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Woodes Rogers

Woodes Rogers (c. 1679 – 15 July 1732) was an English sea captain, privateer, slave trader[1] and, from 1718, the first Royal Governor of the Bahamas. He is known as the captain of the vessel that rescued marooned Alexander Selkirk, whose plight is generally believed to have inspired Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe.

Woodes Rogers
Rogers (right) receives a map of New Providence Island from his son, in a painting by William Hogarth (1729)
Royal Governor of the Bahama Islands
In office
6 January 1718 – June 1721
Appointed byGeorge I
Preceded byNew creation
Succeeded byGeorge Phenney
In office
22 October 1728 – 15 July 1732
Appointed byGeorge II
Preceded byGeorge Phenney
Succeeded byRichard Thompson (acting governor)
Personal details
Bornc. 1679
(presumed) Dorset, England
Died(1732-07-15)July 15, 1732 (aged approximately 53)
Nassau, Bahamas
Resting placeNassau, Bahamas
Children3

Rogers came from an experienced seafaring family, grew up in Poole and Bristol, and served a marine apprenticeship to a Bristol sea captain. His father held shares in many ships, but he died when Rogers was in his mid-twenties, leaving Rogers in control of the family shipping business. In 1707, Rogers was approached by Captain William Dampier, who sought support for a privateering voyage against the Spanish, with whom the British were at war. Rogers led the expedition, which consisted of two well-armed ships, Duke and Duchess, and was the captain of Duke. In three years, Rogers and his men went around the world, capturing several ships in the Pacific Ocean. En route, the expedition rescued Selkirk, finding him on Juan Fernández Island on 1 February 1709. When the expedition returned to England in October 1711, Rogers had circumnavigated the globe, while retaining his original ships and most of his men, and the investors in the expedition doubled their money.

The expedition made Rogers a national hero, but his brother was killed and Rogers was badly wounded in fights in the Pacific. On his return, he was successfully sued by his crew on the grounds that they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits, and Rogers was forced into bankruptcy. He wrote of his maritime experiences in the book A Cruising Voyage Round the World, which sold well, in part due to public fascination at Selkirk's rescue.

Rogers was twice appointed Governor of the Bahamas, where he succeeded in warding off threats from the Spanish, and in ridding the colony of pirates. His first term as governor was financially ruinous, and on his return to England, he was imprisoned for debt. During his second term as governor, Rogers died in Nassau at the age of about 53.

Early life

Woodes Rogers was the eldest son and heir of Woods Rogers, a successful merchant captain. Woodes Rogers spent part of his childhood in Poole, England, where he likely attended the local school; his father, who owned shares in many ships, was often away nine months of the year with the Newfoundland fishing fleet. Sometime between 1690 and 1696, Captain Rogers moved his family to Bristol.[2] In November 1697, Woodes Rogers was apprenticed to Bristol mariner John Yeamans, to learn the profession of a sailor. At 18, Rogers was somewhat old to be starting a seven-year apprenticeship. His biographer, Brian Little, suggests that this might have been a way for the newcomers to become part of Bristol maritime society, as well as making it possible for Woodes Rogers to become a freeman, or voting citizen, of the city. Little also suggests that it is likely that Rogers gained his maritime experience with Yeamans' ship on the Newfoundland fleet.[3]

Rogers completed his apprenticeship in November 1704. The following January, Rogers married Sarah Whetstone, daughter of Rear Admiral Sir William Whetstone, who was a neighbour and close family friend. Rogers became a freeman of Bristol because of his marriage into the prominent Whetstone family. In 1706, Captain Rogers died at sea, leaving his ships and business to his son Woodes.[4] Between 1706 and the end of 1708, Woodes and Sarah Rogers had a son and two daughters.[5]

Privateering expedition

Preparation and the early voyage

The War of the Spanish Succession started in 1702, during which England's main maritime foes were France and Spain, and a number of Bristol ships were given letters of marque, allowing them to strike against enemy shipping. At least four vessels in which Rogers had an ownership interest were granted the letters. One, Whetstone Galley, named for Rogers' father-in,law, received the letters before being sent to Africa to begin a voyage in the slave trade. It did not reach Africa, but was captured by the French.[6] Rogers suffered other losses against the French, although he does not record their extent in his book. He turned to privateering as a means of recouping these losses.[5]

In late 1707, Rogers was approached by William Dampier, a navigator and friend of Rogers' father, who proposed a privateering expedition against the Spanish.[7] This was a desperate move on the part of Captain Dampier to save his career.[7] Dampier had recently returned from leading a two-ship privateering expedition into the Pacific, which culminated in a series of mutinies before both ships finally sank due to Dampier's error in not having the hulls properly protected against worms before leaving port. Unaware of this, Rogers agreed. Financing was provided by many in the Bristol community, including Thomas Goldney II of the Quaker Goldney family and Thomas Dover, who would become president of the voyage council and Rogers' father in law.[8] Commanding two frigates, Duke and Duchess, and captaining the first, Rogers spent three years circumnavigating the globe.[9] The ships departed Bristol on 1 August 1708.[10] Dampier was aboard as Rogers' sailing master.[11]

Rogers encountered various problems along the way. Forty of the Bristol crew deserted or were dismissed, and he spent a month in Ireland recruiting replacements and having the vessels prepared for sea. Many crew members were Dutch, Danish, or other foreigners.[12] Some of the crew mutinied after Rogers refused to let them plunder a neutral Swedish vessel. When the mutiny was put down, he had the leader flogged, put in irons, and sent to England aboard another ship. The less culpable mutineers were given lighter punishments, such as reduced rations.[13] The ships intended to force the chilly Drake Passage off the tip of South America, but expedition leaders soon realised that they were short of warm clothing and alcohol, which was then believed to warm those exposed to cold. Considering the latter the more important problem, the expedition made a stop at Tenerife to stock up on the local wine, and later sewed the ships' blankets into cold weather gear.[14] The ships experienced a difficult inter-oceanic passage; they were forced to almost 62° South latitude,[15] which, according to Rogers, "for ought we know is the furthest that any one has yet been to the southward".[16] At their furthest south, they were closer to as-yet-undiscovered Antarctica than to South America.[17]

