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Miguel Enríquez (privateer)

D. Miguel Enríquez [nb 1] (c. 1674–1743), was a privateer from San Juan, Puerto Rico who operated during the early 18th century. A mulato born out of wedlock, Enríquez was a shoemaker by occupation. After working for the governor as a salesman he was recruited to defend Puerto Rico, then a colony of the Spanish Empire, and commanded a small fleet that intercepted foreign merchant ships and other vessels dedicated to contraband. These outlaws were thriving in the waters of the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, notably in the areas surrounding Saint Thomas, Curaçao and Jamaica. Operating during the height of the Golden Age of Piracy, his fleet was also credited with controlling the proliferation of buccaneers in the region. However, he was considered a pirate himself by the enemies of Spain, since it was common practice of the government to ignore when foreign ships were attacked.[2] After some time operating independently, Enríquez received a letter of marque and reprisal from the Spanish Crown, this was a special permit granting him the privileges of a privateer.[2] Corsairs from Puerto Rico were often called guardacostas, or "coast guards." They operated in the same fashion as any other pirate, the only difference was that they did it in the name of Spain, protecting imperial trade restrictions.[3] Employing a systematic approach, Enríquez was able to become the most successful and influential Puerto Rican of his time. However, despite this, he was never able to gain the acceptance of the higher social classes, something that he strived to earn throughout his life.

Miguel Enríquez
Capt. Miguel Enríquez
Bornc. 1674–80
Died1743
San Juan, Puerto Rico
ChildrenVicente Enríquez (son)
Rosa Enríquez (unrecognized daughter)
Several unrecognized children
AwardsMedalla de oro de la Real Efigie
Piratical career
NicknameThe Grand Archvillain
TypeRoyal Privateer, Pirate Hunter
AllegianceSpain
Years active1701–1735
RankCaballero (Knight) of the Royal Effigy of Spain
Captain of the Land and Seas
Base of operationsSan Juan, Puerto Rico
CommandsPrivate fleet
Battles/warsWar of the Spanish Succession
Battle of Vieques (1717)
War of the Quadruple Alliance
Anglo-Spanish War (1727)
WealthOver 500,000 pieces of eight (between 100 and 200 million USD by modern standards)[1]
Signature

During his years as a privateer, Enríquez established close links with the Spanish Monarchy.[4] His ships were also responsible for the distribution of urgent messages that arrived at San Juan or La Aguada to the rest of the West Indies.[4] When there was a shortage of royal vessels, Enríquez's fleet was responsible for transporting items on behalf of Spain without charge.[4] His fleet also provided transportation for the authorities that arrived at Puerto Rico en route to other locations and for missionaries.[4] Throughout the War of the Spanish Succession, Enríquez's fleet was responsible for guarding the Antilles from incursions by the British and Dutch.[5] Among the places where he established connections was the adjacent island of St. Thomas.[6] Enríquez also dealt directly with the governor of Curaçao.[7] At a time when letters of marque were being regularly issued in neighboring islands his actions converted San Juan into one of the most important ports in the Caribbean.[8] Between 1702 and 1713 Enríquez owned a fleet of more than thirty vessels, losing at least a dozen and capturing more than twenty others.[9] By the time that his career was over, he had reportedly commanded a fleet of over 300 privateer ships, of which approximately 150 were lost, employing close to 1,500 sailors.[10]

In 1717, Great Britain occupied the island of Vieques which was under the control of the Spanish Government of Puerto Rico. According to the British government, they did not recognize the Spanish claim to the island which they referred to as "Crab Island". Enríquez, with the consent of the government, organized an expeditionary force which consisted of two ships with seven members of the regular Spanish Army and 286 members of the Puerto Rican militia. The ships were escorted by a Spanish warship under the command of Naval Commander José Rocher.[11] Enríquez's men fought and defeated the British in Vieques, taking most of their enemy to the mainland of Puerto Rico as their prisoners. He was received as a national hero when he returned the island of Vieques to the Spanish Empire and to the governorship of Puerto Rico. The British government became alarmed and sent a warship to San Juan. Further confrontation between both nations was avoided when the Spanish authorities returned the prisoners.[11] His fleet also participated in other military expeditions in 1728 and 1729.

Enríquez received several recognitions and exemptions that facilitated his work and contributed towards his vast wealth. Under the order of King Philip V (1683–1746), he was awarded The Gold Medal of the Royal Effigy (Spanish: "Medalla de oro de la Real Efigie") in 1713 and was named Capitán de Mar y Guerra y Armador de Corsos (loosely translated as Captain of the Seas and War and Chief Provider to the Crown Corsairs).[3] The Crown also granted him a Royal Auxiliary Identification Document (Spanish: Real Cédula Auxiliar), which allowed him to directly seek help from the Council of the Indies regardless of how insignificant a conflict was.[12] Enríquez also acquired the local rights of the Royal Guinea Company and later the Real Asiento de Inglaterra, organizations dedicated to slave trading which were authorized to do so by Spain.[13] His actions placed him at odds with several influential members of San Juan's society. To counter this, Enríquez supported any new governor by offering his services and providing other help.[5] However, all but José Antonio Mendizábal unsuccessfully tried to revoke his privateering contract, often finding themselves in trouble when he responded by using his resources.[5] The most notable example was Juan de Ribera, who Enríquez managed to remove from the office of governor after an arduous conflict by employing his influence.[14] He also pursued the favor of the bishops appointed to San Juan, earning the support of Pedro de la Concepción Urtiaga and Fernando de Valbidia, but failing to earn the trust of Lorenzo Pizarro.[5] Enríquez's influence extended to several other systems, including the courts and military.[15] He owned 300 slaves and his fortune, at the time, was among the largest in the Americas. Throughout his career, Enríquez was persecuted by the Spanish elite in the island and jailed on various occasions. At the peak of his success, he was able to employ his influence to have governor Danío Granados prosecuted and jailed. However, as international politics evolved, his influence dwindled. By the time that Matías de Abadía became governor, Enríquez was unable to accomplish his removal from office.[16] He was charged with smuggling and stripped of all his power and wealth by the government. Enríquez fled and took refuge in the Catholic Church, which he regularly attended. By being generous with his donations to the bishopric, he had gained allies who would protect him throughout the years. The charges of smuggling made by the Spanish government were eventually dropped, but Enríquez chose to remain in the convent where he died a pauper.[17]

Early life

Enríquez was born in San Juan to a poor family. The actual year of his birth is not clear due to contradictory dates, but the dates of 1674, 1676, 1680 and 1681 are referenced or recorded in official documents.[18] Most of these variations were provided by Enríquez himself, who would report a younger age when questioned. Of those proposed, 1674 seems more likely.[18] He was born to Graciana Enríquez, a freed slave of the same social hierarchy who had inherited the surname "Enríquez" from her former slaver, Leonor. His maternal grandmother was born in Africa, with Angola and Guinea being mentioned[19] while his maternal grandfather was an unknown white man. The name of Enríquez's father is not mentioned in any documentation, with the possible reasons for this being various and unexplored in the surviving records.[20] It is possible that either the identity was truly unknown by the public or that the father was a member of the Catholic clergy, which would have prompted a "silence pact" to avoid a scandal.[20] The second theory is supported by the fact that a member of the elite class, Luis de Salinas, served as the godfather of his brother, José Enríquez, despite the fact that he was also considered an illegitimate child.[21] It seems likely that both Miguel and José shared the same father.[21] Enríquez also possessed several sacramental objects and books written in Latin, which was a language only used by the clergy, now considered to have been inherited from his father.[21] He was the youngest of four siblings, the others being María and Juan. José died soon after his birth, before reaching his first year.[22] They lived in the room of a house belonging to Ana del Rincón on San Cristóbal y la Carnicería Street.[22]

Unlike most children of the time, Enríquez was taught how to read and write at an advanced level, sufficient to compose detailed documents.[22] His writing style was elegant and he knew cursive, implying that it was a product of extended schooling.[22] By age 10, Enríquez had begun to work as an apprentice shoemaker. As a consequence, he also learned how to craft leather.[23] As was the custom during this age, Enríquez was enrolled in the military at the age of 16.[24] These units were divided by social hierarchy, with him serving under Captain Francisco Martín along other mulatos.[24] As a shoemaker, he would only earn four and a half reales per shoe pair.[25] Enríquez never married, but was known to have been involved with several women throughout his life, including Elena Méndez, Teresa Montañez, María Valdés and Ana Muriel.[26] Product of these relations, he had at least eight children, among which were Vicente and Rosa.[27] Of them, Enríquez preferred Vicente, raising him and overseeing his education .[27]

In 1700, aged 26, he was accused of selling contraband in his house. This merchandise was product of trades where people incapable of paying with money, handed items in exchange.[23] The governor sentenced him to a year of forced labor in Castillo San Felipe del Morro and added a fine of 100 pieces of eight.[28] He did not deny the charges, paid the coins without any hesitation and his sentence was changed, upon his own request.[28] Enríquez was now sentenced to serve in the artillery of the Elite Garrison Corps. According to a witness, this change was facilitated due to requests made by influential members of San Juan's society, including some members of the Catholic Church.[28] With his job as a shoemaker, it is unknown how he was able to afford the fine so quickly, but it is assumed that he received help.[25] As part of the sentence, Enríquez could not charge for his work in the military, which also meant that during this timeframe he was economically supported by a third party.[25]

Privateering career

Independent work and letter of marque

Material documenting his early incursion in the business world are scarce.[29] In 1701, Enríquez began working as a salesman for governor Gutiérrez de la Riva.[30] It was under this governor that he would go on to become a privateer.[29] Like those that preceded him, Gutiérrez was appointed due to his military experience and his inauguration coincided with the War of the Spanish Succession arriving with a direct order to evaluate the cost of building a new vessel to "extinguish the commerce of [...] foreigners" that had reportedly engaged in piracy and other acts that threatened the Spanish economy.[31] Within a month, he responded with a report suggesting a system that operated between privateers and a ship to guard the coasts.[31] Both the geopolitical environment and the economic difficulty of the colony made privateering a successful and lucrative venture, both for the individual and for the government itself.[32] Gutiérrez proposed the construction of a new boat for the sole purpose of plundering enemy ships, with half of the loot destined to the Crown and the remainder being distributed among the crew.[31] This initiative was accepted and by 1704 the process was underway, with the ship being completed in 1707.[33] Gutiérrez needed a front man for this operation and Enríquez was eventually selected, his race allowing for a safe scapegoat if the privateering resulted in conflicts between the local government and Spain.[34] He proved successful in this venture and within a year his role had grown. Only two years after Gutiérrez took office, Enríquez already served as the governor's delegate and owner of vessels under his command.[34] These first actions were done independently, albeit with the government's compliance.[34] However, by 1704 Enríquez was already being listed as a privateer, receiving an official letter of marque.[34] His move from a salesman to an influential merchant and privateer was unusually fast, despite the experience that he had acquired during his time working for the governor.[35] Gutiérrez was instrumental in accelerating the success of the privateering venture, even allowing him access into a monopoly that he had created to run the local commerce through front men.[35] Based on these actions, it is possible that the governor mentored Enríquez personally, providing him with resources.[36] Multiple invasion attempts by enemy countries further fueled privateering operations, the Spanish West Indies were constantly being besieged by England, Denmark and the Netherlands.[37] The Spanish Crown did not take these threats lightly and ordered Gutiérrez to prepare for an hypothetical scenario, which ultimately proved to be a false alarm.[37] Despite the outcome, this mentality lingered, facilitating the war acts of the privateers. A year later, England actually tried to unsuccessfully invade Puerto Rico, landing within the vicinity of Arecibo.[38] With the War of Succession repercuting in the Caribbean, the actions of Enríquez were seen in a positive light.[39] Soon afterwards, French corsairs arrived at San Juan as allies, protected by the Crown with orders to be cared for.[39] However, these foreign vessels were being used to import contraband, which combined with a general animosity due to previous conflicts between these nations, further fueled the need to stabilize the economy by supporting local privateers.[40]

On July 23, 1703, Gutiérrez died in San Juan.[40] Despite his connection, Enríquez was generally ignored by the members of the elite that opposed his rule and the privateering operation continued.[41] Gutiérrez's death brought forth a period of instability of five years, during which Puerto Rico had nine governors.[42] This favored Enríquez, who continued to thrive in the shadows. Most of them were simply interim governors and due to their short time in office, none were able to pay any attention to his growing success.[43] When Pedro del Arroyo was sworn, Enríquez tried to buy his favor by paying the voyage.[44] However, Arroyo died shortly afterwards, preventing a notable profit from this partnership.[44] Despite this, Enríquez actually paid for the funeral service and even provided the black clothing for the servants.[45] Despite his distinction, the former governor was not economically stable and his family was moved into the privateer's house.[45] One of the late governor's sons, Laureano Pérez del Arroyo, lived with him until his adulthood, when Enríquez requested that he was promoted to the rank of captain.[46] In time, Pérez del Arroyo would become of his most vocal enemies.[46] Eventually, as his wealth and influence grew Enríquez inherited some of Gutiérrez's old enemies, including the high class Calderón family.[41]

Constantly serving the Crown, he quickly became the top privateer in Puerto Rico.[47][48] In a letter sent on February 14, 1705, the work done by two ships owned by Enríquez in the waters of Puerto Rico and Santo Domingo is praised.[49] King Phillip V expressed satisfaction and encouraged the continuation of this labor, not without claiming the weapons captured from his victims.[50] During this timeframe, Enríquez generally operated with only two vessels at once, often replacing those lost.[51] Among those, several were captured by foreign countries including seven sloops, a schooner and a brigantine.[51] Authorities from Curaçao caught the sloops San Nicolás, Santa Bárbara and La María (with British help), along the unnamed schooner.[51] The ship known as Popa Azul was captured off the coast of Puerto Rico by the Netherlands.[51] An unnamed sloop was captured by England near Santa Cruz, following three days of conflict.[51] Others, including a brigantine, were lost due to other causes. Enríquez usually kept his fleet well staffed, with these vessels being manned by 100–200 sailors.[51] Due to the fact that privateers were not required to report the names of the ships captured to sell their loot, few of the fleet's victims are known. However, it is known that he captured an average of two victims for every vessel lost.[52] One of his ships, named Santo Tomás, was involved in a controversy when its captain, José Rodríguez, ordered to board a Spanish sloop that was leaving a St. Thomas port. Rodríguez tried to justify his action by stating that the vessel was leaving a non-Spanish harbor and could be carrying contraband, but was still jailed in Santo Domingo for some time.[52] Santo Tomás had actually left Puerto Rico ordered to attend the frequent contraband arriving from that island, only receiving a mild authorization from Enríquez, who was sick and decided not to oppose the will of the establishment.[53] Not opposing the governor would prove to be a mistake, since the audience that discussed the case decided to place all the blame on him and Rodríguez.[53] From this moment forward, Enríquez changed his approach, portraying himself as a loyal subject and offering his resources without question, only to play the circumstances to his favor.[54] On December 12, 1704, the Crown authorized the establishment of a route between Puerto Rico and the Canary Islands, which would carry 150 tons of fruit.[54] However, this route remained stale for two years. The government did not possess such a ship and was forced to ask Enríquez to loan it one of his.[54] He did not oppose the request and the vessel arrived to Gran Canaria, with the merchandise having survived a storm and a rough voyage.[54] Enríquez continued to operate this route, repeating the action a year later. However, the Council of the Indies suspended it, claiming that no ship smaller than 50 or 60 tons should travel between Puerto Rico and the Canary Islands citing strategic affairs.[55]

Caballero and Captain of the Land and Seas

In 1707, Enríquez issued a letter to the Spanish king stating that he had placed two vessels near the Leeward and Windward Islands to guard their coasts.[43] He also emphasized his loss of six other ships in battles against opposition from Jamaica and Curaçao.[43] Enríquez requested to be placed in charge of a company based there or in the adjacent locales of Havana or Cartagena.[43] The War Board of the Indies ignored his request, and some members even argued that to extend his stay in Puerto Rico he should only be recognized as Captain of the Sea, instead of the higher title of Captain of the Sea and War.[56] The authorities could not jeopardize the success attained by Enríquez's privateering fleet, which has gathered positive feedback from the local government.[56] However, they could not reward his efforts with a lesser title either. Following a heated debate, the Board decided to grant him the title of Captain of the Sea and War.[57] Enríquez actually planned this outcome, organizing his local influence so that the communications that reached the Crown were largely positive.[58] This correspondence was being sent years before this, by 1705 these letters were granting him the responsibility for controlling contraband and pirates in the coasts of Puerto Rico.[59] With the delay or failure to arrive of the Real Situado, the governors were forced to collect money from the wealthier residents to make do.[60] Enríquez loaned money to the government since 1705 and noted this when issuing his requests.[61] He was officially recognized as Captain of the Sea and War on July 11, 1710.[57] By then Enríquez had become notably active in defending both Puerto Rico and the other Spanish interests in the Caribbean.[60] His privateering fleet had become such a key to local stability that they were the ones responsible for safeguarding the residents when storms or famine struck the island.[61] He continued to loan money to the government, advancing a sum of 11,497 pieces of eight between 1708–12.[61] By 1708, Enríquez had become a renowned man, gaining the attention of Phillip V himself due to his work.[55] That same year, one of his ships brought the loot of a British vessel captured off Tortola to the port of Cumaná.[55] The authorities forced the privateers to sell the cargo in their port and retained two thirds of the earnings.[55] Enríquez was angered by this development and contacted the king, who responded by ordering a full restitution.[55]

After five years of instability, the Crown appointed a sailor and merchant named Francisco Danío Granados as governor of Puerto Rico.[62] It is possible that Enríquez already knew him through Gutiérrez, who purchased merchandise from his company.[63] Like those that preceded him, Danío wanted to quickly gain a profit. As a dominant local merchant, this appointment would normally threaten Enríquez, but it seems likely that he was involved to some degree in the election process.[63] He went on to donate 4,000 pieces of eight before Danío' was sworn into office and provided an additional sum of 300 as a gift.[63] Two months before the new governor took office, the vessel ordered during Gutiérrez's term docked at San Juan.[44] Danío quickly tried to recruit a crew for it, but was largely ignored by the Puerto Rican sailors, who could earn a better profit by working independently as privateers.[64] Furthermore, Enríquez likely felt that this would affect his business and conversely sabotaged the recruitment.[64] This convinced Danío to order it to sail to Cartagena in search of a crew, which later mutinied during the return trip forcing a change in course that ultimately led to the vessel being lost.[65] With this struck of luck, Enríquez's business was now secure and he quickly pursued the favor of the governor, forming a mutually beneficial alliance.[65] Under these circumstances, Danío formed a pseudo-commercial alliance with the privateer.[65] On occasion, they staged the capture of a vessel so that merchandise could be sold without taxes or restrictions.[65] With mutual complicity, they then shared the profit in even halves.[65] However, any losses would fall on Enríquez. Eventually, Danío ordered the construction of a brigantine and registered the vessel under both of their names.[65] The ship was captured and Enríquez was forced to use his own money to recover it, once again registering it under both names.[66] A vessel named La Aurora was registered in a similar fashion and the earnings of its three voyages were divided equally.[66] Other of his sloops, such as San Miguel and Los Montes, served a similar purpose.[66] Enríquez also bought a sloop in Cádiz for the sole purpose of transporting the governor' nephew, Jacome Danío.[66] From that moment onwards, the fleet would be dispatched without question for any purpose that the governor requested. Among the missions issued by Danío, Enríquez sent ships to guard the local coasts and capture contrabandists.[67] They also served the Crown in other assignments, such as providing transport to stranded Jesuit priests.[67] He went as far as paying some of the governor's debts and helping members of his family.[68] These actions costed Enríquez money and men, but for some time served their goal of earning him the favor of Danío.[66] The privateering business continued to grow under this model. By 1710, Enríquez built a brigantine to add to the fleet in his own shipyard.[69] This dockyard was also used to repair other vessels, especially those that belonged to the Crown.[70] On April 6, 1710, Danío requested that one of Enríquez's ships was used to transport important documents to Spain.[71] A sloop named La Perla was chosen for this task, carrying some loot gathered through privateering and also ferrying five prisoners that had been sentenced to death.[72] The vessel docked and immediately received a license to sell the unregistered loot, earning a second license that allowed it to import European merchandise in its return voyage.[72] Enríquez continued to strengthen his reputation locally, taking over the cost of repairing the fortifications and supplying the military hospitals.[73]

