In continuing my celebration of Women’s History Month (the first post featuring sniper Lyudmila Pavlichenko can be found here) I thought I’d do a little more research on a woman I’d always been intrigued with: the Caribbean pirate, Anne Bonny. My husband and I are fans of Black Sails on HBO, and the writers incorporated a character based on Anne, which made me curious–how much is known about this woman who broke with convention and risked her life to live as a pirate?
Anne Bonny was born in Cork, Ireland in the late seventeenth century to a servant woman by the name of Mary Brennan and her employer, a lawyer named William McCormac. Her father moved her to London where he dressed her like a boy and called her Andy (another article I read mentioned that her mother was the one who dressed her like a boy, but we at least can be fairly certain it happened. Interesting twist, though.) When neighbors found out what he’d done, he moved her and her mother to the Carolinas and eventually became a wealthy merchant.
Anne was known to be “high spirited” and rumor has it she put a boy in the hospital for attempting to sexually assault her. Eventually, she married a small-time pirate named James Bonny and her father disowned her. She ended up in the Bahamas, where she met John “Calico Jack” Rackham and fell in love. She divorced Bonny and, joining forces with Rackham and a woman named Mary Read, absconded with a ship called the William out of Nassau harbor. Apropos, I thought.
The three pirates gathered together a crew and sailed the Caribbean taking smaller ships, racking up a fortune. Both women fought alongside the male crew members, and Anne especially was highly thought of for her ability to wield a cutlass. http://bonney-readkrewe.com/legend.html In October of 1720, an ex-pirate who was now a commander with the British navy attacked Rackham’s ship the “Revenge” and captured all aboard. Apparently, the pirates were drunk from celebrating the capture of a Spanish commercial ship. Go figure. Drunk pirates… Anyway, all were tried as pirates in Port Royal and found guilty, and were sentenced to death by hanging. Anne and Mary “plead their bellies” and were spared. Mary died in prison from fever, but Anne was said to have been sprung from jail by her father. Rumor has it she remarried and lived well into her dotage.
Next week: more female pirates!
Fascinating – I can’t help wondering whether people who knew her later in life had any idea she’d been a pirate. And whether if she had told them, they would have believed her!.
Good question, Mel. I’d think it would have been difficult to keep that under wraps. How does a woman go back to a conventional role after that kind of life?
So cool…female pirates. I don’t think I knew that and I don’t think anyone would believe it, Mel. I love it. The Bahamas…freedom…the only drawback is getting caught…or killed LOL
sherry @ fundinmental
Yeah, dying was definitely an occupational hazard for those folks. A recent episode of Black Sails had a graphic scene of keel hauling which I’d learned about during my sailing days, but seeing it depicted on the screen gave it a whole ‘nother dimension.
That is so interesting. I checked out female pirates a few years ago for a series and found Ch’iao K’uo Fü Jën from 600 B.C. She’s a Chinese legend and the inspiration for the magical ancestor to Jen, my next book’s main character.
Oooh, Dale–that sounds intriguing! I ran across her, too, in my research. I’m amazed we never heard of these awesome women growing up.
Yeah, all we got is male explorers. 🙂