Rescue of Selkirk and raids on the Spanish

 
Rogers' men search Spanish ladies for their jewels in Guayaquil

Rogers stocked his ships with limes to fend off scurvy, a practice not universally accepted at that time.[18] After the ships reached the Pacific Ocean, their provisions of limes were exhausted and seven men died of the vitamin deficiency disease. Dampier was able to guide the ships to little-known Juan Fernández Island to replenish supplies of fresh produce.[18] On 1 February 1709, as they neared the island, the sailors spotted a fire ashore and feared that it might be a shore party from a Spanish vessel. The next morning Rogers sent a party ashore and discovered that the fire was from Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk, who had been stranded there four years previously.[19] Selkirk was to become an inspiration for the classic novel Robinson Crusoe, written by Rogers' friend, Daniel Defoe.[9] Rogers found Selkirk to be "wild-looking" and "wearing goatskins", noting in his journal, "He had with him his clothes and bedding, with a firelock, some powder, bullets and tobacco, a hatchet, a knife, a kettle, a Bible and books."[9] Selkirk, who had been part of the ship's crew that abandoned Dampier after losing confidence in his leadership, was now more than willing to join a flotilla that included his old commodore as ship's pilot.[20] Selkirk served as a mate aboard the Duke, and was later given command of one of the prize ships taken by the expedition.[21]

After leaving Juan Fernández on 14 February 1709, the expedition captured and looted a number of small vessels, and launched an attack on the town of Guayaquil, today located in Ecuador. When Rogers attempted to negotiate with the governor, the townsfolk secreted their valuables. Rogers was able to get a modest ransom for the town, but some crew members were so dissatisfied that they dug up the recently dead hoping to find items of value. This led to sickness on board ship, of which six men died.[22] The expedition lost contact with one of the captured ships, which was under the command of Simon Hatley. The other vessels searched for Hatley's ship, but to no avail—Hatley and his men were captured by the Spanish. On a subsequent voyage to the Pacific, Hatley would emulate Selkirk by becoming the centre of an event which would be immortalised in literature. His ship beset by storms, Hatley shot an albatross in the hope of better winds, an episode memorialised by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.[23]

The crew of the vessels became increasingly discontented, and Rogers and his officers feared another mutiny. This tension was dispelled by the expedition's capture of a rich prize off the coast of Mexico: the Spanish vessel Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño. Rogers sustained a wound to the face in the battle.[22] While Duke and Duchess were successful in capturing that vessel, they failed to capture Encarnación's companion, a well-armed galleon, Nuestra Señora de Begoña, which made its escape after damaging both vessels. Rogers only reluctantly agreed to giving the inexperienced Captain Dover command of Encarnación, a decision that may have been eased by naming Selkirk as its sailing master.[24] The privateers, accompanied by their two prizes, limped across the Pacific Ocean.[25] The expedition was able to resupply at Guam, which, though governed by the Spanish, extended a cordial welcome to the privateers.[26]

Homeward voyage

The ships then went to the Dutch port of Batavia in what is now Indonesia, where Rogers underwent surgery to remove a musket ball from the roof of his mouth, and the expedition disposed of the less seaworthy of the two Spanish prizes. Dealing with the Dutch there constituted a violation of the British East India Company's monopoly.[27] When the ships finally dropped anchor in the River Thames on 14 October 1711,[23] a legal battle ensued, with the investors paying the East India Company £6,000 (about £951,000 at today's values)[28] as settlement for their claim for breach of monopoly, about four percent of what Rogers brought back. The investors approximately doubled their money, while Rogers gained £1,600 (now worth perhaps £253,500)[28] from a voyage which disfigured him and cost him his brother, who was killed in a battle in the Pacific.[25] The money was probably less than he could have made at home, and was entirely absorbed by the debts his family had incurred in his absence.[29] The long voyage and the capture of the Spanish ship made Rogers a national hero.[25] Rogers was the first Englishman, in circumnavigating the globe, to have his original ships and most of his crew survive.[29]

After his voyage, he wrote an account of it, titled A Cruising Voyage Round the World.[30] Edward Cooke, an officer aboard Duchess, also wrote a book, A Voyage to the South Sea and Round the World, and beat Rogers to print by several months. Rogers' book was much more successful, with many readers fascinated by the account of Selkirk's rescue, which Cooke had slighted. Among those interested in Selkirk's adventure was Daniel Defoe, who appears to have read about it, and fictionalised the story as Robinson Crusoe.[31]

While Rogers' book enjoyed financial success, it had a practical purpose—to aid British navigators and possible colonists. Much of Rogers' introduction is devoted to advocacy for the South Seas trade. Rogers notes that had there been a British colony in the South Seas, he would not have had to worry about food supplies for his crew. A third of Rogers' book is devoted to detailed descriptions of the places that he explored, with special emphasis on "such [places] as may be of most use for enlarging our trade".[32] He describes the area of the River Plate in detail because it lay "within the limits of the South Sea Company",[32] whose schemes had not yet burst into financial scandal. Rogers' book was carried by such South Pacific navigators as Admiral George Anson and privateering captains John Clipperton and George Shelvocke.[33]

Governor and later life

Financial difficulties and the Bahamas proposal

 
Statue of Woodes Rogers outside the Hilton British Colonial Hotel, Nassau

Rogers encountered financial problems on his return. Sir William Whetstone had died, and Rogers, having failed to recoup his business losses through privateering, was forced to sell his Bristol home to support his family. He was successfully sued by a group of over 200 of his crew, who stated that they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits. The profits from his book were not enough to overcome these setbacks, and he was forced into bankruptcy.[34][35] His wife gave birth to their fourth child a year after his return—a boy who died in infancy—and Woodes and Sarah Rogers soon permanently separated.[34]