Enríquez pursued the rights to become the Royal Guinea Company sole representative in Puerto Rico. Established in 1701, this entity served as a major slave trader and became the only one sanctioned by the Spanish Crown to do business in their American colonies.[13] On May 16, 1710, he officially completed this goal, signing a loan contract with the company's general director, Juan Bautista Chouirrio.[30] With this accord, Enríquez became a major slaver in the territories of Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Margarita, Cumaná, Cumanagoto and Maracaibo, also permitting the acquisition of slaves from adjacent islands such as Jamaica, St. Thomas and Curaçao depending on convenience.[30] Under this agreement, he was able to import 40 African slaves per year, which he could sale under his own criteria.[30] The contract lasted for three years and it also provided exemptions for clothes and maintenance.[30] With the liberty to purchase these from any port in the Caribbean without right charges, it is likely that this was further exploited to import products at cheap prices, providing a large margin of profit.[74] For every peça sold, Enríquez paid 100 pieces of eight, which were combined with an additional fee of 4,000 per year.[75] Danío was involved in the transaction (which would also prove convenient for him as an official of the company) and along the other parts, an accord to secure that wins and losses were divided into three equal parts between them.[75] Enríquez was jubilant with this development and proposed public celebration to commemorate it.[75] He held the contract for a period of four years, leading 19 voyages under the premise of acquiring slaves and maintenance for them. Most of them were destined to St. Thomas. However, only ten of these incursions returned with new slaves for a total of 96, the others were used to import 109 barrels of flour.[75] This cereal was supposedly bought to feed his slaves, but instead it was sold to the wealthier classes for profit.[74] It is presumed that other odd products acquired under this premise, such as wine, beer, sugar, aguardiente, cocoa, paper and even copper, were sold in similar fashion.[76] His enemies were quick to publicly denounce this practice, albeit with some exaggeration.[76] Years later, these rights were supplanted despite the protests of Enríquez.[77] In 1713, the Royal Guinea Company lost its status and was instead replaced with the Royal Asiento de Inglaterra.[77] Enríquez immediately pursued a position within this new entity and quickly coordinated moves with some friends, Santiago Gibbens in St. Thomas and Felipe Henríquez in Curaçao, to establish a new business model once he acquired these rights.[78] To further secure the success of this venture, Enríquez offered gifts and even stakes to people that were already involved with the company.[79] In June 1718, attorney in fact Tomás Othey granted him the title of factor and completed a loan contract. Enríquez was only able to employ this office until September, experiencing a series of complications based on international politics.[80] During this timeframe, Othey himself imported slaves through the South Sea Company.[81]

He took over as Puerto Rico's main supplier, both of food and military supplies, quickly becoming indispensable to the well-being and functionality of the government.[82] However, his tactics did not settle well with the higher classes, who began indirectly accusing him of bribery.[82] Despite this, the Crown was glad to accept any help, knowing that despite operating on for his own interests, Enríquez had become a vital figure in the Caribbean.[83] In 1712, Danío wrote to Phillip V requesting a recognition for these achievements.[83] The king consulted the Council of the Indies, which proposed that Enríquez should receive the Medal of the Royal Effigy (Spanish: "Medalla de la Real Effigie") which knighted him as a Caballero of Spain.[83] The award was officially presented on March 12, 1712.[84] This awoke the ire of the higher classes, who could not fathom how a mulato could receive such a recognition.[84] Enríquez was the first Puerto Rican presented with this distinction and also received the honorific of Don.[84][85] From this point onwards, this title preceded his name in any official documentation.[84] However, his adversaries intentionally avoided employing the honorific.[84] The following year, Enríquez was granted a Royal Auxiliary Identification Document, which allowed him to overcome the arbitrary restrictions that he encountered in some Caribbean ports.[86] This rare privilege shielded him from the authorities of the other Spanish colonies, redirecting any conflict to the tribunal of the Council of the Indies.[87] By the end of his five-year term, Danío had earned 55,179 pieces of eight, more than five times the amount that he would have earned by solely fulfilling his office.[68]

Between 1709 and 1714, Enríquez's fleet captured six British victims and nine ships belonging to the Netherlands.[70] Besides assaulting the enemies of Spain, they also seized five vessels from the adjacent Virgin Islands.[70] The loot acquired included clothes, food and money.[70] During this timeframe, Enríquez's fleet also included La María, San José, La Gloria, La Perla, San Antonio, Los Montes, Nuestra Señora del Rosario and El Jenízaro.[70] He frequently recycled these names for other vessels.[70] Of them, La Aurora was the first known to operate outside the Caribbean, capturing El Príncipe de Asturias off the coast of New England in 1712.[88] Despite the fact that Enríquez worked under a Spanish letter of marque, La Aurora was actually flying a British flag and operating under forged documents, selling its loot at Guadalupe.[89] Two years earlier, Enríquez had ordered his ships to stalk this British colony.[88] In 1714, San Miguel captured a British frigate in Philadelphia and brought it to San Juan.[88] By this time, Enríquez had established working relationships with several merchants from non-Spanish territories.[90] Santiago Giblens and Felipe Henríquez remained his principal foreign associates.[90] By legal definition, the Crown recognized all of them as contrabandists.[90] To avoid this, Enríquez created a system that allowed him to import their merchandise while labeling it as privateering goods.[91] He ordered his associates to send loaded ships towards the open sea and with prior knowledge, sent one of his own to stage a capture.[91] Then the crew of his partner would safely return home in another vessel.[91] Enríquez took this approach with extreme precaution, asking that the letters discussing these plan should only be carried by a trusted person that could handle them personally.[91] To this ends, he employed his contacts within the Catholic Church and the captains of his ships, all of whom would protect him.[92] Besides this, the other parts were cautioned to avoid discussing these transactions even with close friends.[91] To ensure that they remained loyal, Enríquez often offered them gifts.[93] These were usually jewels or similar items, but on one occasion he returned a ship named La Anaronel, that had been captured by La Perla, back to the governor of St. Thomas to avoid conflicts with Giblens.[93] Enríquez secured this alliance by also offering a loaded vessel as a gift to his associate.[94] He rewarded his connections within the Church by importing items not found in Puerto Rico through these deals.[94] Furthermore, Enríquez requested that a jewelry in Barbados made several diamond rings, for both sexes, which he also used as gifts.[94]

Silver shortage and feud with Ribera

The Situado was Puerto Rico's main source of silver coins, by dominating it Enríquez guaranteed complete control over the local market.[95] However, this move was complicated and the only way that he could accomplish it was by involving the governors and other royal representatives, forming a mutually beneficial endeavor.[95] He sold his privateering goods priced with Billon real coins, which were then used to pay the military.[nb 2][95] By the time that the silver coins of the Situado arrived to pay the military, they had already been paid and the silver was paid back to Enríquez.[96] By doing this he not only gained local dominance, but was acquiring a type of coin that would be accepted in all foreign markets.[95] However, this was not without problems, since the Situado was often late or incomplete, Enríquez would often face problems with liquidity.[96] In at least one occasion, this resulted in the confiscation of an account worth 4,000 pieces of eight.[97] Due to this, he experienced anxiety and would often issue letters requesting his associates to be patient and even requested credit until the silver arrived.[96] Tired of operating at a loss, Enríquez created a plan by himself. When the governor of Curaçao proposed an exchange of European goods, he employed Felipe Henríquez as his representative and the three of them evaluated the creation of a unique structure to acquire the desired silver.[98] The governor and Felipe would provide the capital, while he would employ his ships, the profits and losses would be shared equitably.[98] Enríquez would send one of his ships under the excuse of privateering, but in reality the vessel was going to dock at Curaçao and would load with European merchandise.[98] From there, the ship would travel to Veracruz, where the items would be sold as privateering goods in exchange for silver.[98] To hide this from view, the vessel would return to San Juan loaded with some merchandise.[98] The following voyage would be similar, albeit with a scale at La Guaira, where they would load with cocoa before traveling to Curaçao.[98] After traveling to Veracruz, they would only sell the European items, with the cocoa being introduced to Puerto Rico as privateering goods.[98] Enríquez expected to organize at least two yearly voyages under this format and even proposed the construction of a larger vessel, which would be boarded in the Curaçao scale.[98]

However, the plan was brought to a halt with the arrival of the newly designated governor, Juan de Ribera.[99] On July 18, 1711, he was officially appointed by the king, but he could only take office when his predecessor's term was over.[100] Prior to arriving to Puerto Rico, Ribea and Enríquez exchanged friendly letters.[100] The privateer lowered his guard, expecting to have a productive relation with the future governor.[101] While exchanging letters, Enríquez spent over 20,000 pieces of eight as gifts and other considerations and even lent his best vessel, La Gloria, so that Ribera could arrive.[101] He also made sure that La Fortaleza was fitted with supplies to last several months.[102] Ribera arrived to San Juan on December 23, 1713, replacing Danío. Enríquez was confident that with his previous actions he had gained the governor's favor, but noticing that his ship arrived fully loaded likely offered an early warning that the functionary actually intended to compete with him.[102] Ribera had manipulated the privateer, projecting a benign posture to avoid waking any suspicion.[103] Having spent the two years after being appointed in the adjacent Cumaná and Margarita, the governor had observed the models used in the Americas and established connections, also becoming familiar with Enríquez's own modus operandi.[103] Shortly after taking office, Ribera attempted to eradicate privateering from Puerto Rico for his own benefit.[99] He quickly employed his connections in attempts to take over Enríquez's market.[104] After completing his first term, Danío left his entire fortune in charge of Enríquez, while he returned to Spain.[7] They agreed that the money would be sent there when needed. However, the arrangement was difficult, since the money was filtered by small quantities or failed to arrive at all.[7] Ribera would employ the privateer's own model against him, mimicking several of his tactics, albeit in a more aggressive fashion.[104] Considering Enríquez a direct adversary, the governor intercepted his mail and took over profitable associations.[105]

"I find myself informed on several occasions [and] by reliable people of the particular love and zeal with which you have dedicated yourself to my royal service, always maintaining ten or twelve corsair vessels in your coast, well armed and staffed with the finality of cleaning the coasts of this island and of those of Windward of the pirate enemies, that infest them and having attended many other assignments in my service, such as transporting my royal orders and documents to different ports of this America as well as other supplementary work that you have done on your own and by your own wealth with no charge to my royal fortune. Having just learned how governor don Juan de Ribera has stripped you violently, taking away the corsair vessels and other effects, I have ordered a prosecution against him, by law, due to this and other charges and the entire restitution [of your wealth] so you can carry on as you were with your loyal privateering, zeal and disinterest, which would be of my royal satisfaction."

— Royal Decree from Philip V to Enríquez informing him of the destitution of Juan de Ribera, February 10, 1716.

Ribera systematically stripped Enríquez of his belongings, also launching a campaign to discredit him among Spanish merchants.[14] The governor took control of the shipyard and used it to construct a sloop, a brigantine and a schooner.[69] The animosity between both was fueled by the fact that no side was willing to recognize the authority granted to the other. On one occasion the governor asked him to certify (on behalf of the Royal Guinea Company) that a ship had not returned, after it arrived from St. Thomas loaded with an illegal haul, but Enríquez refused to commit fraud.[14] Due to the pressure involved, he was ultimately forced to do so. However, Enríquez visited the Secretary of Government, who served as a witness of the act.[106] The same occurred later with a ship that arrived from Trinidad, but this time he firmly refused, claiming that he was willing to risk his life if that meant conserving his honor.[106]

During this administration, a new treasurer was appointed to Puerto Rico, José del Pozo Oneto.[107] Enríquez had tried to win the functionary's favor when he arrived, providing slaves and several other gifts.[108] The first year of his incumbency was nominal, however, in early 1717 a series of conflicts between them became apparent.[109] According to a witness account, these differences began when Enríquez refused to loan 4,000 pieces of eight that Pozo wanted for personal matters.[109] Another factor could have been that the treasurer owned several stores in San Juan and was competing with the privateer in auctions.[110] Eventually, Pozo sided with another man that was battling to gain power, dean Martín Calderón.[111] Throughout Ribera's term, the elite class of San Juan launched a disparaging campaign, offended by the fact that a mulato had essentially become the most influential figure in Puerto Rico.[112] They would constantly address the Spanish Crown and accused him of smuggling, a notable concern during the era, or attempted to disregard his privateering skills.[113] The high class group that led the campaign was the Calderón family, to which the dean belonged.[114] It is likely that these differences materialized years before, but that these groups were simply waiting for the opportune moment to act on them.[115] Despite their status, the Calderón family was notorious for being involved with contraband and Ribera allied with them to pursue his own goals.[116] The family even employed the influence of one of his members to create divisions between Enríquez and the newly arrived bishop Pedro de la Concepción Urtiaga.[117] He was able to counter these accusations following the arrival of a prelate that favored him, neutralizing their influence.[117]

With the Calderón family on his side, Ribera decided to ignore all of the remaining families due to internal divisions.[117] The governor went as far as eliminating any group that may threaten his intentions of creating a commercial monopoly.[117] Ribera, unable to directly confiscate Heríquez's fleet and wealth due to the Royal Auxiliary Identification Document had decided to employ indirect tactics to drive him off business.[118] Towards these ends, Ribera forced Enríquez to provide his employees and resources for free.[119] The governor exploited this to create his own fleet, with the intention of completely overtaking the privateering venture.[119] Ribera also made sure that Enríquez's fleet was constantly occupied in menial or redundant tasks, requesting their service 19 times.[120] The authorities seized the best ship of the lot, La Gloria, never paying the sum that it was worth.[121] Another form of physiological warfare employed by the governor was keeping the fleet perpetually docked with the constant denial of privateering licenses and the frequent ruling that its captures were "not fair game".[122] Only five licenses were granted and Ribera also confiscated the entire profit of legitimate privateering incursions, citing that the loot belonged to the Crown due to his personal authorization.[123] This inactivity concluded with several of Enríquez's men deserting and becoming pirates, only to return days after to antagonize the governor.[124] These pirates also boarded one of his former employer's privateering sloops.[125] The conclusion of the War of Succession complicated matters more, since French men were now forbidden from working as corsairs for Spain.[125] This meant that a large portion of the sailors working for Enríquez's fleet were expelled.[126] The bishop quickly took notice and denounced these actions, avoiding the mail interception of the government.[119] After briefly considering a relocation to Santo Domingo, Enríquez launched a counterattack.[127] He proposed to the local authorities that they should speak on his behalf, accomplishing this through several figures, including Danío.[127] Ribera was accused of creating a contraband bank before the king, while accountant Antonio Paris Negro highlighted Enríquez's work.[128] These frequent letters began to tip the balance in the privateers favor, but time favored the governor.[129] Based on this, Enríquez granted Danío the rights to serve as his extra-official representative and provided him a vessel in which to travel to Madrid.[129] Ribera attempted and failed to block the voyage, but succeeded in stalling it and forcing an additional scale.[129] Once there, Danío acted to expose Ribera and pursued a return to office.[130] Locally, Enríquez convinced functionaries to send complaints devised by himself while portraying them as being personal.[130] Paris Negro was a prominent member of this initiative.[130] Furthermore, these letters were used to also accuse the Calderón family.[131]

During the final months of 1715, the Council of the Indies was investigating Ribera, confirming that some of the complaints were real.[132] As a result, Francisco Fernández del Barco was assigned to evaluate his administration.[133] Ribera's anti-privateering politics were abolished. A few days after, Fernández issued two documents that secretly prepared the governor's eventually deposition.[134] The first was sent to the governor of Cumaná, José Carreño, and requested that he travel to Puerto Rico and execute the confiscation of Rivera's property and interests with the help of local authorities which was done on May 3, 1716.[nb 3][134] The governor was then to be held captive at La Fortaleza, without communication separated from any allies, being then transferred to a jail.[135] The second letter restituted all of the property that Ribera had stripped from Enríquez.[134] The prosecution was swift, only two months later Fernández arrived to San Juan, taking control of the charges.[136] Carreño took the office temporally, until the appointed interim governor arrived.[136] Ribera and his associates were charged with contraband and monopolizing the market, falsely gathering money for causes that never materialized and of exploiting the Situado, among other things.[137] He was sentenced to pay 40,317 pieces of eight and he was forced to pay an additional sum of 86,370 to Enríquez.[138] Afterwards, Ribera remained imprisoned in El Morro until a frigate named La Reina arrived to take him to Spain.[139] After only serving for nearly two years, the former governor was returned to Spain chained.[16] However, this ordeal had a considerable impact on Enríquez's fortune, which was further exacerbated by the fact that he decided to sustain his employees despite the fact that his fleet was not sailing.[140]

Acquiring unparalleled wealth

In 1716, Enríquez made a suggestion to Carreño that they organize an expedition and take the island of Saint Thomas.[141] The interim governor sent an official proposal and noted his belief that the privateer and 500 militiamen would suffice and that no royal investment would be needed, but ultimately desisted of the idea after the project failed to gain approval.[11][141] Alberto Bertolano took the office of governor from Carreño, being sworn on August 30, 1716.[142] As usual, Enríquez tried to earn his favor.[143] However, due to his role as interim governor, Bertolano distanced himself from any of the groups that dominated the Puerto Rican society.[144] This approach did not please Enríquez, who went on to claim that his opponents, led by Pozo, were being favored.[144] An argument that was ironically repeated by them.[144] However, the governor was instrumental in helping Enríquez to resume his role as a privateer.[145] After months of reorganization that required contracting a new crew, he was able to command two small vessels, a sloop and a schooner, to resume his venture.[145] These two ships were lost shortly afterwards, resetting the process.[146] Enríquez decided to purchase four sloops, naming them El Águila, La Perla, La Aurora and El Fénix.[147] His fleet was systematically rebuilt, with the further acquisition of El Delfín, La Modista, La Pequeña Aurora and Nuestra Señora de Altagracia, Nuestra Señora del Rosario and San Miguel y las Animas.[147] The rebuilding phase extended for a period of three years, and it experienced the loss of La Perla, but once it was concluded, Enríquez's fleet was stronger than its original incarnation.[146] He now employed around 300 sailors and requested help to military supervision to control them.[146] The fleet captured eight Danish vessels named La Margarita, La Juana, Neptuno, Vliegende, Leeduyuel, Leojane and Brelot.[148] St. Thomas's governor complained to Bertolano, noting that they were being captured despite the fact that both nations were not at war, but this claim was dismissed, citing that no foreign ship was allowed to fish near Puerto Rico.[148] La Modista went on to capture three of the four British vessels captured after that nation joined an alliance and declared war on Spain in 1719.[148] Most were captured in a reconnaissance mission, however, their delivery was complicated by the arrival of a British privateer, who engaged them in battle.[149] La Modista won that exchange and returned to San Juan with his captures.[149] Another one, loaded with military provisions, was captured the following year.[150] However, this declaration of war also hurt Enríquez's interest, since he was forced to surrender all of the property that belonged to the Real Asiento.[151] He declared that he no longer possessed anything that belonged to the company.[151] With the embargo taking an extended time period, Enríquez likely hid the Real Asiento's property during the wait and keep them for himself.[151] Pozo was not pleased with this outcome and requested the intervention of dean Martín Calderón, expecting the church to intervene.[152] Harassed by the ecclesiastical investigation, Enríquez requested a license permitting a move to Cuba, which was granted but never materialized.[152] The arrival of a new bishop, Fernando de Valdivia, prevented the migration.[152] Before leaving Spain, the friar had received requests to favor the privateer.[152] Enríquez paid the voyage and offered Valdivia all sorts of gifts, including a house, jewels and slaves, spending at least 3,000 pieces of eight.[153] For the next two weeks, the Bishop only had contact with the privateer, even ignoring the governor.[153] Valvidia eventually established a lukewarm relation with the authorities, which was always superseded by his friendship with Enríquez.[154] With his power, the Bishop revoked the actions of Matín Calderón and placed the blame of the conflicts on the dean and treasurer.[153] Operating on its own, La Aurora captured a Netherlands sloop, La Sara, near the coast of Santo Domingo.[150] Meanwhile, La Perla, La Juana and El Fénix were employed in diplomatic voyages.[155] Transporting royal documents when requested became a recurrent mission.[156] La Aurora and El Águila ferried members of the judiciary branch, including Fernández.[155] La Modista continued with this success, also seizing a French frigate named La Trinidad de Burdeos off Vieques.[150] However, this particular prey created a conflict between Enríquez and Pozo, who argued that it should have been considered spoils of war rather than privateering goods.[150] The privateer won this conflict, retaining its cargo.[157] Ultimately, both sides continued to perpetually exchange accusations and insults.[158] Despite running a generally neutral administration, Bertolano was accused of being biased by both sides after his term concluded.[144]

