Captain William Kidd - for piracy.




Captain William Kidd - for piracy.

William Kidd had been born at Dundee in Scotland around 1654. He emigrated to New York in the 1680’s where he met and married Sarah Bradley Cox Oort, a wealthy widow. Later in life he became a privateer and helped to suppress piracy in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean. 

He is known to have commanded a ship called the “Adventure Galley” whose purpose was to capture French naval vessels and pirate ships. This mission was not greatly successful and as many of his crew were former pirates, he turned to piracy himself in order to prevent a mutiny. He also murdered a member of his crew, gunner William Moore, during an argument, by throwing a bucket at him which fractured his skull, causing his death the following day. 

His last act of piracy was committed against the ship “Quedagh Merchant” which was transporting gold and valuables for the British East India Company. When Kidd returned to New York on the 7th of July 1699, the New England Governor, Lord Richard Bellomont, ordered his arrest and Kidd was returned to England to stand trial for piracy and murder. 

He was tried at The High Court of Admiralty on the 8th and 9th of May 1701 with other members of the crew but was the only one to hang, the rest being reprieved. The execution took place on the 23rd of May 1701 and the first time he was suspended the rope broke, so he had to endure a second execution, after which his body gibbeted on the banks of the Thames.

The High Court of Admiralty was established by Edward III around 1360 having jurisdiction over civilian crimes committed at sea and directly offshore. In its role as a criminal court, it passed death sentences and these were carried out at Execution Dock, rather than at Tyburn. This was located between Wapping Old Stairs (off Wapping High Street) and Wapping Dock Stairs in east London. Hangings took place here for over 400 years. The gallows was erected on the foreshore at low tide and executions had to be timed to fit in with this. 

After execution the body(s) were chained to a stake at the low water mark and left there until three high tides had washed over them. Somewhere between 1786 and 1814, this practice ceased. 

In particularly serious cases of piracy the court could order gibbeting after execution in which case the body was covered in pitch and gibbeted lower down the Thames on the Isle of Dogs or Bugsby's Hole or Reach near Blackwall, as a deterrent to passing merchant sailors.

We hope that you have enjoyed reading our blog on the "From Yesterday to Tomorrow: Exploring the Journey of History". If you enjoy this blog please let us know in the comments below. If you are interested in history, we recommend you check out our other blogs here on the "From Yesterday to Tomorrow: Exploring the Journey of History". Thank you for reading.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Most Radioactive Man' Kept Alive For 83 Days As He 'Cried Blood' And Skin Melted

The Lost Soldier Mine

Battle of Bamber Bridge Jun 24, 1943 – Jun 25, 1943

Once upon a time, there was a young man named Jack.

Eye-opening photos of executions torturers from Nazi camp

"This is Anna Maria Von Stockhausen’s corpse, strapped to keep her coming back from the dead.

He had a hundred names, but he chose his last and most prominent, Ho Chi Minh— the Bringer of Light.

A man begging for his wife’s forgiveness inside Divorce Court. Chicago, 1948.

WHY WERE THE JAPANESE SO CRUEL IN WORLD WAR II?

Killing someone's Soul ... Emotionally Dead has to be the Worst Death!