Rogers decided the way out of his financial difficulty was to lead another expedition, this time against pirates. In 1713, Rogers led what was ostensibly an expedition to purchase slaves in Madagascar and take them to the Dutch East Indies, this time with the permission of the British East India Company. Rogers' secondary purpose was to gather details on the pirates of Madagascar, hoping to destroy or reform them, and colonise Madagascar on a future trip. Rogers collected information regarding pirates and their vessels near the island.[36] Finding that a large number of the pirates had gone native, he persuaded many of them to sign a petition to Queen Anne asking her for clemency.[37] While Rogers' expedition was profitable, when it returned to London in 1715, the British East India Company vetoed the idea of a colonial expedition to Madagascar, believing a colony was a greater threat to its monopoly than a few pirates. Accordingly, Rogers turned his sights from Madagascar to the West Indies. His connections included several of the advisers to the new king, George I, who had succeeded Queen Anne in 1714, and Rogers was able to forge an agreement for a company to manage the Bahamas, which were infested with pirates, in exchange for a share of the colony's profits.[38]

At the time, according to the Governor of Bermuda, the Bahamas were "without any face or form of Government" and the colony was a "sink or nest of infamous rascals".[39] Until Rogers obtained his commission, the islands had been nominally governed by absentee Lords Proprietor, who did little except appoint a new, powerless governor when the position fell vacant.[39] Under the agreement that underlay Rogers' commission, the Lords Proprietor leased their rights for a token sum to Rogers' company for twenty-one years.[40]

On 5 September 1717, a proclamation was issued announcing clemency for all piratical offences, provided that those seeking what became known as the "King's Pardon" surrendered not later than 5 September 1718. Colonial governors and deputy governors were authorised to grant the pardon.[41] Rogers was officially appointed "Captain General and Governor in Chief" by George I on 6 January 1718.[42] He did not leave immediately for his new bailiwick, but spent several months preparing the expedition, which included seven ships, 100 soldiers, 130 colonists, and supplies ranging from food for the expedition members and ships' crews to religious pamphlets to give to the pirates, whom Rogers believed would respond to spiritual teachings. On 22 April 1718, the expedition, accompanied by three Royal Navy vessels, sailed out of the Thames.[43]

First term

The expedition arrived on 24 July 1718, surprising and trapping a ship commanded by pirate Charles Vane. After negotiations failed, Vane used a captured French vessel as a fireship in an attempt to ram the naval vessels. The attempt failed, but the naval vessels were forced out of the west end of Nassau harbour, giving Vane's crew an opportunity to raid the town and secure the best local pilot. Vane and his men then escaped in a small sloop via the harbour's narrow east entrance. The pirates had evaded the trap, but Nassau and New Providence Island were in Rogers' hands.[44]

At the time, the island's population consisted of about two hundred former pirates and several hundred fugitives who had escaped from nearby Spanish colonies. Rogers organised a government, granted the King's Pardon to those former pirates on the island who had not yet accepted it, and started to rebuild the island's fortifications, which had fallen into decrepitude under pirate domination. Less than a month into his residence on New Providence, Rogers was faced with a double threat: Vane wrote, threatening to join with Edward Teach (better known as Blackbeard) to retake the island, and Rogers learned that the Spanish also planned to drive the British out of the Bahamas.[45]

Rogers' expedition suffered further setbacks. An unidentified disease killed almost a hundred of his expedition members, while leaving the long-term residents nearly untouched. Two of the three navy vessels, having no orders to remain, left for New York. Ships sent to Havana to conciliate the Spanish governor there never arrived, their crew revolting and becoming pirates mid-voyage. Finally, the third naval vessel left in mid-September, its commander promising to return in three weeks—a promise he had no intention of keeping. Work on rebuilding the island's fortifications proceeded slowly, with the locals showing a disinclination to work.[46]

On 14 September 1718, Rogers received word that Vane was at Green Turtle Cay near Abaco, about 120 miles (190 km) north of Nassau.[47][48] Some of the pardoned pirates on New Providence took boats to join Vane, and Rogers decided to send two ex-pirate captains, Benjamin Hornigold and John Cockram, with a crew to gather intelligence, and, if possible, to bring Vane to battle. As the weeks passed, and hopes of their return dimmed, Rogers declared martial law and set all inhabitants to work on rebuilding the island's fortifications. Finally, the former pirates returned. They had failed to find an opportunity to kill Vane or bring him to battle, but had captured one ship and a number of pirate captives. Captain Hornigold was then sent to recapture the ships and crews who had gone pirate en route to Havana. He returned with ten prisoners, including captain John Auger,[49] and three corpses.[50] On 9 December 1718, Rogers brought the ten men captured by Hornigold to trial. Nine were convicted, and Rogers had eight hanged three days later, reprieving the ninth on hearing he was of good family. One of the condemned, Thomas Morris, quipped as he climbed the gallows, "We have a good governor, but a harsh one."[47] The executions so cowed the populace that when, shortly after Christmas, several residents plotted to overthrow Rogers and restore the island to piracy, the conspirators attracted little support. Rogers had them flogged, then released as harmless.[51]

On 16 March 1719 Rogers learned that Spain and Britain were at war again. He redoubled his efforts to repair the island's fortifications, buying vital supplies on credit in the hope of later being reimbursed by the expedition's investors. The Spanish sent an assault fleet against Nassau in May, but when the fleet's commodore learned that the French (now Britain's ally) had captured Pensacola, he directed the fleet there instead. This gave Rogers time to continue to fortify and supply New Providence, and in February 1720 the Spaniards finally arrived in Nassau. Two alert ex-slave sentries, the presence of the Delicia of 32-guns and the frigate HMS Flamborough of 24-guns under Captain Johnathan Hildesley[52] and 500 ready waiting militia, many of them ex-pirates helped cause the Spanish withdrawal.[53][54]

The year 1720 brought an end to external threats to Rogers' rule. With Spain and Britain at peace again, the Spanish made no further move against the Bahamas. Vane never returned, having been shipwrecked and captured in the Bay Islands—a year later, he was hanged in Jamaica.[55] This did not end Rogers' problems as governor. Overextended from financing New Providence's defences, he received no assistance from Britain, and merchants refused to give him further credit. His health suffered, and he spent six weeks in Charleston, South Carolina, hoping to recuperate. Instead, he was wounded in a duel with Captain John Hildesley of HMS Flamborough, a duel caused by disputes between the two on New Providence.[56] Troubled by the lack of support and communication from London, Rogers set sail for Britain in March 1721. He arrived three months later to find that a new governor had been appointed, and his company had been liquidated. Personally liable for the obligations he had contracted at Nassau, he was imprisoned for debt.[57]

