jacques Nicolas, 1703-1772.

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The Legend

In retaliation to this she is said to have set fire to her father’s plantation before moving with James Bonny to a sanctuary for the Republic of Pirates in Nassau, on New Providence Island. When Woodes Rogers became Governor in 1718, James Bonny became an informant for the new Governor, betraying his fellow pirates which Anne disapproved of.

This may have been due to an affair she was having with the infamous pirate John “Calico Jack” Rackham whom she had met whilst mingling with pirates in the local taverns. Rackham offered James Bonny a sum of money to divorce Anne to which James refused which forced them to flee the island together with Anne disguising herself as a man and becoming one of Rackham’s crew.

Woodes Rogers, former Pirate, Governor of the Bahamas. The son of the Governor presents his father to the right with plans for the port of Nassau.

A Map of the British Empire in America from 1746 showing Nassau in the Bahamas.

It wasn’t long however until Anne became pregnant at which point Rackham landed her at a port in Cuba so that she could give birth to a son before rejoining the crew.

While aboard Rackham’s ship and crew Anne allegedly grew attracted to another pirate whom she revealed herself as a woman to. However, to Anne’s surprise the pirate she was attempting to seduce revealed themselves to be Mary Read, another woman aboard Rackham’s crew who had disguised themselves as a man.

On August 22nd, 1720 the gang stole an armed sloop named William from port Nassau shortly before Governor Woodes Rogers issued a proclamation declaring Rackham and his crew pirates in October, 1720 which spurred former pirate Jean Bonadvis and pirate hunter Jonathan Barnet to track them down and bring them to justice.

It didn’t take them long to track down Rackham’s crew who were laid to anchor when Barnet had located the ship. Barnet had a broadside take out the boom on Rackham’s ship after which most of Rackham’s fled to the hold in fear.

Jolly Roger flag of the pirates of the Flying Gang who used Nassau as a base for their operations.

A woodcut of Rackham from Charles Johnson’s 1725 edition of A General History of the Pyrates.

Anne and Mary remained on the deck ready to take on Barnet’s boarding party from where they shot into the hold declaring the rest of the crew cowards. Barnet’s crew soon got the better of them and they were put ashore at Davis Cove near Lucea, Jamaica.

They were arrested and tried in November, 1720 in Spanish Town, Jamaica and sentenced to hang. While Rackham was executed in Port Royal on 18th November 1720, his body gibbeted on display on a very small islet at a main entrance to Port Royal now known as Rackham’s Cay.

Bonny and Read both “pleaded the belly” claiming to be pregnant and as such delayed their execution until after they had given birth while imprisoned at Fort Charles.

Records show that Mary Read died of a violent fever while in prison and was buried at St. Catherine’s church in Jamaica with a headstone that reads “Mary Read, pirate”. As for Anne Bonny there is no record of her release or death.

In Charles Johnson’s A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the most notorious Pyrates, published in 1724 he writes that “She was continued in Prison, to the Time of her lying in, and afterwards reprived from Time to Time; but what is become of her since, we cannot tell; only this we know, that she was not executed.”

Cover page from the transcript of Rackham, Read, and Bonney’s 1721 trial.

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The Treasures

The lack of evidence as to what happened to Anne Bonny led to a wide range of stories being told about her and over time a legend.

One account said Bonny escaped from Jamaica, thanks to her father, others have her seducing a guard and making an escape out of the prison. Being the only living member of Rackham’s crew that remained alive at this point it would be believed that she would have made her journey to collect Rackham’s hidden loot and any others they may have hidden.

One legend places Rackham’s treasure on an island in Oyster Bay, Florida and consists of gold bars and Spanish doubloons worth more than $2,000,000.

Oyster Bay treasure legend as depicted in the Ye True Chart of Pirate Treasure Lost or Hidden In the Land & Waters of Florida from 1960 by Sanford, Warner.

Artistic depiction of the Pirate Ann Bonny in the midst of a battle.

Another legend claims that a female buccaneer by the name of Mary Anne Blythe buried a treasure consisting of gold bullion and silver coins a couple of miles south of Southport, North Carolina in the area of old Fort Caswell, at the mouth of the Cape Fear River.

However, there seems to be no evidence to show that a pirate by the name of “Mary Anne Blythe” ever existed and what little information can be found regarding her appears to be a copy of the stories that we hear about Mary Read and Anne Bonny. Most likely Mary Anne Blythe is a chimaera of Mary Read, Anne Bonny, and possibly that of William Bligh.

Does this mean that the legend is only one of fantasy?

Another attributed to “Mary Anne Blythe” was a chest full of jewels which were removed from the ground at Plum Point in 1928.

After all Anne Bonny can be linked to North Carolina through her father’s plantation and would have been there in 1718 with her pirate husband James Bonny before leaving for New Providence.

An Arial view of Fort Caswell, North Carolina.

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Conclusion

On the 29th November 2020 the Youtube channel Debunk File may have put the legends to rest when they discovered archival records of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints regarding burials in 1721 where they found on April 28, 1721 it listed “Mary Read, pirate” showing that Read had died about 5 months after her trial.

Continuing to search the records for any sign of what happened to Anne Bonny they found a ledger of deaths for St. Catherine’s Parish in Jamaica, where Read had died. It’s there on December 29, 1733 that they found a listing for an “Ann Bonny” being buried.

St Catherine’s Church in Spanish Town, Jamaica.

A record in the logbook of burial records for St Catherine’s Church listing “Ann Bonny” being buried in 1732.

With the listing being from Spanish Town, the same place where the pirates were put on trial and where Read was buried together with the correct spelling of “Ann Bonny” as it was in the newspaper accounts before Captain Charles Johnson added the “e” to “Anne”, would suggest that this is the genuine record of the pirate Anne Bonny’s burial and evidence that she remained in Jamaica for 13 years after her trial.

While this comes as good news to treasure hunters who know she never returned for the hidden treasures left by Rackham, it leaves a sense of disappointment for all those who enjoyed the mysteries and legends that tell of a fierce red haired female pirate who defied the powers-be in a man’s world and made it out alive, living a life of fortune from looted pirate treasure on some tropical island somewhere.

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ADAM L C

Director of Areas Grey

Adam is an avid treasure hunter, seeker of adventure and the creator of Areas Grey. After travelling for almost half his life and cataloguing over 100 treasure legends along the way. He decided this was simply far too much treasure for one person to chase! As a result he created Areas Grey so he could share his stories, connect with other treasure hunters and put a little more adventure in the lives of the treasure hunting community.

Adam is a Private Investigator and former Wilderness Guide with a passion for history and archaeology. With the skills, knowledge and gear, Adam is always eager to go on the next fortune seeking adventure and connect with fellow treasure hunters along the way.

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