Throughout the years, Enríquez remained mostly focused in his role as a merchant, exploiting this distinction to move legal and smuggled products with success.[159] He could easily use his privateering ships to launder goods that were otherwise illegal, investing the saving in land and properties.[160] On occasion, he even received permission to openly import illegal merchandise.[159] He used these exceptions to compensate for materials that were lacking in Puerto Rico.[161] His enemies tried to expose him, but with little success. In 1718, they testified that Enríquez had smuggled clothes and other items hidden aboard the sloop La Gloria.[161] Led by Pozo, the group launched another defamatory campaign against him.[162] The attorney of San Juan even blamed him for a shortage of food, after he attempted to export 700 units of merchandise citing that the market was oversaturated.[163] Due to this action the food was retained at port and spoiled.[163] As a consequence, Enríquez deduced that for the well-being of his business, the best was to move and sell the merchandise as far away as possible.[164] His sloops were sent in long voyages, with the incursions of La Aurora and El Águila lasting periods of nearly two years and nine months respectively.[162] They operated and moved merchandise between Habana, Santiago and Cartagena.[162] These ships were likely buying and selling contraband by veiling it as products captured by privateering.[164] Upon returning to San Juan, both of these vessels arrived without any privateering spoils.[162] Despite this, Enríquez gathered so much merchandise that it was unrivaled in Puerto Rico, selling anything that covered basic necessities of the citizens, ranging from food to brushes, razors, leather, locks and clothes.[165] They also offered other commodities, such as playing cards, wines imported from Spain and equipment required for horse riding.[166] Enríquez managed four warehouses, which besides storing merchandise were also used to manufacture anything that his ships needed.[166] He divided them by class, separating the ones where food was stored from the ones where backup equipment was kept.[167]

However, this model also had its drawbacks, since it was linked to the sort of relationship that he had with the authorities, with cities like Santo Domingo, Margarita and Santiago blocking him on occasion.[168] Despite the volatile nature of his business model, Enríquez managed to secure a massive fortune. In 1716, he personally quantified the amount that Juan de Ribera owed him at 86,370 pieces of eight, which added to 20,000 that he donated, would place his fortune in at least 106,370.[169] Fourteen witnesses claimed that based on the number of houses, haciendas, slaves, ships and amounts of other capital, his fortune should have surpassed at least 100,000.[168] Enríquez himself stated that by then it was over 150,000 pieces of eight.[169] Antonio Camino, who managed the money claimed that when all of the capital was added, the total ranged between 350,000 and 400,000.[170] Valdivia supported this assertion, noting that Enríquez's house contained more items than any other house in Puerto Rico, without including its warehouses.[169] Furthermore, his haciendas produced sugar cane, cattle and crops, which were lucrative ventures by themselves.[171]

Paramilitary defense operations

In 1718, one of the privateering vessels was captured by a St. Thomas corsair.[53] Due to this incident, the crew learned that the British were settling the island of Vieques.[172] Governor Bertolano ordered Enríquez to send someone to verify the veracity of this rumor.[173] He equipped two ships with military supplies and departed for Vieques.[173] The crew confirmed the information and set sail to San Juan. During its return, the ships located a small boat with seven black men, which they captured and took to San Juan.[174] The group was fleeing from St. Thomas to Puerto Rico pursuing a baptism and protested their capture, but Enríquez ignored their plights and keep them as slaves.[174] He convinced the governor to list them as "privateering goods" despite the circumstances not falling under the stipulations of the letter of marque.[174] This also ignored royal decrees that allowed any slave that arrived to Puerto Rico pursuing a conversion to Catholicism the opportunity to become a free man.[174] Pozo opposed this move, managing to revoke the governor's original ruling.[175] Shortly afterwards, a vessel property of the Armada de Barlovento arrived to San Juan.[173] Bertolano told its commander, General José Roche de la Peña, about the situation in Vieques.[173] Bertolano decided to organize a mini-armada of five vessels.[173] Only one belonged to the Crown, the others were private. Enríquez loaned the sloop La Perla, which Roche commanded.[173] A makeshift crew was composed of privateers, members of the Puerto Rican urban militias and soldiers.[173] Once there, the local forces quickly overwhelmed the invaders, only suffering a single loss while the British lost over 30 men and other 59 were made prisoners of war.[176] Afterwards, the settlement was burned to the ground.[177] After successfully defeating the British in Vieques, La Perla intercepted a British ship traveling from Bermuda, capturing 72 slaves. Enríquez asked to list them as privateering goods instead of war spoils, but this was denied since La Perla had been supplied with public money.[175] The Crown scolded him for his actions during this event.[178] Besides his active participation, Enríquez also took the initiative of rebuilding the San José fort, undertaking most of the project's cost.[179]

On October 16, 1719, the royal vessel San Carlos docked in San Juan.[180] The boat needed repairs and requested Enríquez's help, who determined that the damage had been caused due to excessive cargo.[180] He responded by donating La Trinidad de Burdeos for free.[180] This move disarmed Pozo's posture, but the functionary replaced them with new bold claims, even claiming that the frigate was damaged.[180] All of the treasurer's complaints were dismissed and the ship left port.[181] That same year a conglomerate of his enemies sent a letter to the king, completely composed by critics and false accusations.[182] However, within a year Phillip V wrote a personal letter thanking Enríquez for his service.[156] His fleet had become the de facto guardian of the Caribbean, surpassing the efficiency of the Armada de Barlovento.[183] With growing contempt against him, Enríquez secured the well-being of his son by placing three houses in San Juan and a farm near Bayamón river (worth 20,000 pieces of eight) to the service of the church.[184] This move guaranteed that they would be beyond the reach of his enemies, with the intention that Vicente would end serving as the chaplain of these properties, receiving a stable income and inheriting at least part of his fortune.[185] To this end, he made a request to Valdivia so that Vicente could fulfill this role.[185] Despite this office, he would also aid his father manage his business.[186] Enríquez had also led an effort to rebuild the cathedral of San Juan.[187] Despite being of mixed race, Enríquez owned several African slaves, which served as an assertion of his social status and performed his menial tasks.[188] At least 50 were working in one of his haciendas, El Plantaje.[189] Enríquez owned another hacienda, Ribiera del Bayamón, where he employed 49 black slaves. Of which he might have fathered a significant portion of 21, which shared his last name, with most also being named Miguel.[190] The other option being that the parents of these children decided to adopt his name as a form of tribute for their master.[190] He maintained this group with three plantations that amassed over 7,982 plants and 10,000 yards where yuca was cultivated.[191] His haciendas were mostly dedicated to the support of his slaves, who in turn did most of the hard work that sustained his empire.[188] Enríquez employed more in his workshops and the port, performing works that varied from carpenters and blacksmiths to moving cargo and supply ships that were about to set sail.[189] Enríquez rarely bought these slaves and the few times that he did it was through the advantages provided by the Royal Asiento or the Guinea Company.[174] Most of them were actually acquired through his privateering vessels. Between 1716 and 1733, his ships captured over 176 slaves in this manner.[174] The most successful was La Modista, which captured a total of 95 enslaved Africans from British and Danish slave ships which were delivered directly to Enríquez.[174] Enríquez was the Puerto Rican that owned more slaves during his time and was reportedly harsh with them. His methods of discipline included holding them captive in his own private jail, food deprivation and flailing.[192] Between 1718 and 1720, several storms affected Puerto Rico, destroying the agriculture and causing a shortage of food and shelter.[193] To further complicate matters, an epidemic was declared, causing the death of several patients.[194] The residents of San Juan asked Enríquez to help, and he responded by donating 400 jars of melado (a type of food made from sugar and molasses) and an entire shipment of corn, which one of his ships had delivered.[194] He also took over the funeral services of the poor that died, paying the Church personally.[195]

The situation at Vieques was eventually repeated, this time in the San Juan cays.[196] Once again, it was thanks to the privateering fleet that the situation was made public.[197] This time the invaders were Danish, who had not only populated the cays, but already possessed functional agriculture, were working on the fortification of the settlements and building a port.[197] However, the local authorities largely ignored the matter.[197] Bertolano repeated his previous actions and ordered Enríquez to send a vessel to confirm the rumors.[197] The ship returned with two Danish victims captured during this visit.[197] Despite this, the local authorities only sent letters informing of the development to Madrid and the viceroy of New Spain.[198] On June 5, 1720, Phllip V requested Enríquez to loan all of his privateering sloops for this operation. However, the coincidental arrival of a small fleet from the Armada de Barlovendo changed the established course of action.[199] The local authorities organized a reunion to discuss what the proper course was.[199] The commander of the fleet, Rodrigo de Torres, quoted several excuses to avoid participating in the incursion ranging from lack of knowledge to weather conditions, ultimately refusing based on the lack of a direct order.[199] However, a communication from the viceroy detailing that a royal request ordered him to redirect the Armada de Barlovento to Puerto Rico for this purpose complicated the matters.[200] Enríquez felt that a single frigate was all that would be needed since his ships were enough to complete a competent fleet.[200] Torres' then offered more excuses and argued that the circumstances were not favorable, lacking the element of surprise.[200] The Armada de Barlovento left the port of San Juan afterwards and the operation was eventually aborted .[201] To further complicate matters, the political climate had changed just months before due to the alliance's victory over Spain, which resulted in the Treaty of The Hague.[202] The cays remained populated by foreigners, being inhabited by British and Dutch living under the flag of Denmark.[202] Parallel to this, the conflict with Pozo continued, when the treasurer noticed that Enríquez owed 2,986 pieces of eight in taxes he denounced it.[158] The Council of the Indies executed a secret investigation of the privateer, based on these allegations.[196] His years of loyalty to the Crown had been ignored by the king himself.[197] However, the process was delayed. Prior to this, Pozo had been even able to secure that his allies won the 1719 municipal elections, running a smear campaign against Enríquez to get them elected.[203] The process was plagued by irregularities, with viable voters being arbitrarily disqualified beforehand.[203]

Second term of Danío

On October 12, 1717, the Spanish Crown granted Danío a second term as governor of Puerto Rico.[204] This was a goal that he and Enríquez had originally planned since the end of his first administration.[205] However, with time the privateer lost interest, feeling that it was no longer necessary to secure his goals.[206] Danío did not take the office immediately since he was ordered to gather and equip a hundred soldiers that would accompany him.[207] The enemies of Enríquez panicked, fearing that the privateer would possess the support of the governor, bishop and accountant.[204] They soon launched an aggressive defamation campaign to revoke this appointment and seized as much control as they could before his arrival.[208] However, their initiative failed.[208] Enríquez and Danío had remained close following the first term, with one of his nephews receiving his education along Vicente.[27] However, the irregularity in the fulfillment of their previous agreement took a toll. Knowing this, Enríquez quickly tried to once again earn his favor through letters, directly accusing his adversaries of the breach of their accord.[209] Danío arrived to San Juan on April 6, 1720, and was immediately received by a belligerent Pozo, who told him that the privateers' enemies were now his own.[209] During the first months of this term, the governor actually persecuted this group.[210] Enríquez thrived, his fleet capturing four vessels, two from the Netherlands and one from Great Britain and France apiece.[211]

Soon after, Danío began a trial of residence that seized the properties of Pozo, who had since gathered a considerable fortune.[212] The former treasurer was also jailed and permanently vanished from the New World.[213] Furthermore, Danío also managed to acquire ecclesiastic censorship from Valvidia, who threatened his allies with eternal damnation.[213] Twelve residents soon revealed the places were Pozo has hidden part of his wealth.[213] The governor used the law as his weapon, who sentenced the other involved to pay a fine of 1,601 pieces of eight and banned them from serving in a public office for a period of ten years.[214] Some were even banished from San Juan. Those affected quickly countered by sending letters to the Crown, which responded by ordering the excarteration of Pozo, allowing him to present his case in Spain.[215] However, before the former treasurer could do that, he found himself involved in the secret investigation that was being done against Enríquez.[215] Due to the large number of accusations offered by each side, the Council of the Indies suspected both.[216] Judge Tomás Férnandez Pérez was placed in charge and arrived to San Juan in 1721.[216] Danío was also involved due to his friendship with the privateer and he was ordered to cooperate with the investigation by leaving San Juan while it was underway.[216] Fernández began by interrogating 21 of Enríquez's enemies, who offered the same arguments.[217] Once the judge heard all of their versions, he determined that they were merely motivated by their desire to punish the privateer.[217] The blame fell on Pozo and Francisco de Allende, with the entire group being jailed.[218]

Enríquez expected to emerge stronger from this process, however, his relationship with Danío quickly took a turn for the worst.[219] It is likely that the governor felt that the privateer was not willing to cooperate or help him during the investigation.[220] The remainder of Enríquez's enemies may have noticed this and pursued his favor, leaving Pozo and his faction alone.[220] During the course of the trial, the animosity between Danío and the privateer became evident.[221] The residents of San Juan were surprised, being familiar with their prior affinity.[221] None of them publicly declared the reason for the conflicts due to the contentious nature of the actions done during their partnership.[221] Under these circumstances, Enríquez found himself in a familiar position. With Danío's opposition, his privateering venture was endangered.[222] Once again Enríquez was forced to defend his role in the defense and supply of Puerto Rico from those that tried to minimize its importance.[222] Despite this, he was able to keep a number of vessels constantly active, being the owner of at least 20.[222] Enríquez did everything within his reach to keep a de facto monopoly over the local economy and despite the political tension, he was still turning a considerable profit.[223] The ships usually left San Juan without established routes or return dates, capturing their preys as they encountered them.[224] Even when they left with a predetermined destination, desertion and other factors commonly complicated their voyages.[225] For the most part, the ships operated under the discretion of their respective captains.[226] On occasion, they would even randomly ambush local vessels claiming that they were captures to "prevent contraband". Their tactics also placed them at odds with friendly ships, such as the Santo Domingo-based La Concordia, which nearly captured La Modista.[225]

Danío's first attempt to challenge this dominance was timid, he fomented more guarda costas and facilitated the emergence of new privateers.[223] Among them there was Miguel de Ubides, a vocal critic of Enríquez, who received the authorization to purchase a ship from the governor of Margarita.[223] Upon learning of this, the privateer quickly moved his connections.[223] Enríquez wrote to the governor of Margarita and requested that the ship was not sold to anyone from Puerto Rico.[223] Valvidia, who was also the bishop of Margarita, also interceded in his favor.[223] When Ubides arrived, he was told that the ship was no longer for sale.[223] He received the same response in the ports of Cumaná and La Guaira.[223] When two slaves were involved in an incident, they were imprisoned in Enríquez's private jail for a period of four months, until Danío ordered their release to antagonize him.[227] The governor also ordered the incarceration of Enríquez in El Morro for cheering posters where the images of several powerful figures were satirized.[16] He did not deny these accusations, instead simply responding that celebrating their use did not damage anyone.[16] Meanwhile, the governors of Margarita and Cumaná also helped the privateers by issuing licenses of their own, which resulted at least in the capture of a British vessel.[228] On March 13, 1721, a French merchant named Francisco de la Get, captain of the frigate Nuestra Señora de la Leche, brought a captured vessel intending to contact Enríquez.[229] They reached an agreement and the captain received the loan of La Modista and La Blanca, which would join the frigate to form a small fleet .[229] The first mission of this alliance was plagued by problems, with La Blanca being forced to remain in San Juan.[230] The crews of the different ships were also incapable of reaching a consensus regarding the preys that should be captured, with Enríquez's group trying to avoid Spanish ships.[230] Shortly afterwards, their alliance was dissolved.[230] Enríquez continued to perform favors for the Royal authorities, fixing their ship in his private shipyard and serving as a ferry for a variety of government and Church officials.[231]

Later that year, Enríquez fell victim to two embargoes, where his properties remained confiscated until 1724.[170] However, the authorities were only able to seize what was registered in his name, with neither jewels or coins being listed in the official forms.[170] It is assumed that he his this portion of his fortune where they could not retrieve it.[170] From these documents it was established that he was the wealthiest Puerto Rican of his time, capable of casually investing 500 pieces of eight.[232] In San Juan alone, Enríquez owned 13 well-equipped houses, several of which he employed for other purposes such as warehouses, carpenter and mechanic shops, an armory and a blacksmith.[233] Another one served as a hotel for notable visitors, while a third one was used to temporally house the Catholic Bishops.[233] Most of them were located at Santa Bárbara street, adjacent to the San Justo marina.[233] His main house was one of the most complete 18th century houses on record and it was equipped with several luxurious decorations, including several pieces of art, but it was also partially converted into a warehouse and store.[234] This marked a stark contrast in a time where the government heavily depended on the Situado and the governor's salary was only 2,200 pieces of eight, while other high-ranking figures did not even reach 800 and common professionals barely reached 3 per day.[232] By 1723, Enríquez had developed a reputation for altruism, reportedly helping neighbors and foreigners alike.[193] On a yearly basis, he continued to work with charity, donating to treat the sick and providing clothes for the poor.[235] However, this actions did not sit well with his enemies, who made efforts to minimize their impact.[195] Despite these efforts, on a personal level Enríquez's grew to dislike the prospect of manual labor and adapted his clothing and diet to that of the higher class that attacked himself, expressing disdain when the only food available was that commonly consumed by the poor.[236]

When the sloop Santiago docked in San Juan carrying royal documents and the governor-elect of Caracas, Danío ordered Enríquez to loan another vessel to transport the politician.[237] The privateer complied and granted them La Venganza, which sailed under Mateo de Luque.[237] The ship then stopped at Cumaná to deliver the documents.[237] In the return trip, La Venganza captured a British ship, sending its prey back to San Juan and docking at Buenavista awaiting further orders.[238] While there, Danío ordered that La Venganza completed an escort mission to Santiago.[239] The governor had declared the British ship a legitimate prey, but as soon as the party left he changed his original ruling.[238] The mission was concluded and they had received orders to return directly, but were low on supplies and were ambushed while trying to fool the crew of a ship by flying a friendly flag.[240] The British crew intended to leave them stranded in Jamaica, however, they found the papers of the ship captured during their previous mission.[239] The crew were treated as pirates and placed on trial as soon as they arrived to Jamaica. 33 of the 41 members of the crew were executed shortly afterward.[240] Enríquez blamed the orders of Danío for the audacious actions of his fleet.[241]

In 1722, Enríquez alleged in a letter to the Spanish Crown that since his return Danío had only pursued the appropriation of his fortune.[221] These accusations were backed by Valdivia and Paris.[221] However, the governor was likely simply trying to recover the wealth that he had left in charge of the privateer years before.[221] Enríquez tried to bring an end to the conflict by offering a sum between 15,000 and 20,000 pieces of eight to Danío.[242] However, this offering was declined.[242] Furthermore, both could never agree on the amount of money that was owed due to their previous arrangement, with the governor claiming that it was 42,261 pieces of eight, but the privateer rebuffing that it was a shared debt and that the fortune was spent in critical investments.[243] Enríquez even told the king that he possessed a document stating that he was actually the creditor of the governor's fortune and as such owned nothing.[242] This infuriated Danío, who ordered his incarceration on December 9, 1722.[242] Antonio Camino, was also jailed but soon escaped and traveled to Havana.[242] Once there, he began collecting positive accounts for his employer.[244] Among those that agreed to help were a group of military officials that had been neglected by Danío in October 1720, only to be fully attended by Enríquez.[244] After gathering the support, Camino traveled to Spain where he spoke in the privateer's behalf for over a year.[245] Valdivia tried to request an excarceration with external help, but Enríquez remained in jail.[245] The relationship between the Church functionary and the privateer had been criticized by Danío.[246] To further antagonize Enríquez, he created a system of official privateering by reassigning the sloop Santiago, confiscated along his other property.[247] Ubides became involved in this venture, but the plan backfired and the ship was captured by a pirate brigantine sailing from Martinique in its first mission.[247] The entire blame fell on Danío, who had staffed the boat with an inexperienced crew that did not know how to react once they witnessed a jolly roger.[248] Seeking an escape, the governor devised an account where he blamed Camino, claiming that he had provided route information to the pirates, supposedly acting on Enríquez's behalf.[248] Danío claimed that the privateer formed an alliance with the pirates so that he could freely import illegal contraband and he even tried to bribe a St. Thomas sailor with 1,000 pieces of eight so that his account had a witness.[248] The governor tried to restart the official privateering project, meeting moderate success by mimicking the pirate code's repartition of the loot captured.[249] They captured three vessels, two from France and Great Britain and a third one sailed by freebooters.[249]