Activities in England, second term and death

 
Plaque on the site of Rogers' Bristol residence, 35 Queen Square

With both the government and his former partners refusing to honour his debts, Rogers was released from debtor's prison only when his creditors took pity on him and absolved him of his debts. Even so, Rogers wrote that he was "perplexed with the melancholy prospect of [his] affairs".[58] In 1722 or 1723, Rogers was approached by a man writing a history of piracy, and supplied him with information. The resulting work, A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates, published under the pseudonym Captain Charles Johnson, was an enormous hit on both sides of the Atlantic, and catapulted Rogers for the second time to the status of a national hero. With public attention focused on him again, Rogers was successful in 1726 in petitioning the king for financial redress. Not only did King George I grant him a pension, retroactive to 1721,[59] but the king's son and successor, George II, reappointed him as governor on 22 October 1728.[60]

The Bahamas did not come under external threat during Rogers' second term, but the reappointed governor had difficulties. Still seeking to bolster the island's defences, Rogers sought imposition of a local tax. The assembly, which had been instituted in Rogers' absence, objected, and Rogers responded by dissolving it. The governmental battle exhausted Rogers, who again went to Charleston in early 1731 in an attempt to recover his health. Though he returned in July 1731, he never truly regained his health, and died in Nassau on 15 July 1732.[61]

A harbour-side street in Nassau is named for Rogers.[62] "Piracy expelled, commerce restored" remained the motto of the Bahamas until the islands gained independence in 1973.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ Woodard, p. 65: "Rogers was an active slave trader throughout his life"
  2. ^ Woodard, pp. 44–45.
  3. ^ Little, p. 19.
  4. ^ Woodard, pp. 47–48.
  5. ^ a b Little, p. 41.
  6. ^ Woodard, p. 65.
  7. ^ a b Woodard, pp. 67, 70.
  8. ^ Woodard, pp. 70–71.
  9. ^ a b c d The Daily Telegraph, 5 January 2009.
  10. ^ Little, p. 51.
  11. ^ Konstam, p. 151.
  12. ^ Woodard, pp. 51, 54.
  13. ^ Woodard, pp. 56–57.
  14. ^ Woodard, p. 72.
  15. ^ Woodard, pp. 70–72.
  16. ^ Bradley, p. 504.
  17. ^ Little, p. 64.
  18. ^ a b Woodard, p. 75.
  19. ^ Rogers, pp. 123–24.
  20. ^ Rogers, pp. 6, 125, 129.
  21. ^ Little, pp. 73, 83.
  22. ^ a b Woodard, pp. 79–81.
  23. ^ a b Leslie, p. 82.
  24. ^ Rogers, pp. 311–312.
  25. ^ a b c Woodard, pp. 82–84.
  26. ^ Little, pp. 131–32.
  27. ^ Little, p. 135.
  28. ^ a b MeasuringWorth.
  29. ^ a b Leslie, p. 83.
  30. ^ Little, p. 154.
  31. ^ Woodard, pp. 114–16.
  32. ^ a b Little, pp. 154–55.
  33. ^ Little, pp. 158–59.
  34. ^ a b Woodard, pp. 112–17.
  35. ^ London Gazette 14 February 1712.
  36. ^ Woodard, pp. 118–21.
  37. ^ Little, p. 172.
  38. ^ Woodard, pp. 163–66.
  39. ^ a b Little, p. 178.
  40. ^ Woodard, p. 167.
  41. ^ Pringle, p. 184.
  42. ^ Woodard, p. 168.
  43. ^ Woodard, pp. 247–48.
  44. ^ Woodard, pp. 261, 263–66.
  45. ^ Woodard, pp. 267–69.
  46. ^ Woodard, pp. 269–72.
  47. ^ a b Woodard, pp. 301–04.
  48. ^ Hedlam.
  49. ^ Humanity, History of. . www.goldenageofpiracy.org. Archived from the original on 14 April 2018. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
  50. ^ Woodard, pp. 284–86.
  51. ^ Woodard, p. 304.
  52. ^ Little, pp. 192–94.
  53. ^ Marley, David (1998). Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World, 1492 to the Present. Santa Barbara, USA: ABC-CLIO. p. 370. ISBN 0-87436-837-5.
  54. ^ Pringle, p. 198.
  55. ^ Woodard, pp. 308–11.
  56. ^ Woodard, p. 313.
  57. ^ Woodard, pp. 312–14.
  58. ^ Woodard, p. 325.
  59. ^ Woodard, pp. 263–66.
  60. ^ London Gazette 19 October 1728.
  61. ^ Woodard, pp. 327–28.
  62. ^ Woodard, p. 328.

References

  • Bradley, Peter (1999). British Maritime Enterprise in the New World: From the Late Fifteenth to the Mid-eighteenth Century. Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-7734-7866-4.
  • Chapman, James (2015). Swashbucklers: The Costume Adventure Series. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-8881-0.
  • Cooke, Edward (1712). A Voyage to the South Sea and Round the World (2 vols). London: Lintot.
  • Konstam, Angus (2007). Pirates—Predators of the Seas. Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60239-035-5.
  • Leslie, Edward (1988). Desperate Journeys, Abandoned Souls. Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 978-0-395-91150-1.
  • Little, Brian (1960). Crusoe's Captain. Odhams Press.
  • Pringle, Peter (2001) [1953]. Jolly Roger: The Story of the Great Age of Piracy. Dover Publishing.
  • Rogers, Woodes (1712). A Cruising Voyage Round the World. London: Andrew Bell.
  • Woodard, Colin (2007). The Republic of Pirates. Harcourt Trade. ISBN 978-0-15-101302-9.

Other

  • Britten, Nick (5 January 2009). "Diaries of swashbuckling hero who rescued Robinson Crusoe unearthed". The Daily Telegraph. UK. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
  • "No. 5095". The London Gazette. 14 February 1712. p. 2. Note that for dates before 1752, the London Gazette give dates Old Style with the new year beginning on 25 March. By modern reckoning, this issue was published on 14 February 1713.
  • "No. 6719". The London Gazette. 19 October 1728. p. 3.
  • "Purchasing Power of British Pounds 1264–2007". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 20 January 2009. (RPI equivalents)
  • Hedlam, Cecil, ed. (1930). "Letter of Woodes Rogers to the Council of Trade and Plantations, 31 October 1718". Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series: America and the West Indies. London. 30: 376.

External links

  • Rogers, Woodes (1712). A Cruising Voyage Round the World. A. Bell and B. Lintot. (first edition)
  • Rogers, Woodes (1928). G. E. Manwaring (ed.). A Cruising Voyage Round the World. Cassell and Company. (illustrated and modern printing)
  • "Woodes Rogers". Republic of pirates.net. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  • Edward E. Leslie (March 1998). Desperate Journeys, Abandoned Souls: True Stories of Castaways and Other Survivors. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0-395-91150-8.
  • Works by Woodes Rogers at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Woodes Rogers at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