In Spain, Camino's testimony gained the attention of the Council of the Indies which suggested to the king that Danío was investigated and that a new governor should be named to eventually replace him.[250] Phillip V named José Antonio de Isasi .[250] The Council also requested the liberation of Enríquez and the restitution of his property.[250] However, this failed to materialize since Isasi remained in Spain for nearly a year after his appointment and by 1724 he surrendered the nomination.[251] The Council named Captain José Antonio de Mendizábal as his replacement.[251] While preparing, the military officer received strict orders to jail Danío and liberate Enríquez as soon as he arrived to San Juan.[251] As usual, the privateer also took the initiative to gain his favor.[252] On August 23, 1724, Mendizábal took the office of governor and only six days afterwards he ordered the incarceration of his predecessor.[252] In the end, Enríquez succeeded in bringing an end to Danío's second term.[16] He suffered the same fate of Juan de Ribera.[5] However, Danío's case dragged on for a prolonged time period, forcing him to remain captive in El Morro until at least 1730. The former governor was subsequently transported to Madrid, where he remained in jail.[253] Enríquez provided transport to Danío's prosecutor, Simón Belenguer so he could return to Spain, but was unable to gain his favor.[254] This functionary criticized all of the involved and even argued that the privateer's actions were more akin to a pirate than to a military officer.[255] However, Belenguer placed most of the blame on Enríquez and issued harsher sentences to his allies that to his enemies.[256] Dean Martín Calderon and Pozo were declared free of guilt.[257] To justify his actions, Mendizábal conducted his own investigation.[253] During this process, even the former allies of Danío testified against him.[253]

Later years

Following Danío's trial, Enríquez received full support from Mendizábal.[258] The governor largely ignored Balaguer's sentence.[258] The Mendizábal administration became the most tranquil time period in Enríquez's career.[258] On July 21, 1727, one of his ships brought a British prey, which was renamed El Postillón, quickly becoming an instrumental part of the fleet.[259] In Spain, Phillip V was briefly replaced by Louis I, only to return to the Crown.[258] The king quickly introduced a new politic that focused on Spain 's superiority in the Atlantic.[260] This created a new rift between the Empire and Great Britain, which directly benefited Enríquez.[261] The First Secretary of State, José Patiño, decided that the privateer's fleet would be employed towards this end.[262] This functionary archived all the complaints issued by his enemies, dismissing the efficiency of their work.[262] Enríquez's fleet defended the local trade, a difficult mission due to the proximity of St. Thomas to Puerto Rico.[263] During the summer of 1728, he was forced to attend a local enemy. Captain Isidro Álvarez de Nava and other members of the military were plotting to assassinate Mendizábal and the privateer.[264] Word of this reached the governor on June 26, 1728, but was largely ignored. Álvarez was the most experienced military captain and would take the office of governor in case of death.[265] He was also related to Fernando de Allende, who insisted that if Enríquez survived, the assassination would fail in turning the balance of power.[265] Two unsuccessful attempts were organized against the privateer.[266] A subsequent confession, offering full detail of the plot, put an end to it. The conspirators vehemently denied these accusations, claiming that Enríquez was framing them.[267] The governor negotiated with the soldiers and convinced them to submit to a temporary sentence in El Morro.[268] Afterwards, Álvarez was released and continued his defense at Madrid.[268]

Led by El Postillón, El Pequeño P., La Amarilla, La Verdad and La Fe, his vessels captured 56 British merchant ships during the Anglo-Spanish War.[269] This constituted nearly half of their merchant fleet.[270] With his vessels playing a key role to secure Spain's dominance over Great Britain, Enríquez made a bold request for a mulato, asking Patiño to help him reach the rank of Royal Admiral.[271] The secretary never answered this petition.[271] The actions of Enríquez soon gained notoriety among the merchants affiliated to the South Sea Company, who gave him the nickname "The Grand Archvillain".[85] One of them once described him by saying "[Enríquez] has raised himself to be in effect King, at least more than Governor of Porto Rico (sic)".[85] The impact of his fleet on British merchants was such that on February 24, 1728, that he became the topic of the House of Commons of Great Britain in London.[270] There, its members decided to send several military captains to directly attack Enríquez's fleet.[270] Several British warships were sent to San Juan in order to demand restitution for the lost vessels.[270] The British ambassador to Madrid also wrote to Patiño demanding the return of the vessels.[272] These requests did not produce an immediate effect.[273] Enríquez was a topic of inquiry in this entity a total of 12 times during a period of five years, with most complaints being filed by military officers and governors from Jamaica.[1]

Mendizábal's cooperation benefited both his business and his military influence, and the governor went as far as employing politics to favor him. On one night, a group of 23 slaves escaped from El Plantaje and were joined by some employees from his shipyard.[274] Consequently in May 1728, Enríquez ordered two of his ships to go to St. Thomas to reclaim the slaves that had escaped. He also ordered that if this could not be accomplished, they should go to the San Juan cays and capture as many as possible, which they did and returned with 24 slaves.[175] Taking notice, Mendizábal requested a treaty with Denmark that allowed the return or replacement of slaves that escaped between Puerto Rico and St. Thomas.[275] Despite being fully invested in the war effort, Enríquez also continued to serve the Crown in other aspects. His fleet was forced to secure the arrival of Cumaná's Situado, evading a British squadron.[276] Enríquez also continued providing transport to the authorities and even some civilians.[276] That same year, he sent Camino to Havana in order to complete a task.[277] However, Enríquez's confidant failed when he lost the relevant documentation, losing to a local privateer and costing a significant amount of money.[277] The privateer was angered by this development, Camino responded by reclaiming payment for his entire career and threatened that he would travel to Spain seeking retribution.[278] Enríquez's enemies considered this an opportunity to give credibility to their allegations.[278]

However, as years went by the number of captured vessels became consistently smaller due to Spain's shifting its focus to the Mediterranean.[259] Enríquez also lost his influence within the Church with the arrival of a new bishop, Sebastián Lorenzo Pizarro, who declined any gift or favor that he offered.[279] After the war ended, the Empire's relation with Great Britain normalized, further complicating this venture.[259] Under these circumstances, the work of Enríquez served as an obstacle and by 1731, Mendizábal's last year in office, he was no longer considered a key asset in the New Word.[259] In 1731, Enríquez sent two sloops to spy on a British warship that had been sailing adjacent to San Juan for a week.[264] This action interfered with the international relations between both nations, Patiño now intended to rebuild the Empire's armada and required peace to accomplish this task. The sudden change in geopolitics combined with conclusion of Mendizábal's term began a downward spiral for Enríquez's life.[280] On October 11, 1731, Matías de Abadía docked at San Juan and took office a few hours later.[280] He arrived in one of Enríquez's ships after his original vessel lost registration midway.[280] A military officer, Abadía was accompanied by three trusted men, who were quickly placed in the pivotal offices of treasurer of Puerto Rico, overseer and manager of the city.[281] Even before traveling to San Juan, the governor had orders to settle the constant conflicts between its residents.[282] Abadía was also placed in charge of attending Camino's case against Enríquez and of investigating the assassination attempts.[282] Following his intervention, the cases of Danío and Álvarez were suddenly re-evaluated by the Council of the Indies and Enríquez was forced to pay 4,000 pieces of eight to the former governor, despite the fact that the investigation had already been closed.[283] Álvarez was also released and reinstated in his military position, with the privateer being forced to pay again.[283] The influence that Enríquez once possessed was now wavering and he was likely being held accountable for the incidents of the previous decades.[283] His enemies exploited this and bishop Pizarro aligned himself with the governor, only contacting the privateer to order the use of his vessels for transportation.[284] The fact that Spain needed a scapegoat to appease the British government complicated his position.[285]

Despite being under constant pressure, Enríquez tried to continue his privateering business, expecting things to normalize as they had in the past.[286] However, his venture suffered directly and his fleet only captured two confirmed preys, both were Spanish ships that were carrying contraband and were seized by the sloop La Isabela.[286] Due to the circumstances, vessels previously under his sway, spent most of their time operating outside Puerto Rico, since they were otherwise employed in non-lucrative government missions when they returned.[204] Eventually Enríquez systematically lost all of his vessels except a small schooner, which the governor ordered to be disarmed.[286] Furthermore, knowing the lucrative nature of the practice, Abadía employed front men that worked as privateers for him.[287] Eventually, he decided to abandon privateering altogether.[288] During the final months of 1732, Abadía sentenced Enríquez for not paying Camino and another group of merchants.[289] The former was to receive 5,800 pieces of eight, the salary of ten years, despite the protest of the privateer who reclaimed what he had given to his former trustee.[289] Enríquez tried to appeal, but before a sentence was reached Abadía forced him to pay.[290] The privateer gave 20 slaves that were worth the fine.[290] Furthermore, Enríquez was forced to pay 21,631 additional pieces of eight for an unrelated matter.[290] The merchants were demanding 72,285 which Abadía also granted, despite the fact that Enríquez assured that the debt was paid.[291] The governor's stance led to the arrival of several alleged creditors, which in turn reclaimed their own purported debts, some dating back nearly thirty years.[291] Twenty-two cases were open for the total of 199,129 pieces of eight, 4 reales and 11 maravedís.[291] The Crown itself reclaimed 25,069 pieces of eight and 2 reales for a trade, equipment and the capture of a slaving vessel by La Modista.[292] The Church also demanded 27,291 pieces of eight based on three transactions.[292] In the end, even the totality of Enríquez's fortune would not be enough to pay the entire sum.[293]

A complete embargo was ordered by Abadía in 1733.[284] Mysteriously, the entire fortune was only estimated to be worth 43,000 pieces of eight, although the worth of his slaves alone was known to surpass this sum and he had invested 150,000 recently.[293] Since his goods were insufficient to pay the debt, Abadía complied with the demands of Camino and seized the chaplaincies that were created by Enríquez's donation to the Catholic Church, leaving his son without a place to practice.[186] Vicente tried to appeal at the Royal Audiencia of Santo Domingo.[294] However, his plights were ignored and the governor's ruling was upheld. In 1734, Enríquez issued a complaint stating that Abadía was prohibiting him from using the title of Caballero of the Royal Effigy and requesting a confirmation of said title.[295] The Council of the Indies preferred to ignore the request, instead telling the privateer to show the relevant medal to the governor.[295] That same year, Abadía judged the Mendizábal administration and ordered the incarceration of the former governor, basing his entire case on the complaints of Pozo.[295] Enríquez was also involved in the prosecution, which focused on his supposed debts.[289] He tried to provide his own documentation, but the governor declined.[296]

In May 1735, Vicente died, filling the former privateer with guilt.[294] Attempting to escape the administration of Abadía, Enríquez took refuge in the Convent of Santo Tomás on October 30, 1735. He remained there after hearing rumors that he was going to be jailed at El Morro.[186] However, even there the governor pursued him. Abadía requested permission to obtain a search warrant and check if Enríquez had taken any wealth there.[294] All of the rooms were rummaged, but nothing of worth was found.[294] Despite this, Abadía confiscated Enríquez's correspondence.[294] Incredulous, the former privateer requested a certification for the search warrant.[297] Between 1735 and 1737, Enríquez wrote to Phillip V six times requesting an independent prosecutor that could launch a neutral investigation.[298] He also offered to reorganize the now scattered privateers.[298] However, the king never replied directly and the only response, issued by the Council of the Indies, informed him that they did not consider that action convenient.[298] From that moment onwards, Enríquez only wrote to detail his misery and to request the payment of an old debt.[299] During the following years, his only contact to the outside world was through the Dominican friars.[300] To Enríquez's chagrin, Abadía had unusual longevity in the office of governor, with the Crown granting him time beyond the stipulated five years.[301] In 1740, the Council of the Indies revised Mendizábal's case and issued a declaration restoring his honor and rank.[296] However, they never did the same for Enríquez, despite being charged as a supposed accomplice of the former governor.[296] Most of his friend eventually left, only Paris and the members of the Church remained besides him.[302] On June 29, 1743, Abadía died while still in office.[303] Five months afterwards, Enríquez died a sudden death.[303] After receiving the Extreme Unction, his body was laid to rest in a mass grave as a charity, since he was penniless and nobody paid for a burial.[304] Only Paris and Rosa Enríquez, his unrecognized daughter who would later claim that he had been poisoned, mourned his death.[304]

Legacy

The progress of the fortunate mulato ended up bringing him enemies; envy merged to the racial prejudices so deeply rooted in those times.

Salvador Brau's take of Enríquez's life in 1854

With its goal finally accomplished, the high class of San Juan did its part to erase Enríquez's presence from the collective memory of Puerto Rico.[304] His loyalty to the Crown was also ignored by the same authorities that he fervently served in life and his role in history eventually faded from the records.[304] Throughout the following centuries Enríquez's work became fragmented, with the bulk remaining obscure.[1] Locally, authors Salvador Brau, Arturo Morales Carrión and José Luis González played a role introducing him to Puerto Rican literature, while his figure was established within the education system by 1922's Historia de Puerto Rico.[1] Internationally, the early accounts of his life reflect their source, with British versions depicting him as a pirate while the Spanish ones describe his accomplishments. An example was published in 1940 by historian Jean O. McLachlan who lived in British India, who after revising the declarations of the South Sea Company's factors concluded that Enríquez "[should have been] the most famous of the guarda costas" and that he "may have been a desperado".[305] McLachlan contends that Enríquez was an ex-slave who got his fortune by "betraying a gentleman to the Inquisition" and used this to become a privateer.[305] He then further goes on to claim that Enríquez was "given a gold medal and the title of Don […] as a result of giving presents to the royal officials and even to His Catholic Majesty".[305] A direct contrast is established in the eleventh volume of Historia general de España y América, a collaboration written by several professors of the University of Córdoba and the University of Seville detailing the history of Spain, which asserts that "[of] all the Spanish corsairs, the most accomplished one was the Puerto Rican Miguel Henríquez", whom they describe as a "famous and feared […] mythological figure in the Caribbean" during his lifetime.[306][307]

A more systematic approach was taken by Vegan historian Ángel López Cantós, who studied Enríquez's life and whereabouts for decades.[1] The process of rediscovering the privateer's past took several years of research, during which his life's work was slowly retrieved from the contemporary documents that survive in the General Archive of the Indies.[1] Afterwards, López published several books based on his examination, including two biographies, a novel titled Mi Tío, Miguel Enríquez (lit. "My uncle, Miguel Enríquez") and the historical compilation Historia y poesía en la vida de Miguel Enríquez (lit. "History and poetry in the life of Miguel Enríquez").[1] In 2011, professor Milagros Denis Rosario of City University of New York published a socio-historical analysis for Universidad del Norte, where the role that race played in the recognition of those involved in fending off the 1797 British attack of San Juan was examined, as part of its thesis the document discussed the role and background of similar individuals in the Military history of Puerto Rico.[308] Among the issues explored were the circumstances of Enríquez's downfall, which are discussed within the framework set by López Cantós and Brau, leading to the author's conclusion that the backlash of the higher classes "represents a clear example of how the [18th century] Puerto Rican society was not ready to accept this kind of individual."[308]

Despite the success of his career, the presence of Enríquez in modern Puerto Rican culture has been eclipsed by his clandestine counterpart, Roberto Cofresí.[309] However, this process of romanticization began during the 20th century. Teacher, journalist and writer Enrique A. Laguerre wrote a novel dedicated to his memory, titled Miguel Enríquez: Proa libre sobre mar gruesa (lit. "Miguel Enríquez, free life in a heavy sea").[310] Enríquez, who became the wealthiest man on the archipelago during the first half of the 18th century, is now considered to have been the first Puerto Rican economic force and entrepreneur.[2] Historian and author Federico Ribes Tovar considered him a "financial genius".[311] Proposals to name a large cargo transport ship after him have been pursued, but with no success so far.[1] In 2010 the ruins of a chapel that he built within El Plantaje in 1735, named Ermita de Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria, was recognized as an historic monument by the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico.[312]

Though the examples remain scarce, Enríquez has inspired other kinds of media. In 2007, the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture published a series of comic books named ICePé.cómic, with the 12th volume being Miguel Enríquez, corsario puertorriqueño (lit. "Miguel Enríquez, Puerto Rican corsair"). In 2016, Raúl Ríos Díaz published the eponymous short documentary Miguel Enríquez, which combined his own research with Cantós' previous work, later winning a Gold Peer Award for best direction and the public preference vote at the San Juan Fine Arts Film Festival.[313] As part of the Ibero-American branch of promotion for Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, Ubisoft published an "affinity test" that allowed players to gauge their relation to certain historical figures, among whom was Enríquez, who was listed under both variants of his name.[314] He was played by actor Modesto Lacén in the San Juan National Historic Site/Northern Light Productions documentary El legado de una Isla: Las fortificaciones del Viejo San Juan which debuted on March 7, 2017.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ His last name is also frequently spelled Henríquez. This variant has been especially used by English-language sources.
  2. ^ Billon coins were supposed to be worth the same as the silver coins, but in practice were worth 25% less.
  3. ^ Captain José Martínez de Andino, one of Enríquez's most loyal allies, was the one in charge of moving the military for this operation.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Ángel Collado Schwarz (2007-03-01). "Miguel Enríquez: el primer gran héroe nacional" (in Spanish). La Voz del Centro. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
  2. ^ a b c Lance Oliver (2000). "1700: The age of pirates and privateers". Coffeericeandbeans.com. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
  3. ^ a b Challenging Changes
  4. ^ a b c d López Cantós 1994, pp. 62
  5. ^ a b c d e López Cantós 1994, pp. 63
  6. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 54
  7. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 56
  8. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 136
  9. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 154
  10. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 104
  11. ^ a b c Negroni 1992, pp. 273
  12. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 75
  13. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 113
  14. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 77
  15. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 64
  16. ^ a b c d e López Cantós 1994, pp. 61
  17. ^ Puertorriqueñidad
  18. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 21
  19. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 22
  20. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 23
  21. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 24
  22. ^ a b c d López Cantós 1994, pp. 27
  23. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 32
  24. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 33
  25. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 26
  26. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 34
  27. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 41
  28. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 25
  29. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 127
  30. ^ a b c d e López Cantós 1994, pp. 114
  31. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 129
  32. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 128
  33. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 130
  34. ^ a b c d López Cantós 1994, pp. 131
  35. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 132
  36. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 133
  37. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 137
  38. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 138
  39. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 139
  40. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 142
  41. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 143
  42. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 144
  43. ^ a b c d López Cantós 1994, pp. 145
  44. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 164
  45. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 35
  46. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 36
  47. ^ Jímenez de Wagenheim 1998, pp. 73
  48. ^ Morales Carrión 1974, pp. 70
  49. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 151
  50. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 152
  51. ^ a b c d e f López Cantós 1994, pp. 153
  52. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 155
  53. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 156
  54. ^ a b c d López Cantós 1994, pp. 157
  55. ^ a b c d e López Cantós 1994, pp. 158
  56. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 146
  57. ^ a b Ribes Tovar 1973, pp. 133
  58. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 147
  59. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 148
  60. ^ a b López Cantós 1994, pp. 149
  61. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 150
  62. ^ López Cantós 1994, pp. 159
  63. ^ a b c López Cantós 1994, pp. 163
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Bibliography

  • López Cantós, Ángel (1994). Miguel Enríquez: Corsario boricua del siglo XVIII (in Spanish). Ediciones Puerto. ISBN 0942347048.
  • Ribes Tovar, Federico (1970). Enciclopedia Puertorriqueña Ilustrada: The Puerto Rican Heritage Encyclopedia, Volume 1 (in Spanish). Ultra Educational Publishers. ISBN 0915534207.
  • Marley, David F. (2008). Wars of the Americas : a chronology of armed conflict in the Western Hemisphere, 1492 to the present. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-100-8.
  • McLachlan, Jean Olivia (1940). Trade and Peace with Old Spain, 1667–1750: A Study of the Influence of Commerce on Anglo-Spanish Diplomacy in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0374955204.
  • Miller, Paul Gerald (1922). Historia de Puerto Rico (in Spanish). Department of Public Instruction of Puerto Rico. ISBN 1246389746.
  • Navarro García, Luis (1983). Historia general de España y América: los primeros Borbones. América en el siglo XVIII. Tomo XI-1, Volumen 11. Ediciones Rialp. ISBN 9788432121074.
  • Ribes Tovar, Federico (1973). A Chronological History of Puerto Rico. Ultra Educational Publishers. ISBN 0915534207.
  • Moya Pons, Frank (2007). History of the Caribbean: plantations, trade, and war in the Atlantic world. Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 978-1558764149.
  • Jímenez de Wagenheim, Olga (1998). Puerto Rico: an interpretive history from pre-Columbian times to 1900. Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 1558761225.
  • Morales Carrión, Arturo (1974). Puerto Rico and the non Hispanic Caribbean: a study in the decline of Spanish exclusivism. University of Puerto Rico. ISBN 9780847708352.
  • Coles Langhorne, Elizabeth (1987). Vieques: History of a Small Island. Vieques Conservation and Historical Trust. ISBN 9780944957363.
  • Irizarry, Estelle (2005). Estudios sobre Enrique A. Laguerre: Edición conmemorativa a los cien años de su nacimiento (in Spanish). Editorial Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña. ISBN 0865816182.
  • Negroni, Héctor Andrés (1992). Historia Militar de Puerto Rico (A Military History of Puerto Rico) (in Spanish). Turner Publishing. ISBN 8478441387.