woodes, rogers, 1679, july, 1732, english, captain, privateer, slave, trader, from, 1718, first, royal, governor, bahamas, known, captain, vessel, that, rescued, marooned, alexander, selkirk, whose, plight, generally, believed, have, inspired, daniel, defoe, r. Woodes Rogers c 1679 15 July 1732 was an English sea captain privateer slave trader 1 and from 1718 the first Royal Governor of the Bahamas He is known as the captain of the vessel that rescued marooned Alexander Selkirk whose plight is generally believed to have inspired Daniel Defoe s Robinson Crusoe Woodes RogersRogers right receives a map of New Providence Island from his son in a painting by William Hogarth 1729 Royal Governor of the Bahama IslandsIn office 6 January 1718 June 1721Appointed byGeorge IPreceded byNew creationSucceeded byGeorge PhenneyIn office 22 October 1728 15 July 1732Appointed byGeorge IIPreceded byGeorge PhenneySucceeded byRichard Thompson acting governor Personal detailsBornc 1679 presumed Dorset EnglandDied 1732 07 15 July 15 1732 aged approximately 53 Nassau BahamasResting placeNassau BahamasChildren3Rogers came from an experienced seafaring family grew up in Poole and Bristol and served a marine apprenticeship to a Bristol sea captain His father held shares in many ships but he died when Rogers was in his mid twenties leaving Rogers in control of the family shipping business In 1707 Rogers was approached by Captain William Dampier who sought support for a privateering voyage against the Spanish with whom the British were at war Rogers led the expedition which consisted of two well armed ships Duke and Duchess and was the captain of Duke In three years Rogers and his men went around the world capturing several ships in the Pacific Ocean En route the expedition rescued Selkirk finding him on Juan Fernandez Island on 1 February 1709 When the expedition returned to England in October 1711 Rogers had circumnavigated the globe while retaining his original ships and most of his men and the investors in the expedition doubled their money The expedition made Rogers a national hero but his brother was killed and Rogers was badly wounded in fights in the Pacific On his return he was successfully sued by his crew on the grounds that they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits and Rogers was forced into bankruptcy He wrote of his maritime experiences in the book A Cruising Voyage Round the World which sold well in part due to public fascination at Selkirk s rescue Rogers was twice appointed Governor of the Bahamas where he succeeded in warding off threats from the Spanish and in ridding the colony of pirates His first term as governor was financially ruinous and on his return to England he was imprisoned for debt During his second term as governor Rogers died in Nassau at the age of about 53 Contents 1 Early life 2 Privateering expedition 2 1 Preparation and the early voyage 2 2 Rescue of Selkirk and raids on the Spanish 2 3 Homeward voyage 3 Governor and later life 3 1 Financial difficulties and the Bahamas proposal 3 2 First term 3 3 Activities in England second term and death 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Other 6 External linksEarly life EditWoodes Rogers was the eldest son and heir of Woods Rogers a successful merchant captain Woodes Rogers spent part of his childhood in Poole England where he likely attended the local school his father who owned shares in many ships was often away nine months of the year with the Newfoundland fishing fleet Sometime between 1690 and 1696 Captain Rogers moved his family to Bristol 2 In November 1697 Woodes Rogers was apprenticed to Bristol mariner John Yeamans to learn the profession of a sailor At 18 Rogers was somewhat old to be starting a seven year apprenticeship His biographer Brian Little suggests that this might have been a way for the newcomers to become part of Bristol maritime society as well as making it possible for Woodes Rogers to become a freeman or voting citizen of the city Little also suggests that it is likely that Rogers gained his maritime experience with Yeamans ship on the Newfoundland fleet 3 Rogers completed his apprenticeship in November 1704 The following January Rogers married Sarah Whetstone daughter of Rear Admiral Sir William Whetstone who was a neighbour and close family friend Rogers became a freeman of Bristol because of his marriage into the prominent Whetstone family In 1706 Captain Rogers died at sea leaving his ships and business to his son Woodes 4 Between 1706 and the end of 1708 Woodes and Sarah Rogers had a son and two daughters 5 Privateering expedition EditPreparation and the early voyage Edit William Dampier The War of the Spanish Succession started in 1702 during which England s main maritime foes were France and Spain and a number of Bristol ships were given letters of marque allowing them to strike against enemy shipping At least four vessels in which Rogers had an ownership interest were granted the letters One Whetstone Galley named for Rogers father in law received the letters before being sent to Africa to begin a voyage in the slave trade It did not reach Africa but was captured by the French 6 Rogers suffered other losses against the French although he does not record their extent in his book He turned to privateering as a means of recouping these losses 5 In late 1707 Rogers was approached by William Dampier a navigator and friend of Rogers father who proposed a privateering expedition against the Spanish 7 This was a desperate move on the part of Captain Dampier to save his career 7 Dampier had recently returned from leading a two ship privateering expedition into the Pacific which culminated in a series of mutinies before both ships finally sank due to Dampier s error in not having the hulls properly protected against worms before leaving port Unaware of this Rogers agreed Financing was provided by many in the Bristol community including Thomas Goldney II of the Quaker Goldney family and Thomas Dover who would become president of the voyage council and Rogers father in law 8 Commanding two frigates Duke and Duchess and captaining the first Rogers spent three years circumnavigating the globe 9 The ships departed Bristol on 1 August 1708 10 Dampier was aboard as Rogers sailing master 11 Rogers encountered various problems along the way Forty of the Bristol crew deserted or were dismissed and he spent a month in Ireland recruiting replacements and having the vessels prepared for sea Many crew members were Dutch Danish or other foreigners 12 Some of the crew mutinied after Rogers refused to let them plunder a neutral Swedish vessel When the mutiny was put down he had the leader flogged put in irons and sent to England aboard another ship The less culpable mutineers were given lighter punishments such as reduced rations 13 The ships intended to force the chilly Drake Passage off the tip of South America but expedition leaders soon realised that they were short of warm clothing and alcohol which was then believed to warm those exposed to cold Considering the latter the more important problem the expedition made a stop at Tenerife to stock up on the local wine and later sewed the ships blankets into cold weather gear 14 The ships experienced a difficult inter oceanic passage they were forced to almost 62 South latitude 15 which according to Rogers for ought we know is the furthest that any one has yet been to the southward 16 At their furthest south they were closer to as yet undiscovered Antarctica than to South America 17 Rescue of Selkirk and raids on the Spanish Edit Rogers men search Spanish ladies for their jewels in Guayaquil Rogers stocked his ships with limes to fend off scurvy a practice not universally accepted at that time 18 After the ships reached the Pacific Ocean their provisions of limes were exhausted and seven men died of the vitamin deficiency disease Dampier was able to guide the ships to little known Juan Fernandez Island to replenish supplies of fresh produce 18 On 1 February 1709 as they neared the island the sailors spotted a fire ashore and feared that it might be a shore party from a Spanish vessel The next morning Rogers sent a party ashore and discovered that the fire was from Scottish sailor Alexander Selkirk who had been stranded there four years previously 19 Selkirk was to become an inspiration for the classic novel Robinson Crusoe written by Rogers friend Daniel Defoe 9 Rogers found Selkirk to be wild looking and wearing goatskins noting in his journal He had with him his clothes and bedding with a firelock some powder bullets and tobacco a hatchet a knife a kettle a Bible and books 9 Selkirk who had been part of the ship s crew that abandoned Dampier after losing confidence in his leadership was now more than willing to join a flotilla that included his old commodore as ship s pilot 20 Selkirk served as a mate aboard the Duke and was later given command of one of the prize ships taken by the expedition 21 After leaving Juan Fernandez on 14 February 1709 the expedition captured and looted a number of small vessels and launched an attack on the town of Guayaquil