Further reading

  • "Voces de la Cultura" by Angel Collado Schwarz
  • "Atlas de Historia de Puerto Rico: Desde sus Origenes Hasta el Siglo XIX" by Arturo Santana and R. Torrech

External links

    miguel, enríquez, privateer, miguel, enríquez, 1674, 1743, privateer, from, juan, puerto, rico, operated, during, early, 18th, century, mulato, born, wedlock, enríquez, shoemaker, occupation, after, working, governor, salesman, recruited, defend, puerto, rico,. D Miguel Enriquez nb 1 c 1674 1743 was a privateer from San Juan Puerto Rico who operated during the early 18th century A mulato born out of wedlock Enriquez was a shoemaker by occupation After working for the governor as a salesman he was recruited to defend Puerto Rico then a colony of the Spanish Empire and commanded a small fleet that intercepted foreign merchant ships and other vessels dedicated to contraband These outlaws were thriving in the waters of the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean notably in the areas surrounding Saint Thomas Curacao and Jamaica Operating during the height of the Golden Age of Piracy his fleet was also credited with controlling the proliferation of buccaneers in the region However he was considered a pirate himself by the enemies of Spain since it was common practice of the government to ignore when foreign ships were attacked 2 After some time operating independently Enriquez received a letter of marque and reprisal from the Spanish Crown this was a special permit granting him the privileges of a privateer 2 Corsairs from Puerto Rico were often called guardacostas or coast guards They operated in the same fashion as any other pirate the only difference was that they did it in the name of Spain protecting imperial trade restrictions 3 Employing a systematic approach Enriquez was able to become the most successful and influential Puerto Rican of his time However despite this he was never able to gain the acceptance of the higher social classes something that he strived to earn throughout his life Miguel EnriquezCapt Miguel EnriquezBornc 1674 80San Juan Puerto RicoDied1743San Juan Puerto RicoChildrenVicente Enriquez son Rosa Enriquez unrecognized daughter Several unrecognized childrenAwardsMedalla de oro de la Real EfigiePiratical careerNicknameThe Grand ArchvillainTypeRoyal Privateer Pirate HunterAllegianceSpainYears active1701 1735RankCaballero Knight of the Royal Effigy of SpainCaptain of the Land and SeasBase of operationsSan Juan Puerto RicoCommandsPrivate fleetBattles warsWar of the Spanish SuccessionBattle of Vieques 1717 War of the Quadruple AllianceAnglo Spanish War 1727 WealthOver 500 000 pieces of eight between 100 and 200 million USD by modern standards 1 SignatureDuring his years as a privateer Enriquez established close links with the Spanish Monarchy 4 His ships were also responsible for the distribution of urgent messages that arrived at San Juan or La Aguada to the rest of the West Indies 4 When there was a shortage of royal vessels Enriquez s fleet was responsible for transporting items on behalf of Spain without charge 4 His fleet also provided transportation for the authorities that arrived at Puerto Rico en route to other locations and for missionaries 4 Throughout the War of the Spanish Succession Enriquez s fleet was responsible for guarding the Antilles from incursions by the British and Dutch 5 Among the places where he established connections was the adjacent island of St Thomas 6 Enriquez also dealt directly with the governor of Curacao 7 At a time when letters of marque were being regularly issued in neighboring islands his actions converted San Juan into one of the most important ports in the Caribbean 8 Between 1702 and 1713 Enriquez owned a fleet of more than thirty vessels losing at least a dozen and capturing more than twenty others 9 By the time that his career was over he had reportedly commanded a fleet of over 300 privateer ships of which approximately 150 were lost employing close to 1 500 sailors 10 In 1717 Great Britain occupied the island of Vieques which was under the control of the Spanish Government of Puerto Rico According to the British government they did not recognize the Spanish claim to the island which they referred to as Crab Island Enriquez with the consent of the government organized an expeditionary force which consisted of two ships with seven members of the regular Spanish Army and 286 members of the Puerto Rican militia The ships were escorted by a Spanish warship under the command of Naval Commander Jose Rocher 11 Enriquez s men fought and defeated the British in Vieques taking most of their enemy to the mainland of Puerto Rico as their prisoners He was received as a national hero when he returned the island of Vieques to the Spanish Empire and to the governorship of Puerto Rico The British government became alarmed and sent a warship to San Juan Further confrontation between both nations was avoided when the Spanish authorities returned the prisoners 11 His fleet also participated in other military expeditions in 1728 and 1729 Enriquez received several recognitions and exemptions that facilitated his work and contributed towards his vast wealth Under the order of King Philip V 1683 1746 he was awarded The Gold Medal of the Royal Effigy Spanish Medalla de oro de la Real Efigie in 1713 and was named Capitan de Mar y Guerra y Armador de Corsos loosely translated as Captain of the Seas and War and Chief Provider to the Crown Corsairs 3 The Crown also granted him a Royal Auxiliary Identification Document Spanish Real Cedula Auxiliar which allowed him to directly seek help from the Council of the Indies regardless of how insignificant a conflict was 12 Enriquez also acquired the local rights of the Royal Guinea Company and later the Real Asiento de Inglaterra organizations dedicated to slave trading which were authorized to do so by Spain 13 His actions placed him at odds with several influential members of San Juan s society To counter this Enriquez supported any new governor by offering his services and providing other help 5 However all but Jose Antonio Mendizabal unsuccessfully tried to revoke his privateering contract often finding themselves in trouble when he responded by using his resources 5 The most notable example was Juan de Ribera who Enriquez managed to remove from the office of governor after an arduous conflict by employing his influence 14 He also pursued the favor of the bishops appointed to San Juan earning the support of Pedro de la Concepcion Urtiaga and Fernando de Valbidia but failing to earn the trust of Lorenzo Pizarro 5 Enriquez s influence extended to several other systems including the courts and military 15 He owned 300 slaves and his fortune at the time was among the largest in the Americas Throughout his career Enriquez was persecuted by the Spanish elite in the island and jailed on various occasions At the peak of his success he was able to employ his influence to have governor Danio Granados prosecuted and jailed However as international politics evolved his influence dwindled By the time that Matias de Abadia became governor Enriquez was unable to accomplish his removal from office 16 He was charged with smuggling and stripped of all his power and wealth by the government Enriquez fled and took refuge in the Catholic Church which he regularly attended By being generous with his donations to the bishopric he had gained allies who would protect him throughout the years The charges of smuggling made by the Spanish government were eventually dropped but Enriquez chose to remain in the convent where he died a pauper 17 Contents 1 Early life 2 Privateering career 2 1 Independent work and letter of marque 2 2 Caballero and Captain of the Land and Seas 2 3 Silver shortage and feud with Ribera 2 4 Acquiring unparalleled wealth 2 5 Paramilitary defense operations 2 6 Second term of Danio 2 7 Later years 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life EditEnriquez was born in San Juan to a poor family The actual year of his birth is not clear due to contradictory dates but the dates of 1674 1676 1680 and 1681 are referenced or recorded in official documents 18 Most of these variations were provided by Enriquez himself who would report a younger age when questioned Of those proposed 1674 seems more likely 18 He was born to Graciana Enriquez a freed slave of the same social hierarchy who had inherited the surname Enriquez from her former slaver Leonor His maternal grandmother was born in Africa with Angola and Guinea being mentioned 19 while his maternal grandfather was an unknown white man The name of Enriquez s father is not mentioned in any documentation with the possible reasons for this being various and unexplored in the surviving records 20 It is possible that either the identity was truly unknown by the public or that the father was a member of the Catholic clergy which would have prompted a silence pact to avoid a scandal 20 The second theory is supported by the fact that a member of the elite class Luis de Salinas served as the godfather of his brother Jose Enriquez despite the fact that he was also considered an illegitimate child 21 It seems likely that both Miguel and Jose shared the same father 21 Enriquez also possessed several sacramental objects and books written in Latin which was a language only used by the clergy now considered to have been inherited from his father 21 He was the youngest of four siblings the others being Maria and Juan Jose died soon after his birth before reaching his first year 22 They lived in the room of a house belonging to Ana del Rincon on San Cristobal y la Carniceria Street 22 Unlike most children of the time Enriquez was taught how to read and write at an advanced level sufficient to compose detailed documents 22 His writing style was elegant and he knew cursive implying that it was a product of extended schooling 22 By age 10 Enriquez had begun to work as an apprentice shoemaker As a consequence he also learned how to craft leather 23 As was the custom during this age Enriquez was enrolled in the military at the age of 16 24 These units were divided by social hierarchy with him serving under Captain Francisco Martin along other mulatos 24 As a shoemaker he would only earn four and a half reales per shoe pair 25 Enriquez never married but was known to have been involved with several women throughout his life including Elena Mendez Teresa Montanez Maria Valdes and Ana Muriel 26 Product of these relations he had at least eight children among which were Vicente and Rosa 27 Of them Enriquez preferred Vicente raising him and overseeing his education 27 In 1700 aged 26 he was accused of selling contraband in his house This merchandise was product of trades where people incapable of paying with money handed items in exchange 23 The governor sentenced him to a year of forced labor in Castillo San Felipe del Morro and added a fine of 100 pieces of eight 28 He did not deny the charges paid the coins without any hesitation and his sentence was changed upon his own request 28 Enriquez was now sentenced to serve in the artillery of the Elite Garrison Corps According to a witness this change was facilitated due to requests made by influential members of San Juan s society including some members of the Catholic Church 28 With his job as a shoemaker it is unknown how he was able to afford the fine so quickly but it is assumed that he received help 25 As part of the sentence Enriquez could not charge for his work in the military which also meant that during this timeframe he was economically supported by a third party 25 Privateering career EditIndependent work and letter of marque Edit Material documenting his early incursion in the business world are scarce 29 In 1701 Enriquez began working as a salesman for governor Gutierrez de la Riva 30 It was under this governor that he would go on to become a privateer 29 Like those that preceded him Gutierrez was appointed due to his military experience and his inauguration coincided with the War of the Spanish Succession arriving with a direct order to evaluate the cost of building a new vessel to extinguish the commerce of foreigners that had reportedly engaged in piracy and other acts that threatened the Spanish economy 31 Within a month he responded with a report suggesting a system that operated between privateers and a ship to guard the coasts 31 Both the geopolitical environment and the economic difficulty of the colony made privateering a successful and lucrative venture both for the individual and for the government itself 32 Gutierrez proposed the construction of a new boat for the sole purpose of plundering enemy ships with half of the loot destined to the Crown and the remainder being distributed among the crew 31 This initiative was accepted and by 1704 the process was underway with the ship being completed in 1707 33 Gutierrez needed a front man for this operation and Enriquez was eventually selected his race allowing for a safe scapegoat if the privateering resulted in conflicts between the local government and Spain 34 He proved successful in this venture and within a year his role had grown Only two years after Gutierrez took office Enriquez already served as the governor s delegate and owner of vessels under his command 34 These first actions were done independently albeit with the government s compliance 34 However by 1704 Enriquez was already being listed as a privateer receiving an official letter of marque 34 His move from a salesman to an influential merchant and privateer was unusually fast despite the experience that he had acquired during his time working for the governor 35 Gutierrez was instrumental in accelerating the success of the privateering venture even allowing him access into a monopoly that he had created to run the local commerce through front men 35 Based on these actions it is possible that the governor mentored Enriquez personally providing him with resources 36 Multiple invasion attempts by enemy countries further fueled privateering operations the Spanish West Indies were constantly being besieged by England Denmark and the Netherlands 37 The Spanish Crown did not take these threats lightly and ordered Gutierrez to prepare for an hypothetical scenario which ultimately proved to be a false alarm 37 Despite the outcome this mentality lingered facilitating the war acts of the privateers A year later England actually tried to unsuccessfully invade Puerto Rico landing within the vicinity of Arecibo 38 With the War of Succession repercuting in the Caribbean the actions of Enriquez were seen in a positive light 39 Soon afterwards French corsairs arrived at San Juan as allies protected by the Crown with orders to be cared for 39 However these foreign vessels were being used to import contraband which combined with a general animosity due to previous conflicts between these nations further fueled the need to stabilize the economy by supporting local privateers 40 On July 23 1703 Gutierrez died in San Juan 40 Despite his connection Enriquez was generally ignored by the members of the elite that opposed his rule and the privateering operation continued 41 Gutierrez s death brought forth a period of instability of five years during which Puerto Rico had nine governors 42 This favored Enriquez who continued to thrive in the shadows Most of them were simply interim governors and due to their short time in office none were able to pay any attention to his growing success 43 When Pedro del Arroyo was sworn Enriquez tried to buy his favor by paying the voyage 44 However Arroyo died shortly afterwards preventing a notable profit from this partnership 44 Despite this Enriquez actually paid for the funeral service and even provided the black clothing for the servants 45 Despite his distinction the former governor was not economically stable and his family was moved into the privateer s house 45 One of the late governor s sons Laureano Perez del Arroyo lived with him until his adulthood when Enriquez requested that he was promoted to the rank of captain 46 In time Perez del Arroyo would become of his most vocal enemies 46 Eventually as his wealth and influence grew Enriquez inherited some of Gutierrez s old enemies including the high class Calderon family 41 Constantly serving the Crown he quickly became the top privateer in Puerto Rico 47 48 In a letter sent on February 14 1705 the work done by two ships owned by Enriquez in the waters of Puerto Rico and Santo Domingo is praised 49 King Phillip V expressed satisfaction and encouraged the continuation of this labor not without claiming the weapons captured from his victims 50 During this timeframe Enriquez generally operated with only two vessels at once often replacing those lost 51 Among those several were captured by foreign countries including seven sloops a schooner and a brigantine 51 Authorities from Curacao caught the sloops San Nicolas Santa Barbara and La Maria with British help along the unnamed schooner 51 The ship known as Popa Azul was captured off the coast of Puerto Rico by the Netherlands 51 An unnamed sloop was captured by England near Santa Cruz following three days of conflict 51 Others including a brigantine were lost due to other causes Enriquez usually kept his fleet well staffed with these vessels being manned by 100 200 sailors 51 Due to the fact that privateers were not required to report the names of the ships captured to sell their loot few of the fleet s victims are known However it is known that he captured an average of two victims for every vessel lost 52 One of his ships named Santo Tomas was involved in a controversy when its captain Jose Rodriguez ordered to board a Spanish sloop that was leaving a St Thomas port Rodriguez tried to justify his action by stating that the vessel was leaving a non Spanish harbor and could be carrying contraband but was still jailed in Santo Domingo for some time 52 Santo Tomas had actually left Puerto Rico ordered to attend the frequent contraband arriving from that island only receiving a mild authorization from Enriquez who was sick and decided not to oppose the will of the establishment 53 Not opposing the governor would prove to be a mistake since the audience that discussed the case decided to place all the blame on him and Rodriguez 53 From this moment forward Enriquez changed his approach portraying himself as a loyal subject and offering his resources without question only to play the circumstances to his favor 54 On December 12 1704 the Crown authorized the establishment of a route between Puerto Rico and the Canary Islands which would carry 150 tons of fruit 54 However this route remained stale for two years The government did not possess such a ship and was forced to ask Enriquez to loan it one of his 54 He did not oppose the request and the vessel arrived to Gran Canaria with the merchandise having survived a storm and a rough voyage 54 Enriquez continued to operate this route repeating the action a year later However the Council of the Indies suspended it claiming that no ship smaller than 50 or 60 tons should travel between Puerto Rico and the Canary Islands citing strategic affairs 55 Caballero and Captain of the Land and Seas Edit In 1707 Enriquez issued a letter to the Spanish king stating that he had placed two vessels near the Leeward and Windward Islands to guard their coasts 43 He also emphasized his loss of six other ships in battles against opposition from Jamaica and Curacao 43 Enriquez requested to be placed in charge of a company based there or in the adjacent locales of Havana or Cartagena 43 The War Board of the Indies ignored his request and some members even argued that to extend his stay in Puerto Rico he should only be recognized as Captain of the Sea instead of the higher title of Captain of the Sea and War 56 The authorities could not jeopardize the success attained by Enriquez s privateering fleet which has gathered positive feedback from the local government 56 However they could not reward his efforts with a lesser title either Following a heated debate the Board decided to grant him the title of Captain of the Sea and War 57 Enriquez actually planned this outcome organizing his local influence so that the communications that reached the Crown were largely positive 58 This correspondence was being sent years before this by 1705 these letters were granting him the responsibility for controlling contraband and pirates in the coasts of Puerto Rico 59 With the delay or failure to arrive of the Real Situado the governors were forced to collect money from the wealthier residents to make do 60 Enriquez loaned money to the government since 1705 and noted this when issuing his requests 61 He was officially recognized as Captain of the Sea and War on July 11 1710 57 By then Enriquez had become notably active in defending both Puerto Rico and the other Spanish interests in the Caribbean 60 His privateering fleet had become such a key to local stability that they were the ones responsible for safeguarding the residents when storms or famine struck the island 61 He continued to loan money to the government advancing a sum of 11 497 pieces of eight between 1708 12 61 By 1708 Enriquez had become a renowned man gaining the attention of Phillip V himself due to his work 55 That same year one of his ships brought the loot of a British vessel captured off Tortola to the port of Cumana 55 The authorities forced the privateers to sell the cargo in their port and retained two thirds of the earnings 55 Enriquez was angered by this development and contacted the king who responded by ordering a full restitution 55 After five years of instability the Crown appointed a sailor and merchant named Francisco Danio Granados as governor of Puerto Rico 62 It is possible that Enriquez already knew him through Gutierrez who purchased merchandise from his company 63 Like those that preceded him Danio wanted to quickly gain a profit As a dominant local merchant this appointment would normally threaten Enriquez but it seems likely that he was involved to some degree in the election process 63 He went on to donate 4 000 pieces of eight before Danio was sworn into office and provided an additional sum of 300 as a gift 63 Two months before the new governor took office the vessel ordered during Gutierrez s term docked at San Juan 44 Danio quickly tried to recruit a crew for it but was largely ignored by the Puerto Rican sailors who could earn a better profit by working independently as privateers 64 Furthermore Enriquez likely felt that this would affect his business and conversely sabotaged the recruitment 64 This convinced Danio to order it to sail to Cartagena in search of a crew which later mutinied during the return trip forcing a change in course that ultimately led to the vessel being lost 65 With this struck of luck Enriquez s business was now secure and he quickly pursued the favor of the governor forming a mutually beneficial alliance 65 Under these circumstances Danio formed a pseudo commercial alliance with the privateer 65 On occasion they staged the capture of a vessel so that merchandise could be sold without taxes or restrictions 65 With mutual complicity they then shared the profit in even halves 65 However any losses would fall on Enriquez Eventually Danio ordered the construction of a brigantine and registered the vessel under both of their names 65 The ship was captured and Enriquez was forced to use his own money to recover it once again registering it under both names 66 A vessel named La Aurora was registered in a similar fashion and the earnings of its three voyages were divided equally 66 Other of his sloops such as San Miguel and Los Montes served a similar purpose 66 Enriquez also bought a sloop in Cadiz for the sole purpose of transporting the governor nephew Jacome Danio 66 From that moment onwards the fleet would be dispatched without question for any purpose that the governor requested Among the missions issued by Danio Enriquez sent ships to guard the local coasts and capture contrabandists 67 They also served the Crown in other assignments such as providing transport to stranded Jesuit priests 67 He went as far as paying some of the governor s debts and helping members of his family 68 These actions costed Enriquez money and men but for some time served their goal of earning him the favor of Danio 66 The privateering business continued to grow under this model By 1710 Enriquez built a brigantine to add to the fleet in his own shipyard 69 This dockyard was also used to repair other vessels especially those that belonged to the Crown 70 On April 6 1710 Danio requested that one of Enriquez s ships was used to transport important documents to Spain 71 A sloop named La Perla was chosen for this task carrying some loot gathered through privateering and also ferrying five prisoners that had been sentenced to death 72 The vessel docked and immediately received a license to sell the unregistered loot earning a second license that allowed it to import European merchandise in its return voyage 72 Enriquez continued to strengthen his reputation locally taking over the cost of repairing the fortifications and supplying the military hospitals 73 Enriquez pursued the rights to become the Royal Guinea Company sole representative in Puerto Rico Established in 1701 this entity served as a major slave trader and became the only one sanctioned by the Spanish Crown to do business in their American colonies 13 On May 16 1710 he officially completed this goal signing a loan contract with the company s general director Juan Bautista Chouirrio 30 With this accord Enriquez became a major slaver in the territories of Puerto Rico Trinidad Margarita Cumana Cumanagoto and Maracaibo also permitting the acquisition of slaves from adjacent islands such as Jamaica St Thomas and Curacao depending on convenience 30 Under this agreement he was able to import 40 African slaves per year which he could sale under his own criteria 30 The contract lasted for three years and it also provided exemptions for clothes and maintenance 30 With the liberty to purchase these from any port in the Caribbean without right charges it is likely that this was further exploited to import products at cheap prices providing a large margin of profit 74 For every peca sold Enriquez paid 100 pieces of eight which were combined with an additional fee of 4 000 per year 75 Danio was involved in the transaction which would also prove convenient for him as an official of the company and along the other parts an accord to secure that wins and losses were divided into three equal parts between them 75 Enriquez was jubilant with this development and proposed public celebration to commemorate it 75 He held the contract for a period of four years leading 19 voyages under the premise of acquiring slaves and maintenance for them Most of them were destined to St Thomas However only ten of these incursions returned with new slaves for a total of 96 the others were used to import 109 barrels of flour 75 This cereal was supposedly bought to feed his slaves but instead it was sold to the wealthier classes for profit 74 It is presumed that other odd products acquired under this premise such as wine beer sugar aguardiente cocoa paper and even copper were sold in similar fashion 76 His enemies were quick to publicly denounce this practice albeit with some exaggeration 76 Years later these rights were supplanted despite the protests of Enriquez 77 In 1713 the Royal Guinea Company lost its status and was instead replaced with the Royal Asiento de Inglaterra 77 Enriquez immediately pursued a position within this new entity and quickly coordinated moves with some friends Santiago Gibbens in St Thomas and Felipe Henriquez in Curacao to establish a new business model once he acquired these rights 78 To further secure the success of this venture Enriquez offered gifts and even stakes to people that were already involved with the company 79 In June 1718 attorney in fact Tomas Othey granted him the title of factor and completed a loan contract Enriquez was only able to employ this office until September experiencing a series of complications based on international politics 80 During this timeframe Othey himself imported slaves through the South Sea Company 81 He took over as Puerto Rico s main supplier both of food and military supplies quickly becoming indispensable to the well being and functionality of the government 82 However his tactics did not settle well with the higher classes who began indirectly accusing him of bribery 82 Despite this the Crown was glad to accept any help knowing that despite operating on for his own interests Enriquez had become a vital figure in the Caribbean 83 In 1712 Danio wrote to Phillip V requesting a recognition for these achievements 83 The king consulted the Council of the Indies which proposed that Enriquez should receive the Medal of the Royal Effigy Spanish Medalla de la Real Effigie which knighted him as a Caballero of Spain 83 The award