today located in Ecuador When Rogers attempted to negotiate with the governor the townsfolk secreted their valuables Rogers was able to get a modest ransom for the town but some crew members were so dissatisfied that they dug up the recently dead hoping to find items of value This led to sickness on board ship of which six men died 22 The expedition lost contact with one of the captured ships which was under the command of Simon Hatley The other vessels searched for Hatley s ship but to no avail Hatley and his men were captured by the Spanish On a subsequent voyage to the Pacific Hatley would emulate Selkirk by becoming the centre of an event which would be immortalised in literature His ship beset by storms Hatley shot an albatross in the hope of better winds an episode memorialised by Samuel Taylor Coleridge 23 The crew of the vessels became increasingly discontented and Rogers and his officers feared another mutiny This tension was dispelled by the expedition s capture of a rich prize off the coast of Mexico the Spanish vessel Nuestra Senora de la Encarnacion y Desengano Rogers sustained a wound to the face in the battle 22 While Duke and Duchess were successful in capturing that vessel they failed to capture Encarnacion s companion a well armed galleon Nuestra Senora de Begona which made its escape after damaging both vessels Rogers only reluctantly agreed to giving the inexperienced Captain Dover command of Encarnacion a decision that may have been eased by naming Selkirk as its sailing master 24 The privateers accompanied by their two prizes limped across the Pacific Ocean 25 The expedition was able to resupply at Guam which though governed by the Spanish extended a cordial welcome to the privateers 26 Homeward voyage Edit The ships then went to the Dutch port of Batavia in what is now Indonesia where Rogers underwent surgery to remove a musket ball from the roof of his mouth and the expedition disposed of the less seaworthy of the two Spanish prizes Dealing with the Dutch there constituted a violation of the British East India Company s monopoly 27 When the ships finally dropped anchor in the River Thames on 14 October 1711 23 a legal battle ensued with the investors paying the East India Company 6 000 about 951 000 at today s values 28 as settlement for their claim for breach of monopoly about four percent of what Rogers brought back The investors approximately doubled their money while Rogers gained 1 600 now worth perhaps 253 500 28 from a voyage which disfigured him and cost him his brother who was killed in a battle in the Pacific 25 The money was probably less than he could have made at home and was entirely absorbed by the debts his family had incurred in his absence 29 The long voyage and the capture of the Spanish ship made Rogers a national hero 25 Rogers was the first Englishman in circumnavigating the globe to have his original ships and most of his crew survive 29 After his voyage he wrote an account of it titled A Cruising Voyage Round the World 30 Edward Cooke an officer aboard Duchess also wrote a book A Voyage to the South Sea and Round the World and beat Rogers to print by several months Rogers book was much more successful with many readers fascinated by the account of Selkirk s rescue which Cooke had slighted Among those interested in Selkirk s adventure was Daniel Defoe who appears to have read about it and fictionalised the story as Robinson Crusoe 31 While Rogers book enjoyed financial success it had a practical purpose to aid British navigators and possible colonists Much of Rogers introduction is devoted to advocacy for the South Seas trade Rogers notes that had there been a British colony in the South Seas he would not have had to worry about food supplies for his crew A third of Rogers book is devoted to detailed descriptions of the places that he explored with special emphasis on such places as may be of most use for enlarging our trade 32 He describes the area of the River Plate in detail because it lay within the limits of the South Sea Company 32 whose schemes had not yet burst into financial scandal Rogers book was carried by such South Pacific navigators as Admiral George Anson and privateering captains John Clipperton and George Shelvocke 33 Governor and later life EditFinancial difficulties and the Bahamas proposal Edit Statue of Woodes Rogers outside the Hilton British Colonial Hotel Nassau Rogers encountered financial problems on his return Sir William Whetstone had died and Rogers having failed to recoup his business losses through privateering was forced to sell his Bristol home to support his family He was successfully sued by a group of over 200 of his crew who stated that they had not received their fair share of the expedition profits The profits from his book were not enough to overcome these setbacks and he was forced into bankruptcy 34 35 His wife gave birth to their fourth child a year after his return a boy who died in infancy and Woodes and Sarah Rogers soon permanently separated 34 Rogers decided the way out of his financial difficulty was to lead another expedition this time against pirates In 1713 Rogers led what was ostensibly an expedition to purchase slaves in Madagascar and take them to the Dutch East Indies this time with the permission of the British East India Company Rogers secondary purpose was to gather details on the pirates of Madagascar hoping to destroy or reform them and colonise Madagascar on a future trip Rogers collected information regarding pirates and their vessels near the island 36 Finding that a large number of the pirates had gone native he persuaded many of them to sign a petition to Queen Anne asking her for clemency 37 While Rogers expedition was profitable when it returned to London in 1715 the British East India Company vetoed the idea of a colonial expedition to Madagascar believing a colony was a greater threat to its monopoly than a few pirates Accordingly Rogers turned his sights from Madagascar to the West Indies His connections included several of the advisers to the new king George I who had succeeded Queen Anne in 1714 and Rogers was able to forge an agreement for a company to manage the Bahamas which were infested with pirates in exchange for a share of the colony s profits 38 At the time according to the Governor of Bermuda the Bahamas were without any face or form of Government and the colony was a sink or nest of infamous rascals 39 Until Rogers obtained his commission the islands had been nominally governed by absentee Lords Proprietor who did little except appoint a new powerless governor when the position fell vacant 39 Under the agreement that underlay Rogers commission the Lords Proprietor leased their rights for a token sum to Rogers company for twenty one years 40 On 5 September 1717 a proclamation was issued announcing clemency for all piratical offences provided that those seeking what became known as the King s Pardon surrendered not later than 5 September 1718 Colonial governors and deputy governors were authorised to grant the pardon 41 Rogers was officially appointed Captain General and Governor in Chief by George I on 6 January 1718 42 He did not leave immediately for his new bailiwick but spent several months preparing the expedition which included seven ships 100 soldiers 130 colonists and supplies ranging from food for the expedition members and ships crews to religious pamphlets to give to the pirates whom Rogers believed would respond to spiritual teachings On 22 April 1718 the expedition accompanied by three Royal Navy vessels sailed out of the Thames 43 First term Edit The expedition arrived on 24 July 1718 surprising and trapping a ship commanded by pirate Charles Vane After negotiations failed Vane used a captured French vessel as a fireship in an attempt to ram the naval vessels The attempt failed but the naval vessels were forced out of the west end of Nassau harbour giving Vane s crew an opportunity to raid the town and secure the best local pilot Vane and his men then escaped in a small sloop via the harbour s narrow east entrance The pirates had evaded the trap but Nassau and New Providence Island were in Rogers hands 44 Charles Vane At the time the island s population consisted of about two hundred former pirates and several hundred fugitives who had escaped from nearby Spanish colonies Rogers organised a government granted the King s Pardon to those former pirates on the island who had not yet accepted it and started to rebuild the island s fortifications which had fallen into decrepitude under pirate domination Less than a month into his residence on New Providence Rogers was faced with a double threat Vane wrote threatening to join with Edward Teach better known as Blackbeard to retake the island and Rogers learned that the Spanish also planned to drive the British out of the Bahamas 45 Rogers expedition suffered further setbacks An unidentified disease killed almost a hundred of his expedition members while leaving the long term residents nearly untouched Two of the three navy vessels having no orders to remain left for New York Ships sent to Havana to conciliate