was officially presented on March 12 1712 84 This awoke the ire of the higher classes who could not fathom how a mulato could receive such a recognition 84 Enriquez was the first Puerto Rican presented with this distinction and also received the honorific of Don 84 85 From this point onwards this title preceded his name in any official documentation 84 However his adversaries intentionally avoided employing the honorific 84 The following year Enriquez was granted a Royal Auxiliary Identification Document which allowed him to overcome the arbitrary restrictions that he encountered in some Caribbean ports 86 This rare privilege shielded him from the authorities of the other Spanish colonies redirecting any conflict to the tribunal of the Council of the Indies 87 By the end of his five year term Danio had earned 55 179 pieces of eight more than five times the amount that he would have earned by solely fulfilling his office 68 Between 1709 and 1714 Enriquez s fleet captured six British victims and nine ships belonging to the Netherlands 70 Besides assaulting the enemies of Spain they also seized five vessels from the adjacent Virgin Islands 70 The loot acquired included clothes food and money 70 During this timeframe Enriquez s fleet also included La Maria San Jose La Gloria La Perla San Antonio Los Montes Nuestra Senora del Rosario and El Jenizaro 70 He frequently recycled these names for other vessels 70 Of them La Aurora was the first known to operate outside the Caribbean capturing El Principe de Asturias off the coast of New England in 1712 88 Despite the fact that Enriquez worked under a Spanish letter of marque La Aurora was actually flying a British flag and operating under forged documents selling its loot at Guadalupe 89 Two years earlier Enriquez had ordered his ships to stalk this British colony 88 In 1714 San Miguel captured a British frigate in Philadelphia and brought it to San Juan 88 By this time Enriquez had established working relationships with several merchants from non Spanish territories 90 Santiago Giblens and Felipe Henriquez remained his principal foreign associates 90 By legal definition the Crown recognized all of them as contrabandists 90 To avoid this Enriquez created a system that allowed him to import their merchandise while labeling it as privateering goods 91 He ordered his associates to send loaded ships towards the open sea and with prior knowledge sent one of his own to stage a capture 91 Then the crew of his partner would safely return home in another vessel 91 Enriquez took this approach with extreme precaution asking that the letters discussing these plan should only be carried by a trusted person that could handle them personally 91 To this ends he employed his contacts within the Catholic Church and the captains of his ships all of whom would protect him 92 Besides this the other parts were cautioned to avoid discussing these transactions even with close friends 91 To ensure that they remained loyal Enriquez often offered them gifts 93 These were usually jewels or similar items but on one occasion he returned a ship named La Anaronel that had been captured by La Perla back to the governor of St Thomas to avoid conflicts with Giblens 93 Enriquez secured this alliance by also offering a loaded vessel as a gift to his associate 94 He rewarded his connections within the Church by importing items not found in Puerto Rico through these deals 94 Furthermore Enriquez requested that a jewelry in Barbados made several diamond rings for both sexes which he also used as gifts 94 Silver shortage and feud with Ribera Edit The Situado was Puerto Rico s main source of silver coins by dominating it Enriquez guaranteed complete control over the local market 95 However this move was complicated and the only way that he could accomplish it was by involving the governors and other royal representatives forming a mutually beneficial endeavor 95 He sold his privateering goods priced with Billon real coins which were then used to pay the military nb 2 95 By the time that the silver coins of the Situado arrived to pay the military they had already been paid and the silver was paid back to Enriquez 96 By doing this he not only gained local dominance but was acquiring a type of coin that would be accepted in all foreign markets 95 However this was not without problems since the Situado was often late or incomplete Enriquez would often face problems with liquidity 96 In at least one occasion this resulted in the confiscation of an account worth 4 000 pieces of eight 97 Due to this he experienced anxiety and would often issue letters requesting his associates to be patient and even requested credit until the silver arrived 96 Tired of operating at a loss Enriquez created a plan by himself When the governor of Curacao proposed an exchange of European goods he employed Felipe Henriquez as his representative and the three of them evaluated the creation of a unique structure to acquire the desired silver 98 The governor and Felipe would provide the capital while he would employ his ships the profits and losses would be shared equitably 98 Enriquez would send one of his ships under the excuse of privateering but in reality the vessel was going to dock at Curacao and would load with European merchandise 98 From there the ship would travel to Veracruz where the items would be sold as privateering goods in exchange for silver 98 To hide this from view the vessel would return to San Juan loaded with some merchandise 98 The following voyage would be similar albeit with a scale at La Guaira where they would load with cocoa before traveling to Curacao 98 After traveling to Veracruz they would only sell the European items with the cocoa being introduced to Puerto Rico as privateering goods 98 Enriquez expected to organize at least two yearly voyages under this format and even proposed the construction of a larger vessel which would be boarded in the Curacao scale 98 However the plan was brought to a halt with the arrival of the newly designated governor Juan de Ribera 99 On July 18 1711 he was officially appointed by the king but he could only take office when his predecessor s term was over 100 Prior to arriving to Puerto Rico Ribea and Enriquez exchanged friendly letters 100 The privateer lowered his guard expecting to have a productive relation with the future governor 101 While exchanging letters Enriquez spent over 20 000 pieces of eight as gifts and other considerations and even lent his best vessel La Gloria so that Ribera could arrive 101 He also made sure that La Fortaleza was fitted with supplies to last several months 102 Ribera arrived to San Juan on December 23 1713 replacing Danio Enriquez was confident that with his previous actions he had gained the governor s favor but noticing that his ship arrived fully loaded likely offered an early warning that the functionary actually intended to compete with him 102 Ribera had manipulated the privateer projecting a benign posture to avoid waking any suspicion 103 Having spent the two years after being appointed in the adjacent Cumana and Margarita the governor had observed the models used in the Americas and established connections also becoming familiar with Enriquez s own modus operandi 103 Shortly after taking office Ribera attempted to eradicate privateering from Puerto Rico for his own benefit 99 He quickly employed his connections in attempts to take over Enriquez s market 104 After completing his first term Danio left his entire fortune in charge of Enriquez while he returned to Spain 7 They agreed that the money would be sent there when needed However the arrangement was difficult since the money was filtered by small quantities or failed to arrive at all 7 Ribera would employ the privateer s own model against him mimicking several of his tactics albeit in a more aggressive fashion 104 Considering Enriquez a direct adversary the governor intercepted his mail and took over profitable associations 105 I find myself informed on several occasions and by reliable people of the particular love and zeal with which you have dedicated yourself to my royal service always maintaining ten or twelve corsair vessels in your coast well armed and staffed with the finality of cleaning the coasts of this island and of those of Windward of the pirate enemies that infest them and having attended many other assignments in my service such as transporting my royal orders and documents to different ports of this America as well as other supplementary work that you have done on your own and by your own wealth with no charge to my royal fortune Having just learned how governor don Juan de Ribera has stripped you violently taking away the corsair vessels and other effects I have ordered a prosecution against him by law due to this and other charges and the entire restitution of your wealth so you can carry on as you were with your loyal privateering zeal and disinterest which would be of my royal satisfaction Royal Decree from Philip V to Enriquez informing him of the destitution of Juan de Ribera February 10 1716 Ribera systematically stripped Enriquez of his belongings also launching a campaign to discredit him among Spanish merchants 14 The governor took control of the shipyard and used it to construct a sloop a brigantine and a schooner 69 The animosity between both was fueled by the fact that no side was willing to recognize the authority granted to the other On one occasion the governor asked him to certify on behalf of the Royal Guinea Company that a ship had not returned after it arrived from St Thomas loaded with an illegal haul but Enriquez refused to commit fraud 14 Due to the pressure involved he was ultimately forced to do so However Enriquez visited the Secretary of Government who served as a witness of the act 106 The same occurred later with a ship that arrived from Trinidad but this time he firmly refused claiming that he was willing to risk his life if that meant conserving his honor 106 During this administration a new treasurer was appointed to Puerto Rico Jose del Pozo Oneto 107 Enriquez had tried to win the functionary s favor when he arrived providing slaves and several other gifts 108 The first year of his incumbency was nominal however in early 1717 a series of conflicts between them became apparent 109 According to a witness account these differences began when Enriquez refused to loan 4 000 pieces of eight that Pozo wanted for personal matters 109 Another factor could have been that the treasurer owned several stores in San Juan and was competing with the privateer in auctions 110 Eventually Pozo sided with another man that was battling to gain power dean Martin Calderon 111 Throughout Ribera s term the elite class of San Juan launched a disparaging campaign offended by the fact that a mulato had essentially become the most influential figure in Puerto Rico 112 They would constantly address the Spanish Crown and accused him of smuggling a notable concern during the era or attempted to disregard his privateering skills 113 The high class group that led the campaign was the Calderon family to which the dean belonged 114 It is likely that these differences materialized years before but that these groups were simply waiting for the opportune moment to act on them 115 Despite their status the Calderon family was notorious for being involved with contraband and Ribera allied with them to pursue his own goals 116 The family even employed the influence of one of his members to create divisions between Enriquez and the newly arrived bishop Pedro de la Concepcion Urtiaga 117 He was able to counter these accusations following the arrival of a prelate that favored him neutralizing their influence 117 With the Calderon family on his side Ribera decided to ignore all of the remaining families due to internal divisions 117 The governor went as far as eliminating any group that may threaten his intentions of creating a commercial monopoly 117 Ribera unable to directly confiscate Heriquez s fleet and wealth due to the Royal Auxiliary Identification Document had decided to employ indirect tactics to drive him off business 118 Towards these ends Ribera forced Enriquez to provide his employees and resources for free 119 The governor exploited this to create his own fleet with the intention of completely overtaking the privateering venture 119 Ribera also made sure that Enriquez s fleet was constantly occupied in menial or redundant tasks requesting their service 19 times 120 The authorities seized the best ship of the lot La Gloria never paying the sum that it was worth 121 Another form of physiological warfare employed by the governor was keeping the fleet perpetually docked with the constant denial of privateering licenses and the frequent ruling that its captures were not fair game 122 Only five licenses were granted and Ribera also confiscated the entire profit of legitimate privateering incursions citing that the loot belonged to the Crown due to his personal authorization 123 This inactivity concluded with several of Enriquez s men deserting and becoming pirates only to return days after to antagonize the governor 124 These pirates also boarded one of his former employer s privateering sloops 125 The conclusion of the War of Succession complicated matters more since French men were now forbidden from working as corsairs for Spain 125 This meant that a large portion of the sailors working for Enriquez s fleet were expelled 126 The bishop quickly took notice and denounced these actions avoiding the mail interception of the government 119 After briefly considering a relocation to Santo Domingo Enriquez launched a counterattack 127 He proposed to the local authorities that they should speak on his behalf accomplishing this through several figures including Danio 127 Ribera was accused of creating a contraband bank before the king while accountant Antonio Paris Negro highlighted Enriquez s work 128 These frequent letters began to tip the balance in the privateers favor but time favored the governor 129 Based on this Enriquez granted Danio the rights to serve as his extra official representative and provided him a vessel in which to travel to Madrid 129 Ribera attempted and failed to block the voyage but succeeded in stalling it and forcing an additional scale 129 Once there Danio acted to expose Ribera and pursued a return to office 130 Locally Enriquez convinced functionaries to send complaints devised by himself while portraying them as being personal 130 Paris Negro was a prominent member of this initiative 130 Furthermore these letters were used to also accuse the Calderon family 131 During the final months of 1715 the Council of the Indies was investigating Ribera confirming that some of the complaints were real 132 As a result Francisco Fernandez del Barco was assigned to evaluate his administration 133 Ribera s anti privateering politics were abolished A few days after Fernandez issued two documents that secretly prepared the governor s eventually deposition 134 The first was sent to the governor of Cumana Jose Carreno and requested that he travel to Puerto Rico and execute the confiscation of Rivera s property and interests with the help of local authorities which was done on May 3 1716 nb 3 134 The governor was then to be held captive at La Fortaleza without communication separated from any allies being then transferred to a jail 135 The second letter restituted all of the property that Ribera had stripped from Enriquez 134 The prosecution was swift only two months later Fernandez arrived to San Juan taking control of the charges 136 Carreno took the office temporally until the appointed interim governor arrived 136 Ribera and his associates were charged with contraband and monopolizing the market falsely gathering money for causes that never materialized and of exploiting the Situado among other things 137 He was sentenced to pay 40 317 pieces of eight and he was forced to pay an additional sum of 86 370 to Enriquez 138 Afterwards Ribera remained imprisoned in El Morro until a frigate named La Reina arrived to take him to Spain 139 After only serving for nearly two years the former governor was returned to Spain chained 16 However this ordeal had a considerable impact on Enriquez s fortune which was further exacerbated by the fact that he decided to sustain his employees despite the fact that his fleet was not sailing 140 Acquiring unparalleled wealth Edit In 1716 Enriquez made a suggestion to Carreno that they organize an expedition and take the island of Saint Thomas 141 The interim governor sent an official proposal and noted his belief that the privateer and 500 militiamen would suffice and that no royal investment would be needed but ultimately desisted of the idea after the project failed to gain approval 11 141 Alberto Bertolano took the office of governor from Carreno being sworn on August 30 1716 142 As usual Enriquez tried to earn his favor 143 However due to his role as interim governor Bertolano distanced himself from any of the groups that dominated the Puerto Rican society 144 This approach did not please Enriquez who went on to claim that his opponents led by Pozo were being favored 144 An argument that was ironically repeated by them 144 However the governor was instrumental in helping Enriquez to resume his role as a privateer 145 After months of reorganization that required contracting a new crew he was able to command two small vessels a sloop and a schooner to resume his venture 145 These two ships were lost shortly afterwards resetting the process 146 Enriquez decided to purchase four sloops naming them El Aguila La Perla La Aurora and El Fenix 147 His fleet was systematically rebuilt with the further acquisition of El Delfin La Modista La Pequena Aurora and Nuestra Senora de Altagracia Nuestra Senora del Rosario and San Miguel y las Animas 147 The rebuilding phase extended for a period of three years and it experienced the loss of La Perla but once it was concluded Enriquez s fleet was stronger than its original incarnation 146 He now employed around 300 sailors and requested help to military supervision to control them 146 The fleet captured eight Danish vessels named La Margarita La Juana Neptuno Vliegende Leeduyuel Leojane and Brelot 148 St Thomas s governor complained to Bertolano noting that they were being captured despite the fact that both nations were not at war but this claim was dismissed citing that no foreign ship was allowed to fish near Puerto Rico 148 La Modista went on to capture three of the four British vessels captured after that nation joined an alliance and declared war on Spain in 1719 148 Most were captured in a reconnaissance mission however their delivery was complicated by the arrival of a British privateer who engaged them in battle 149 La Modista won that exchange and returned to San Juan with his captures 149 Another one loaded with military provisions was captured the following year 150 However this declaration of war also hurt Enriquez s interest since he was forced to surrender all of the property that belonged to the Real Asiento 151 He declared that he no longer possessed anything that belonged to the company 151 With the embargo taking an extended time period Enriquez likely hid the Real Asiento s property during the wait and keep them for himself 151 Pozo was not pleased with this outcome and requested the intervention of dean Martin Calderon expecting the church to intervene 152 Harassed by the ecclesiastical investigation Enriquez requested a license permitting a move to Cuba which was granted but never materialized 152 The arrival of a new bishop Fernando de Valdivia prevented the migration 152 Before leaving Spain the friar had received requests to favor the privateer 152 Enriquez paid the voyage and offered Valdivia all sorts of gifts including a house jewels and slaves spending at least 3 000 pieces of eight 153 For the next two weeks the Bishop only had contact with the privateer even ignoring the governor 153 Valvidia eventually established a lukewarm relation with the authorities which was always superseded by his friendship with Enriquez 154 With his power the Bishop revoked the actions of Matin Calderon and placed the blame of the conflicts on the dean and treasurer 153 Operating on its own La Aurora captured a Netherlands sloop La Sara near the coast of Santo Domingo 150 Meanwhile La Perla La Juana and El Fenix were employed in diplomatic voyages 155 Transporting royal documents when requested became a recurrent mission 156 La Aurora and El Aguila ferried members of the judiciary branch including Fernandez 155 La Modista continued with this success also seizing a French frigate named La Trinidad de Burdeos off Vieques 150 However this particular prey created a conflict between Enriquez and Pozo who argued that it should have been considered spoils of war rather than privateering goods 150 The privateer won this conflict retaining its cargo 157 Ultimately both sides continued to perpetually exchange accusations and insults 158 Despite running a generally neutral administration Bertolano was accused of being biased by both sides after his term concluded 144 Throughout the years Enriquez remained mostly focused in his role as a merchant exploiting this distinction to move legal and smuggled products with success 159 He could easily use his privateering ships to launder goods that were otherwise illegal investing the saving in land and properties 160 On occasion he even received permission to openly import illegal merchandise 159 He used these exceptions to compensate for materials that were lacking in Puerto Rico 161 His enemies tried to expose him but with little success In 1718 they testified that Enriquez had smuggled clothes and other items hidden aboard the sloop La Gloria 161 Led by Pozo the group launched another defamatory campaign against him 162 The attorney of San Juan even blamed him for a shortage of food after he attempted to export 700 units of merchandise citing that the market was oversaturated 163 Due to this action the food was retained at port and spoiled 163 As a consequence Enriquez deduced that for the well being of his business the best was to move and sell the merchandise as far away as possible 164 His sloops were sent in long voyages with the incursions of La Aurora and El Aguila lasting periods of nearly two years and nine months respectively 162 They operated and moved merchandise between Habana Santiago and Cartagena 162 These ships were likely buying and selling contraband by veiling it as products captured by privateering 164 Upon returning to San Juan both of these vessels arrived without any privateering spoils 162 Despite this Enriquez gathered so much merchandise that it was unrivaled in Puerto Rico selling anything that covered basic necessities of the citizens ranging from food to brushes razors leather locks and clothes 165 They also offered other commodities such as playing cards wines imported from Spain and equipment required for horse riding 166 Enriquez managed four warehouses which besides storing merchandise were also used to manufacture anything that his ships needed 166 He divided them by class separating the ones where food was stored from the ones where backup equipment was kept 167 However this model also had its drawbacks since it was linked to the sort of relationship that he had with the authorities with cities like Santo Domingo Margarita and Santiago blocking him on occasion 168 Despite the volatile nature of his business model Enriquez managed to secure a massive fortune In 1716 he personally quantified the amount that Juan de Ribera owed him at 86 370 pieces of eight which added to 20 000 that he donated would place his fortune in at least 106 370 169 Fourteen witnesses claimed that based on the number of houses haciendas slaves ships and amounts of other capital his fortune should have surpassed at least 100 000 168 Enriquez himself stated that by then it was over 150 000 pieces of eight 169 Antonio Camino who managed the money claimed that when all of the capital was added the total ranged between 350 000 and 400 000 170 Valdivia supported this assertion noting that Enriquez s house contained more items than any other house in Puerto Rico without including its warehouses 169 Furthermore his haciendas produced sugar cane cattle and crops which were lucrative ventures by themselves 171 Paramilitary defense operations Edit In 1718 one of the privateering vessels was captured by a St Thomas corsair 53 Due to this incident the crew learned that the British were settling the island of Vieques 172 Governor Bertolano ordered Enriquez to send someone to verify the veracity of this rumor 173 He equipped two ships with military supplies and departed for Vieques 173 The crew confirmed the information and set sail to San Juan During its return the ships located a small boat with seven black men which they captured and took to San Juan 174 The group was fleeing from St Thomas to Puerto Rico pursuing a baptism and protested their capture but Enriquez ignored their plights and keep them as slaves 174 He convinced the governor to list them as privateering goods despite the circumstances not falling under the stipulations of the letter of marque 174 This also ignored royal decrees that allowed any slave that arrived to Puerto Rico pursuing a conversion to Catholicism the opportunity to become a free man 174 Pozo opposed this move managing to revoke the governor s original ruling 175 Shortly afterwards a vessel property of the Armada de Barlovento arrived to San Juan 173 Bertolano told its commander General Jose Roche de la Pena about the situation in Vieques 173 Bertolano decided to organize a mini armada of five vessels 173 Only one belonged to the Crown the others were private Enriquez loaned the sloop La Perla which Roche commanded 173 A makeshift crew was composed of privateers members of the Puerto Rican urban militias and soldiers 173 Once there the local forces quickly overwhelmed the invaders only suffering a single loss while the British lost over 30 men and other 59 were made prisoners of war 176 Afterwards the settlement was burned to the ground 177 After successfully defeating the British in Vieques La Perla intercepted a British ship traveling from Bermuda capturing 72 slaves Enriquez asked to list them as privateering goods instead of war spoils but this was denied since La Perla had been supplied with public money 175 The Crown scolded him for his actions during this event 178 Besides his active participation Enriquez also took the initiative of rebuilding the San Jose fort undertaking most of the project s cost 179 On October 16 1719 the royal vessel San Carlos docked in San Juan 180 The boat needed repairs and requested Enriquez s help who determined that the damage had been caused due to excessive cargo 180 He responded by donating La Trinidad de Burdeos for free 180 This move disarmed Pozo s posture but the functionary replaced them with new bold claims even claiming that the frigate was damaged 180 All of the treasurer s complaints were dismissed and the ship left port 181 That same year a conglomerate of his enemies sent a letter to the king completely composed by critics and false accusations 182 However within a year Phillip V wrote a personal letter thanking Enriquez for his service 156 His fleet had become the de facto guardian of the Caribbean surpassing the efficiency of the Armada de Barlovento 183 With growing contempt against him Enriquez secured the well being of his son by placing three houses in San Juan and a farm near Bayamon river worth 20 000 pieces of eight to the service of the church 184 This move guaranteed that they would be beyond the reach of his enemies with the intention that Vicente would end serving as the chaplain of these properties receiving a stable income and inheriting at least part of his fortune 185 To this end he made a request to Valdivia so that Vicente could fulfill this role 185 Despite this office he would also aid his father manage his business 186 Enriquez had also led an effort to rebuild the cathedral of San Juan 187 Despite being of mixed race Enriquez owned several African slaves which served as an assertion of his social status and performed his menial tasks 188 At least 50 were working in one of his haciendas El Plantaje 189 Enriquez owned another hacienda Ribiera del Bayamon where he employed 49 black slaves Of which he might have fathered a significant portion of 21 which shared his last name with most also being named Miguel 190 The other option being that the parents of these children decided to adopt his name as a form of tribute for their master 190 He maintained this group with three plantations that amassed over 7 982 plants and 10 000 yards where yuca was cultivated 191 His haciendas were mostly dedicated to the support of his slaves who in turn did most of the hard work that sustained his empire 188 Enriquez employed more in his workshops and the port performing works that varied from carpenters and blacksmiths to moving cargo and supply ships that were about to set sail 189 Enriquez rarely bought these slaves and the few times that he did it was through the advantages provided by the Royal Asiento or the Guinea Company 174 Most of them were actually acquired through his privateering vessels Between 1716 and 1733 his ships captured over 176 slaves in this manner 174 The most successful was La Modista which captured a total of 95 enslaved Africans from British and Danish slave ships which were delivered directly to Enriquez 174 Enriquez was the Puerto Rican that owned more slaves during his time and was reportedly harsh with them His methods of discipline included holding them captive in his own private jail food deprivation and flailing 192 Between 1718 and 1720 several storms affected Puerto Rico destroying the agriculture and causing a shortage of food and shelter 193 To further complicate matters an epidemic was declared causing the death of several patients 194 The residents of San Juan asked Enriquez to help and he responded by donating 400 jars of melado a type of food made from sugar and molasses and an entire shipment of corn which one of his ships had delivered 194 He also took over the funeral services of the poor that died paying the Church personally 195 The situation at Vieques was eventually repeated this time in the San Juan cays 196 Once again it was thanks to the privateering fleet that the situation was made public 197 This time the invaders were Danish who had not only populated the cays but already possessed functional agriculture were working on the fortification of the settlements and building a port 197 However the local authorities largely ignored the matter 197 Bertolano repeated his previous actions and ordered Enriquez to send a vessel to confirm the rumors 197 The ship returned with two Danish victims captured during this visit 197 Despite this the local authorities only sent letters informing of the development to Madrid and the viceroy of New Spain 198 On June 5 1720 Phllip V requested Enriquez to loan all of his privateering sloops for this operation However the coincidental arrival of a small fleet from the Armada de Barlovendo changed the established course of action 199 The local authorities organized a reunion to discuss what the proper course was 199 The commander of the fleet Rodrigo de Torres quoted several excuses to avoid participating in the incursion ranging from lack of knowledge to weather conditions ultimately refusing based on the lack of a direct order 199 However a communication from the viceroy detailing that a royal request ordered him to redirect the Armada de Barlovento to Puerto Rico for this purpose complicated the matters 200 Enriquez felt that a single frigate was all that would be needed since his ships were enough to complete a competent fleet 200 Torres then offered more excuses and argued that the circumstances were not favorable lacking the element of surprise 200 The Armada de Barlovento left the port of San Juan afterwards and the operation was eventually aborted 201 To further complicate matters the political climate had changed just months before due to the alliance s victory over Spain which resulted in the Treaty of The Hague 202 The cays remained populated by foreigners being inhabited by British and Dutch living under the flag of Denmark 202 Parallel to this the conflict with Pozo continued when the treasurer noticed that Enriquez owed 2 986 pieces of eight in taxes he denounced it 158 The Council of the Indies executed a secret investigation of the privateer based on these allegations 196 His years of loyalty to the Crown had been ignored by the king himself 197 However the process was delayed Prior to this Pozo had been even able to secure that his allies won the 1719 municipal elections running a smear campaign against Enriquez to get them elected 203 The process was plagued by irregularities with viable voters being arbitrarily disqualified beforehand 203 Second term of Danio Edit On October 12 1717 the Spanish Crown granted Danio a second term as governor of Puerto Rico 204 This was a goal that he and Enriquez had originally planned since the end of his first administration 205 However with time the privateer lost interest feeling that it was no longer necessary to secure his goals 206 Danio did not take the office immediately since he was ordered to gather and equip a hundred soldiers that would accompany him 207 The enemies of Enriquez panicked fearing that the privateer would possess the support of the governor bishop and accountant 204 They soon launched an aggressive defamation campaign to revoke this appointment and seized as much control as they could before his arrival 208 However their initiative failed 208 Enriquez and Danio had remained close following the first term with one of his nephews receiving his education along Vicente 27 However the irregularity in the fulfillment of their previous agreement took a toll Knowing this Enriquez quickly tried to once again earn his favor through letters directly accusing his adversaries of the breach of their accord 209 Danio arrived to San Juan on April 6 1720 and was immediately received by a belligerent Pozo who told him that the privateers enemies were now his own 209 During the first months of this term the governor actually persecuted this group 210 Enriquez thrived his fleet capturing four vessels two from the Netherlands and one from Great Britain and France apiece 211 Soon after Danio began a trial of residence that seized the properties of Pozo who had since gathered a considerable fortune 212 The former treasurer was also jailed and permanently vanished from the New World 213 Furthermore Danio also managed to acquire ecclesiastic censorship from Valvidia who threatened his allies with eternal damnation 213 Twelve residents soon revealed the places were Pozo has hidden part of his wealth 213 The governor used the law as his weapon who sentenced the other involved to pay a fine of 1 601 pieces of eight and banned them from serving in a public office for a period of ten years 214 Some were even banished from San Juan Those affected quickly countered by sending letters to the Crown which responded by ordering the excarteration of Pozo allowing him to present his case in Spain 215 However before the former treasurer could do that he found himself involved in the secret investigation that was being done against Enriquez 215 Due to the large number of accusations offered by each side the Council of the Indies suspected both 216 Judge Tomas Fernandez Perez was placed in charge and arrived to San Juan in 1721 216 Danio was also involved due to his friendship with the privateer and he was ordered to cooperate with the investigation by leaving San Juan while it was underway 216 Fernandez began by interrogating 21 of Enriquez s enemies who offered the same arguments 217 Once the judge heard all of their versions he determined that they were merely motivated by their desire to punish the privateer 217 The blame fell on Pozo and Francisco de Allende with the entire group being jailed 218 Enriquez expected to emerge stronger from this process however his relationship with Danio quickly took a turn for the worst 219 It is likely that the governor felt that the privateer was not willing to cooperate or help him during the investigation 220 The remainder of Enriquez s enemies may have noticed this and pursued his favor leaving Pozo and his faction alone 220 During the course of the trial the animosity between Danio and the privateer became evident 221 The residents of San Juan were surprised being familiar with their prior affinity 221 None of them publicly declared the reason for the conflicts due to the contentious nature of the actions done during their partnership 221 Under these circumstances Enriquez found himself in a familiar position With Danio s opposition his privateering venture was endangered 222 Once again Enriquez was forced to defend his role in the defense and supply of Puerto Rico from those that tried to minimize its importance 222 Despite this he was able to keep a number of vessels constantly active being the owner of at least 20 222 Enriquez did everything within his reach to keep a de facto monopoly over the local economy and despite the political tension he was still turning a considerable profit 223 The ships usually left San Juan without established routes or return dates capturing their preys as they encountered them 224 Even when they left with a predetermined destination desertion and other factors commonly complicated their voyages 225 For the most part the ships operated under the discretion of their respective captains 226 On occasion they would even randomly ambush local vessels claiming that they were captures to prevent contraband Their tactics also placed them at odds with friendly ships such as the Santo Domingo based La Concordia which nearly captured La Modista 225 Danio s first attempt to challenge this dominance was timid he fomented more guarda costas and facilitated the emergence of new privateers 223 Among them there was Miguel de Ubides a vocal critic of Enriquez who received the authorization to purchase a ship from the governor of Margarita 223 Upon learning of this the privateer quickly moved his connections 223 Enriquez wrote to the governor of Margarita and requested that the ship was not sold to anyone from Puerto Rico 223 Valvidia who was also the bishop of Margarita also interceded in his favor 223 When Ubides arrived he was told that the ship was no longer for sale 223 He received the same response in the ports of Cumana and La Guaira 223 When two slaves were involved in an incident they were imprisoned in Enriquez s private jail for a period of four months until Danio ordered their release to antagonize him 227 The governor also ordered the incarceration of Enriquez in El Morro for cheering posters where the images of several powerful figures were satirized 16 He did not deny these accusations instead simply responding that celebrating their use did not damage anyone 16 Meanwhile the governors of Margarita and Cumana also helped the privateers by issuing licenses of their own which resulted at least in the capture of a British vessel 228 On March 13 1721 a French merchant named Francisco de la Get captain of the frigate Nuestra Senora de la Leche brought a captured vessel intending to contact Enriquez 229 They reached an agreement and the captain received the loan of La Modista and La Blanca which would join the frigate to form a small fleet 229 The first mission of this alliance was plagued by problems with La Blanca being forced to remain in San Juan 230 The crews of the different ships were also incapable of reaching a consensus regarding the preys that should be captured with Enriquez s group trying to avoid Spanish ships 230 Shortly afterwards their alliance was dissolved 230 Enriquez continued to perform favors for the Royal authorities fixing their ship in his private shipyard and serving as a ferry for a variety of government and Church officials 231 Later that year Enriquez fell victim to two embargoes where his properties remained confiscated until 1724 170 However the authorities were only able to seize what was registered in his name with neither jewels or coins being listed in the official forms 170 It is assumed that he his this portion of his fortune where they could not retrieve it 170 From these documents it was established that he was the wealthiest Puerto Rican of his time capable of casually investing 500 pieces of eight 232 In San Juan alone Enriquez owned 13 well equipped houses several of which he employed for other purposes such as warehouses carpenter and mechanic shops an armory and a blacksmith 233 Another one served as a hotel for notable visitors while a third one was used to temporally house the Catholic Bishops 233 Most of them were located at Santa Barbara street adjacent to the San Justo marina 233 His main house was one of the most complete 18th century houses on record and it was equipped with several luxurious decorations including several pieces of art but it was also partially converted into a warehouse and store 234 This marked a stark contrast in a time where the government heavily depended on the Situado and the governor s salary was only 2 200 pieces of eight while other high ranking figures did not even reach 800 and common professionals barely reached 3 per day 232 By 1723 Enriquez had developed a reputation for altruism reportedly helping neighbors and foreigners alike 193 On a yearly basis he continued to work with charity donating to treat the sick and providing clothes for the poor 235 However this actions did not sit well with his enemies who made efforts to minimize their impact 195 Despite these efforts on a personal level Enriquez s grew to dislike the prospect of manual labor and adapted his clothing and diet to that of the higher class that attacked himself expressing disdain when the only food available was that commonly consumed by the poor 236 When the sloop Santiago docked in San Juan carrying royal documents and the governor elect of Caracas Danio ordered Enriquez to loan another vessel to transport the politician 237 The privateer complied and granted them La Venganza which sailed under Mateo de Luque 237 The ship then stopped at Cumana to deliver the documents 237 In the return trip La Venganza captured a British ship sending its prey back to San Juan and docking at Buenavista awaiting further orders 238 While there Danio ordered that La Venganza completed an escort mission to Santiago 239 The governor had declared the British ship a legitimate prey but as soon as the party left he changed his original ruling 238 The mission was concluded and they had received orders to return directly but were low on supplies and were ambushed while trying to fool the crew of a ship by flying a friendly flag 240 The British crew intended to leave them stranded in Jamaica however they found the papers of the ship captured during their previous mission 239 The crew were treated as pirates and placed on trial as soon as they arrived to Jamaica 33 of the 41 members of the crew were executed shortly afterward 240 Enriquez blamed the orders of Danio for the audacious actions of his fleet 241 In 1722 Enriquez alleged in a letter to the Spanish Crown that since his return Danio had only pursued the appropriation of his fortune 221 These accusations were backed by Valdivia and Paris 221 However the governor was likely simply trying to recover the wealth that he had left in charge of the privateer years before 221 Enriquez tried to bring an end to the conflict by offering a sum between 15 000 and 20 000 pieces of eight to Danio 242 However this offering was declined 242 Furthermore both could never agree on the amount of money that was owed due to their previous arrangement with the governor claiming that it was 42 261 pieces of eight but the privateer rebuffing that it was a shared debt and that the fortune was spent in critical investments 243 Enriquez even told the king that he possessed a document stating that he was actually the creditor of the governor s fortune and as such owned nothing 242 This infuriated Danio who ordered his incarceration on December 9 1722 242 Antonio Camino was also jailed but soon escaped and traveled to Havana 242 Once there he began collecting positive accounts for his employer 244 Among those that agreed to help were a group of military officials that had been neglected by Danio in October 1720 only to be fully attended by Enriquez 244 After gathering the support Camino traveled to Spain where he spoke in the privateer s behalf for over a year 245 Valdivia tried to request an excarceration with external help but Enriquez remained in jail 245 The relationship between the Church functionary and the privateer had been criticized by Danio 246 To further antagonize Enriquez he created a system of official privateering by reassigning the sloop Santiago confiscated along his other property 247 Ubides became involved in this venture but the plan backfired and the ship was captured by a pirate brigantine sailing from Martinique in its first mission 247 The entire blame fell on Danio who had staffed the boat with an inexperienced crew that did not know how to react once they witnessed a jolly roger 248 Seeking an escape the governor devised an account where he blamed Camino claiming that he had provided route information to the pirates supposedly acting on Enriquez s behalf 248 Danio claimed that the privateer formed an alliance with the pirates so that he could freely import illegal contraband and he even tried to bribe a St Thomas sailor with 1 000 pieces of eight so that his account had a witness 248 The governor tried to restart the official privateering project meeting moderate success by mimicking the pirate code s repartition of the loot captured 249 They captured three vessels two from France and Great Britain and a third one sailed by freebooters 249 In Spain Camino s testimony gained the attention of the Council of the Indies which suggested to the king that Danio was investigated and that a new governor should be named to eventually replace him 250 Phillip V named Jose Antonio de Isasi 250 The Council also requested the liberation of Enriquez and the restitution of his property 250 However this failed to materialize since Isasi remained in Spain for nearly a year after his appointment and by 1724 he surrendered the nomination 251 The Council named Captain Jose Antonio de Mendizabal as his replacement 251 While preparing the military officer received strict orders to jail Danio and liberate Enriquez as soon as he arrived to San Juan 251 As usual the privateer also took the initiative to gain his favor 252 On August 23 1724 Mendizabal took the office of governor and only six days afterwards he ordered the incarceration of his predecessor 252 In the end Enriquez succeeded in bringing an end to Danio s second term 16 He suffered the same fate of Juan de Ribera 5 However Danio s case dragged on for a prolonged time period forcing him to remain captive in El Morro until at least 1730 The former governor was subsequently transported to Madrid where he remained in jail 253 Enriquez provided transport to Danio s prosecutor Simon Belenguer so he could return to Spain but was unable to gain his favor 254 This functionary criticized all of the involved and even argued that the privateer s actions were more akin to a pirate than to a military officer 255 However Belenguer placed most of the blame on Enriquez and issued harsher sentences to his allies that to his enemies 256 Dean Martin Calderon and Pozo were declared free of guilt 257 To justify his actions Mendizabal conducted his own investigation 253 During this process even the former allies of Danio testified against him 253 Later years Edit Following Danio s trial Enriquez received full support from Mendizabal 258 The governor largely ignored Balaguer s sentence 258 The Mendizabal administration became the most tranquil time period in Enriquez s career 258 On July 21 1727 one of his ships brought a British prey which was renamed El Postillon quickly becoming an instrumental part of the fleet 259 In Spain Phillip V was briefly replaced by Louis I only to return to the Crown 258 The king quickly introduced a new politic that focused on Spain s superiority in the Atlantic 260 This created a new rift between the Empire and Great Britain which directly benefited Enriquez 261 The First Secretary of State Jose Patino decided that the privateer s fleet would be employed towards this end 262 This functionary archived all the complaints issued by his enemies dismissing the efficiency of their work 262 Enriquez s fleet defended the local trade a difficult mission due to the proximity of St Thomas to Puerto Rico 263 During the summer of 1728 he was forced to attend a local enemy Captain Isidro Alvarez de Nava and other members of the military were plotting to assassinate Mendizabal and the privateer 264 Word of this reached the governor on June 26 1728 but was largely ignored Alvarez was the most experienced military captain and would take the office of governor in case of death 265 He was also related to Fernando de Allende who insisted that if Enriquez survived the assassination would fail in turning the balance of power 265 Two unsuccessful attempts were organized against the privateer 266 A subsequent confession offering full detail of the plot put an end to it The conspirators vehemently denied these accusations claiming that Enriquez was framing them 267 The governor negotiated with the soldiers and convinced them to submit to a temporary sentence in El Morro 268 Afterwards Alvarez was released and continued his defense at Madrid 268 Led by El Postillon El Pequeno P La Amarilla La Verdad and La Fe his vessels captured 56 British merchant ships during the Anglo Spanish War 269 This constituted nearly half of their merchant fleet 270 With his vessels playing a key role to secure Spain s dominance over Great Britain Enriquez made a bold request for a mulato asking Patino to help him reach the rank of Royal Admiral 271 The secretary never answered this petition 271 The actions of Enriquez soon gained notoriety among the merchants affiliated to the South Sea Company who gave him the nickname The Grand Archvillain 85 One of them once described him by saying Enriquez has raised himself to be in effect King at least more than Governor of Porto Rico sic 85 The impact of his fleet on British merchants was such that on February 24 1728 that he became the topic of the House of Commons of Great Britain in London 270 There its members decided to send several military captains to directly attack Enriquez s fleet 270 Several British warships were sent to San Juan in order to demand restitution for the lost vessels 270 The British ambassador to Madrid also wrote to Patino demanding the return of the vessels 272 These requests did not produce an immediate effect 273 Enriquez was a topic of inquiry in this entity a total of 12 times during a period of five years with most complaints being filed by military officers and governors from Jamaica 1 Mendizabal s cooperation benefited both his business and his military influence and the governor went as far as employing politics to favor him On one night a group of 23 slaves escaped from El Plantaje and were joined by some employees from his shipyard 274 Consequently in May 1728 Enriquez ordered two of his ships to go to St Thomas to reclaim the slaves that had escaped He also ordered that if this could not be accomplished they should go to the San Juan cays and capture as many as possible which they did and returned with 24 slaves 175 Taking notice Mendizabal requested a treaty with Denmark that allowed the return or replacement of slaves that escaped between Puerto Rico and St Thomas 275 Despite being fully invested in the war effort Enriquez also continued to serve the Crown in other aspects His fleet was forced to secure the arrival of Cumana s Situado evading a British squadron 276 Enriquez also continued providing transport to the authorities and even some civilians 276 That same year he sent Camino to Havana in order to complete a task 277 However Enriquez s confidant failed when he lost the relevant documentation losing to a local privateer and costing a significant amount of money 277 The privateer was angered by this development Camino responded by reclaiming payment for his entire career and threatened that he would travel to Spain seeking retribution 278 Enriquez s enemies considered this an opportunity to give credibility to their allegations 278 However as years went by the number of captured vessels became consistently smaller due to Spain s shifting its focus to the Mediterranean 259 Enriquez also lost his influence within the Church with the arrival of a new bishop Sebastian Lorenzo Pizarro who declined any gift or favor that he offered 279 After the war ended the Empire s relation with Great Britain normalized further complicating this venture 259 Under these circumstances the work of Enriquez served as an obstacle and by 1731 Mendizabal s last year in office he was no longer considered a key asset in the New Word 259 In 1731 Enriquez sent two sloops to spy on a British warship that had been sailing adjacent to San Juan for a week 264 This action interfered with the international relations between both nations Patino now intended to rebuild the Empire s armada and required peace to accomplish this task The sudden change in geopolitics combined with conclusion of Mendizabal s term began a downward spiral for Enriquez s life 280 On October 11 1731 Matias de Abadia docked at San Juan and took office a few hours later 280 He arrived in one of Enriquez s ships after his original vessel lost registration midway 280 A military officer Abadia was accompanied by three trusted men who were quickly placed in the pivotal offices of treasurer of Puerto Rico overseer and manager of the city 281 Even before traveling to San Juan the governor had orders to settle the constant conflicts between its residents 282 Abadia was also placed in charge of attending Camino s case against Enriquez and of investigating the assassination attempts 282 Following his intervention the cases of Danio and Alvarez were suddenly re evaluated by the Council of the Indies and Enriquez was forced to pay 4 000 pieces of eight to the former governor despite the fact that the investigation had already been closed 283 Alvarez was also released and reinstated in his military position with the privateer being forced to pay again 283 The influence that Enriquez once possessed was now wavering and he was likely being held accountable for the incidents of the previous decades 283 His enemies exploited this and bishop Pizarro aligned himself with the governor only contacting the privateer to order the use of his vessels for transportation 284 The fact that Spain needed a scapegoat to appease the British government complicated his position 285 Despite being under constant pressure Enriquez tried to continue his privateering business expecting things to normalize as they had in the past 286 However his venture suffered directly and his fleet only captured two confirmed preys both were Spanish ships that were carrying contraband and were seized by the sloop La Isabela 286 Due to the circumstances vessels previously under his sway spent most of their time operating outside Puerto Rico since they were otherwise employed in non lucrative government missions when they returned 204 Eventually Enriquez systematically lost all of his vessels except a small schooner which the governor ordered to be disarmed 286 Furthermore knowing the lucrative nature of the practice Abadia employed front men that worked as privateers for him 287 Eventually he decided to abandon privateering altogether 288 During the final months of 1732 Abadia sentenced Enriquez for not paying Camino and another group of merchants 289 The former was to receive 5 800 pieces of eight the salary of ten years despite the protest of the privateer who reclaimed what he had given to his former trustee 289 Enriquez tried to appeal but before a sentence was reached Abadia forced him to pay 290 The privateer gave 20 slaves that were worth the fine 290 Furthermore Enriquez was forced to pay 21 631 additional pieces of eight for an unrelated matter 290 The merchants were demanding 72 285 which Abadia also granted despite the fact that Enriquez assured that the debt was paid 291 The governor s stance led to the arrival of several alleged creditors which in turn reclaimed their own purported debts some dating back nearly thirty years 291 Twenty two cases were open for the total of 199 129 pieces of eight 4 reales and 11 maravedis 291 The Crown itself reclaimed 25 069 pieces of eight and 2 reales for a trade equipment and the capture of a slaving vessel by La Modista 292 The Church also demanded 27 291 pieces of eight based on three transactions 292 In the end even the totality of Enriquez s fortune would not be enough to pay the entire sum 293 A complete embargo was ordered by Abadia in 1733 284 Mysteriously the entire fortune was only estimated to be worth 43 000 pieces of eight although the worth of his slaves alone was known to surpass this sum and he had invested 150 000 recently 293 Since his goods were insufficient to pay the debt Abadia complied with the demands of Camino and seized the chaplaincies that were created by Enriquez s donation to the Catholic Church leaving his son without a place to practice 186 Vicente tried to appeal at the Royal Audiencia of Santo Domingo 294 However his plights were ignored and the governor s ruling was upheld In 1734 Enriquez issued a complaint stating that Abadia was prohibiting him from using the title of Caballero of the Royal Effigy and requesting a confirmation of said title 295 The Council of the Indies preferred to ignore