the Spanish governor there never arrived their crew revolting and becoming pirates mid voyage Finally the third naval vessel left in mid September its commander promising to return in three weeks a promise he had no intention of keeping Work on rebuilding the island s fortifications proceeded slowly with the locals showing a disinclination to work 46 On 14 September 1718 Rogers received word that Vane was at Green Turtle Cay near Abaco about 120 miles 190 km north of Nassau 47 48 Some of the pardoned pirates on New Providence took boats to join Vane and Rogers decided to send two ex pirate captains Benjamin Hornigold and John Cockram with a crew to gather intelligence and if possible to bring Vane to battle As the weeks passed and hopes of their return dimmed Rogers declared martial law and set all inhabitants to work on rebuilding the island s fortifications Finally the former pirates returned They had failed to find an opportunity to kill Vane or bring him to battle but had captured one ship and a number of pirate captives Captain Hornigold was then sent to recapture the ships and crews who had gone pirate en route to Havana He returned with ten prisoners including captain John Auger 49 and three corpses 50 On 9 December 1718 Rogers brought the ten men captured by Hornigold to trial Nine were convicted and Rogers had eight hanged three days later reprieving the ninth on hearing he was of good family One of the condemned Thomas Morris quipped as he climbed the gallows We have a good governor but a harsh one 47 The executions so cowed the populace that when shortly after Christmas several residents plotted to overthrow Rogers and restore the island to piracy the conspirators attracted little support Rogers had them flogged then released as harmless 51 On 16 March 1719 Rogers learned that Spain and Britain were at war again He redoubled his efforts to repair the island s fortifications buying vital supplies on credit in the hope of later being reimbursed by the expedition s investors The Spanish sent an assault fleet against Nassau in May but when the fleet s commodore learned that the French now Britain s ally had captured Pensacola he directed the fleet there instead This gave Rogers time to continue to fortify and supply New Providence and in February 1720 the Spaniards finally arrived in Nassau Two alert ex slave sentries the presence of the Delicia of 32 guns and the frigate HMS Flamborough of 24 guns under Captain Johnathan Hildesley 52 and 500 ready waiting militia many of them ex pirates helped cause the Spanish withdrawal 53 54 The year 1720 brought an end to external threats to Rogers rule With Spain and Britain at peace again the Spanish made no further move against the Bahamas Vane never returned having been shipwrecked and captured in the Bay Islands a year later he was hanged in Jamaica 55 This did not end Rogers problems as governor Overextended from financing New Providence s defences he received no assistance from Britain and merchants refused to give him further credit His health suffered and he spent six weeks in Charleston South Carolina hoping to recuperate Instead he was wounded in a duel with Captain John Hildesley of HMS Flamborough a duel caused by disputes between the two on New Providence 56 Troubled by the lack of support and communication from London Rogers set sail for Britain in March 1721 He arrived three months later to find that a new governor had been appointed and his company had been liquidated Personally liable for the obligations he had contracted at Nassau he was imprisoned for debt 57 Activities in England second term and death Edit Plaque on the site of Rogers Bristol residence 35 Queen Square With both the government and his former partners refusing to honour his debts Rogers was released from debtor s prison only when his creditors took pity on him and absolved him of his debts Even so Rogers wrote that he was perplexed with the melancholy prospect of his affairs 58 In 1722 or 1723 Rogers was approached by a man writing a history of piracy and supplied him with information The resulting work A General History of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pyrates published under the pseudonym Captain Charles Johnson was an enormous hit on both sides of the Atlantic and catapulted Rogers for the second time to the status of a national hero With public attention focused on him again Rogers was successful in 1726 in petitioning the king for financial redress Not only did King George I grant him a pension retroactive to 1721 59 but the king s son and successor George II reappointed him as governor on 22 October 1728 60 The Bahamas did not come under external threat during Rogers second term but the reappointed governor had difficulties Still seeking to bolster the island s defences Rogers sought imposition of a local tax The assembly which had been instituted in Rogers absence objected and Rogers responded by dissolving it The governmental battle exhausted Rogers who again went to Charleston in early 1731 in an attempt to recover his health Though he returned in July 1731 he never truly regained his health and died in Nassau on 15 July 1732 61 A harbour side street in Nassau is named for Rogers 62 Piracy expelled commerce restored remained the motto of the Bahamas until the islands gained independence in 1973 9 Notes Edit Woodard p 65 Rogers was an active slave trader throughout his life Woodard pp 44 45 Little p 19 Woodard pp 47 48 a b Little p 41 Woodard p 65 a b Woodard pp 67 70 Woodard pp 70 71 a b c d The Daily Telegraph 5 January 2009 Little p 51 Konstam p 151 Woodard pp 51 54 Woodard pp 56 57 Woodard p 72 Woodard pp 70 72 Bradley p 504 Little p 64 a b Woodard p 75 Rogers pp 123 24 Rogers pp 6 125 129 Little pp 73 83 a b Woodard pp 79 81 a b Leslie p 82 Rogers pp 311 312 a b c Woodard pp 82 84 Little pp 131 32 Little p 135 a b MeasuringWorth a b Leslie p 83 Little p 154 Woodard pp 114 16 a b Little pp 154 55 Little pp 158 59 a b Woodard pp 112 17 London Gazette 14 February 1712 Woodard pp 118 21 Little p 172 Woodard pp 163 66 a b Little p 178 Woodard p 167 Pringle p 184 Woodard p 168 Woodard pp 247 48 Woodard pp 261 263 66 Woodard pp 267 69 Woodard pp 269 72 a b Woodard pp 301 04 Hedlam Humanity History of Infamous Pirates John Auger www goldenageofpiracy org Archived from the original on 14 April 2018 Retrieved 31 May 2017 Woodard pp 284 86 Woodard p 304 Little pp 192 94 Marley David 1998 Wars of the Americas A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the New World 1492 to the Present Santa Barbara USA ABC CLIO p 370 ISBN 0 87436 837 5 Pringle p 198 Woodard pp 308 11 Woodard p 313 Woodard pp 312 14 Woodard p 325 Woodard pp 263 66 London Gazette 19 October 1728 Woodard pp 327 28 Woodard p 328 References EditBradley Peter 1999 British Maritime Enterprise in the New World From the Late Fifteenth to the Mid eighteenth Century Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 0 7734 7866 4 Chapman James 2015 Swashbucklers The Costume Adventure Series Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 8881 0 Cooke Edward 1712 A Voyage to the South Sea and Round the World 2 vols London Lintot Konstam Angus 2007 Pirates Predators of the Seas Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 60239 035 5 Leslie Edward 1988 Desperate Journeys Abandoned Souls Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 978 0 395 91150 1 Little Brian 1960 Crusoe s Captain Odhams Press Pringle Peter 2001 1953 Jolly Roger The Story of the Great Age of Piracy Dover Publishing Rogers Woodes 1712 A Cruising Voyage Round the World London Andrew Bell Woodard Colin 2007 The Republic of Pirates Harcourt Trade ISBN 978 0 15 101302 9 Other Edit Britten Nick 5 January 2009 Diaries of swashbuckling hero who rescued Robinson Crusoe unearthed The Daily Telegraph UK Retrieved 5 January 2009 No 5095 The London Gazette 14 February 1712 p 2 Note that for dates before 1752 the London Gazette give dates Old Style with the new year beginning on 25 March By modern reckoning this issue was published on 14 February 1713 No 6719 The London Gazette 19 October 1728 p 3 Purchasing Power of British Pounds 1264 2007 MeasuringWorth Retrieved 20 January 2009 RPI equivalents Hedlam Cecil ed 1930 Letter of Woodes Rogers to the Council of Trade and Plantations 31 October 1718 Calendar of State Papers Colonial Series America and the West Indies London 30 376 External links EditRogers Woodes 1712 A Cruising Voyage Round the World A Bell and B Lintot first edition Rogers Woodes 1928 G E Manwaring ed A Cruising Voyage Round the World Cassell and Company illustrated and modern printing Woodes Rogers Republic of pirates net Retrieved 23 January 2009 Edward E Leslie March 1998 Desperate Journeys Abandoned Souls True Stories of Castaways and Other Survivors Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 395 91150 8 Works by Woodes Rogers at Project Gutenberg Works by Woodes Rogers at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Woodes Rogers amp oldid 1119643300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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