the request instead telling the privateer to show the relevant medal to the governor 295 That same year Abadia judged the Mendizabal administration and ordered the incarceration of the former governor basing his entire case on the complaints of Pozo 295 Enriquez was also involved in the prosecution which focused on his supposed debts 289 He tried to provide his own documentation but the governor declined 296 In May 1735 Vicente died filling the former privateer with guilt 294 Attempting to escape the administration of Abadia Enriquez took refuge in the Convent of Santo Tomas on October 30 1735 He remained there after hearing rumors that he was going to be jailed at El Morro 186 However even there the governor pursued him Abadia requested permission to obtain a search warrant and check if Enriquez had taken any wealth there 294 All of the rooms were rummaged but nothing of worth was found 294 Despite this Abadia confiscated Enriquez s correspondence 294 Incredulous the former privateer requested a certification for the search warrant 297 Between 1735 and 1737 Enriquez wrote to Phillip V six times requesting an independent prosecutor that could launch a neutral investigation 298 He also offered to reorganize the now scattered privateers 298 However the king never replied directly and the only response issued by the Council of the Indies informed him that they did not consider that action convenient 298 From that moment onwards Enriquez only wrote to detail his misery and to request the payment of an old debt 299 During the following years his only contact to the outside world was through the Dominican friars 300 To Enriquez s chagrin Abadia had unusual longevity in the office of governor with the Crown granting him time beyond the stipulated five years 301 In 1740 the Council of the Indies revised Mendizabal s case and issued a declaration restoring his honor and rank 296 However they never did the same for Enriquez despite being charged as a supposed accomplice of the former governor 296 Most of his friend eventually left only Paris and the members of the Church remained besides him 302 On June 29 1743 Abadia died while still in office 303 Five months afterwards Enriquez died a sudden death 303 After receiving the Extreme Unction his body was laid to rest in a mass grave as a charity since he was penniless and nobody paid for a burial 304 Only Paris and Rosa Enriquez his unrecognized daughter who would later claim that he had been poisoned mourned his death 304 Legacy EditThe progress of the fortunate mulato ended up bringing him enemies envy merged to the racial prejudices so deeply rooted in those times Salvador Brau s take of Enriquez s life in 1854 With its goal finally accomplished the high class of San Juan did its part to erase Enriquez s presence from the collective memory of Puerto Rico 304 His loyalty to the Crown was also ignored by the same authorities that he fervently served in life and his role in history eventually faded from the records 304 Throughout the following centuries Enriquez s work became fragmented with the bulk remaining obscure 1 Locally authors Salvador Brau Arturo Morales Carrion and Jose Luis Gonzalez played a role introducing him to Puerto Rican literature while his figure was established within the education system by 1922 s Historia de Puerto Rico 1 Internationally the early accounts of his life reflect their source with British versions depicting him as a pirate while the Spanish ones describe his accomplishments An example was published in 1940 by historian Jean O McLachlan who lived in British India who after revising the declarations of the South Sea Company s factors concluded that Enriquez should have been the most famous of the guarda costas and that he may have been a desperado 305 McLachlan contends that Enriquez was an ex slave who got his fortune by betraying a gentleman to the Inquisition and used this to become a privateer 305 He then further goes on to claim that Enriquez was given a gold medal and the title of Don as a result of giving presents to the royal officials and even to His Catholic Majesty 305 A direct contrast is established in the eleventh volume of Historia general de Espana y America a collaboration written by several professors of the University of Cordoba and the University of Seville detailing the history of Spain which asserts that of all the Spanish corsairs the most accomplished one was the Puerto Rican Miguel Henriquez whom they describe as a famous and feared mythological figure in the Caribbean during his lifetime 306 307 A more systematic approach was taken by Vegan historian Angel Lopez Cantos who studied Enriquez s life and whereabouts for decades 1 The process of rediscovering the privateer s past took several years of research during which his life s work was slowly retrieved from the contemporary documents that survive in the General Archive of the Indies 1 Afterwards Lopez published several books based on his examination including two biographies a novel titled Mi Tio Miguel Enriquez lit My uncle Miguel Enriquez and the historical compilation Historia y poesia en la vida de Miguel Enriquez lit History and poetry in the life of Miguel Enriquez 1 In 2011 professor Milagros Denis Rosario of City University of New York published a socio historical analysis for Universidad del Norte where the role that race played in the recognition of those involved in fending off the 1797 British attack of San Juan was examined as part of its thesis the document discussed the role and background of similar individuals in the Military history of Puerto Rico 308 Among the issues explored were the circumstances of Enriquez s downfall which are discussed within the framework set by Lopez Cantos and Brau leading to the author s conclusion that the backlash of the higher classes represents a clear example of how the 18th century Puerto Rican society was not ready to accept this kind of individual 308 Despite the success of his career the presence of Enriquez in modern Puerto Rican culture has been eclipsed by his clandestine counterpart Roberto Cofresi 309 However this process of romanticization began during the 20th century Teacher journalist and writer Enrique A Laguerre wrote a novel dedicated to his memory titled Miguel Enriquez Proa libre sobre mar gruesa lit Miguel Enriquez free life in a heavy sea 310 Enriquez who became the wealthiest man on the archipelago during the first half of the 18th century is now considered to have been the first Puerto Rican economic force and entrepreneur 2 Historian and author Federico Ribes Tovar considered him a financial genius 311 Proposals to name a large cargo transport ship after him have been pursued but with no success so far 1 In 2010 the ruins of a chapel that he built within El Plantaje in 1735 named Ermita de Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria was recognized as an historic monument by the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico 312 Though the examples remain scarce Enriquez has inspired other kinds of media In 2007 the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture published a series of comic books named ICePe comic with the 12th volume being Miguel Enriquez corsario puertorriqueno lit Miguel Enriquez Puerto Rican corsair In 2016 Raul Rios Diaz published the eponymous short documentary Miguel Enriquez which combined his own research with Cantos previous work later winning a Gold Peer Award for best direction and the public preference vote at the San Juan Fine Arts Film Festival 313 As part of the Ibero American branch of promotion for Assassin s Creed IV Black Flag Ubisoft published an affinity test that allowed players to gauge their relation to certain historical figures among whom was Enriquez who was listed under both variants of his name 314 He was played by actor Modesto Lacen in the San Juan National Historic Site Northern Light Productions documentary El legado de una Isla Las fortificaciones del Viejo San Juan which debuted on March 7 2017 See also Edit Puerto Rico portal Piracy portalList of Puerto Ricans List of Puerto Rican military personnel Battle of San Juan 1595 Jose Campuzano Polanco Francis Drake William Kidd Amaro Rodriguez FelipeNotes Edit His last name is also frequently spelled Henriquez This variant has been especially used by English language sources Billon coins were supposed to be worth the same as the silver coins but in practice were worth 25 less Captain Jose Martinez de Andino one of Enriquez s most loyal allies was the one in charge of moving the military for this operation References Edit a b c d e f g h Angel Collado Schwarz 2007 03 01 Miguel Enriquez el primer gran heroe nacional in Spanish La Voz del Centro Retrieved 2014 01 01 a b c Lance Oliver 2000 1700 The age of pirates and privateers Coffeericeandbeans com Retrieved 2014 01 01 a b Challenging Changes a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 62 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 63 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 54 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 56 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 136 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 154 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 104 a b c Negroni 1992 pp 273 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 75 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 113 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 77 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 64 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 61 Puertorriquenidad a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 21 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 22 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 23 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 24 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 27 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 32 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 33 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 26 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 34 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 41 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 25 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 127 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 114 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 129 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 128 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 130 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 131 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 132 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 133 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 137 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 138 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 139 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 142 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 143 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 144 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 145 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 164 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 35 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 36 Jimenez de Wagenheim 1998 pp 73 Morales Carrion 1974 pp 70 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 151 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 152 a b c d e f Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 153 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 155 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 156 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 157 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 158 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 146 a b Ribes Tovar 1973 pp 133 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 147 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 148 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 149 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 150 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 159 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 163 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 165 a b c d e f Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 166 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 167 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 174 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 168 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 169 a b c d e f Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 170 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 175 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 176 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 177 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 117 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 115 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 118 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 119 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 120 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 121 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 123 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 122 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 178 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 179 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 180 a b c McLachlan 1940 pp 89 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 181 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 182 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 171 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 172 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 183 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 184 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 185 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 186 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 187 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 189 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 190 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 191 a b c d e f g h Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 193 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 194 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 195 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 196 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 197 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 198 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 199 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 201 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 78 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 268 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 267 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 269 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 272 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 271 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 66 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 70 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 203 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 204 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 205 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 207 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 209 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 208 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 210 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 214 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 211 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 213 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 216 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 217 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 218 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 219 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 220 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 221 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 224 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 225 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 226 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 227 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 228 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 229 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 231 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 235 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 236 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 237 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 215 a b Miller 1922 pp 171 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 240 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 241 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 242 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 243 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 244 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 245 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 247 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 248 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 249 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 278 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 279 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 280 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 281 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 254 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 255 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 250 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 275 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 80 Moya Pons 2007 pp 115 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 81 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 82 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 84 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 83 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 98 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 99 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 100 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 85 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 86 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 87 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 102 Ribes Tovar 1970 pp 39 a b c d e f g Miller 1922 pp 169 a b c d e f g Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 109 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 110 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 258 Marley 2008 pp 367 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 259 Navarro Garcia 1983 pp 114 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 251 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 252 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 253 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 256 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 42 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 43 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 44 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 49 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 106 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 105 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 40 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 103 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 107 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 50 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 51 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 52 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 260 a b c d e f Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 261 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 262 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 263 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 264 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 265 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 266 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 277 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 286 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 288 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 282 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 283 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 284 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 285 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 329 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 270 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 291 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 292 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 293 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 294 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 295 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 296 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 297 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 299 a b c d e f Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 300 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 310 a b c d e f g h Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 312 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 317 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 318 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 322 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 108 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 330 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 331 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 333 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 334 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 88 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 91 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 92 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 53 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 73 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 324 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 325 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 326 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 327 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 328 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 301 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 306 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 302 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 303 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 305 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 313 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 315 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 316 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 336 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 337 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 338 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 339 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 341 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 344 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 346 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 345 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 348 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 358 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 349 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 350 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 351 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 353 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 360 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 361 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 366 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 367 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 368 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 354 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 355 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 352 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 356 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 357 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 111 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 112 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 359 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 379 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 380 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 387 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 370 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 371 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 373 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 374 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 388 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 381 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 393 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 395 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 394 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 382 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 383 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 384 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 385 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 386 a b c d e Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 389 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 375 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 376 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 390 a b c Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 398 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 399 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 397 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 372 Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 401 a b Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 404 a b c d Lopez Cantos 1994 pp 405 a b c McLachlan 1940 pp 62 Navarro Garcia 1983 pp 34 Navarro Garcia 1983 pp 596 a b Milagros Denis Rosario 2011 06 14 The Silence of the Black Militia Socio Historical Analysis of the British Attack to Puerto Rico of 1797 PDF Memorias Revista Digital de Historia y Arqueologia desde el Caribe Universidad del Norte Retrieved 2015 05 14 Coles Langhorne 1987 pp 12 Irizarry 2005 pp 202 Ribes Tovar 1973 pp 138 Ley Num 47 del ano 2010 in Spanish LexJuris de Puerto Rico 2010 04 22 Retrieved 2015 06 01 Cineasta boricua apuesta por una nueva produccion documental El Nuevo Dia 2016 11 25 Retrieved 2017 10 20 Miguel Henriquez in Spanish Ubisoft Spain Retrieved 2014 01 05 Bibliography EditLopez Cantos Angel 1994 Miguel Enriquez Corsario boricua del siglo XVIII in Spanish Ediciones Puerto ISBN 0942347048 Ribes Tovar Federico 1970 Enciclopedia Puertorriquena Ilustrada The Puerto Rican Heritage Encyclopedia Volume 1 in Spanish Ultra Educational Publishers ISBN 0915534207 Marley David F 2008 Wars of the Americas a chronology of armed conflict in the Western Hemisphere 1492 to the present ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 100 8 McLachlan Jean Olivia 1940 Trade and Peace with Old Spain 1667 1750 A Study of the Influence of Commerce on Anglo Spanish Diplomacy in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century Cambridge University Press ISBN 0374955204 Miller Paul Gerald 1922 Historia de Puerto Rico in Spanish Department of Public Instruction of Puerto Rico ISBN 1246389746 Navarro Garcia Luis 1983 Historia general de Espana y America los primeros Borbones America en el siglo XVIII Tomo XI 1 Volumen 11 Ediciones Rialp ISBN 9788432121074 Ribes Tovar Federico 1973 A Chronological History of Puerto Rico Ultra Educational Publishers ISBN 0915534207 Moya Pons Frank 2007 History of the Caribbean plantations trade and war in the Atlantic world Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 978 1558764149 Jimenez de Wagenheim Olga 1998 Puerto Rico an interpretive history from pre Columbian times to 1900 Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 1558761225 Morales Carrion Arturo 1974 Puerto Rico and the non Hispanic Caribbean a study in the decline of Spanish exclusivism University of Puerto Rico ISBN 9780847708352 Coles Langhorne Elizabeth 1987 Vieques History of a Small Island Vieques Conservation and Historical Trust ISBN 9780944957363 Irizarry Estelle 2005 Estudios sobre Enrique A Laguerre Edicion conmemorativa a los cien anos de su nacimiento in Spanish Editorial Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena ISBN 0865816182 Negroni Hector Andres 1992 Historia Militar de Puerto Rico A Military History of Puerto Rico in Spanish Turner Publishing ISBN 8478441387 Further reading Voces de la Cultura by Angel Collado Schwarz Atlas de Historia de Puerto Rico Desde sus Origenes Hasta el Siglo XIX by Arturo Santana and R TorrechExternal links EditContrabando en Puerto Rico 1626 1789 by the Puerto Rican Foundation for the Humanities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miguel Enriquez privateer amp oldid 1093946548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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