Samual Bellamy
Later to be called "Black Bellamy", was
known to be one of the most active freebooters. As legend has it that he was a
young English sailor, who traveled to the new world
colonies to seek his fortune. He found a wealthy sponsor to finance an
expedition South, to search for sunken Spanish
treasure. This proved to be unsuccessful, and Bellamy returned home
empty-handed, and married.
He soon however, left his wife and family behind in a
town near Canterbury to sail the seas once more. As many notorious pirates
before him, Bellamy served as an apprentice with Benjamin Hornigold,
who was known for his generosity to prisoners, and reluctance to plunder
English ships. Bellamy was elected as captain when Hornigold
was deposed.
Bellamy proved to be a most successful pirate, mainly
in the West Indies. He was known to entertain his crew with flowery
orations, of which he considered himself quite the master. The concerned for
the well-being of his prisoners, but he favored his
crew’s well-being above all else, not to evoke any sinister feelings among
them.
His growing carrier came to an abrupt end in April
1717, off Cape Cod, when his fleet was hit by an intense storm,
completely capsizing and destroying his ship, the Whydah. Two men
survived this tragedy, one disappeared in history, while the other, Thomas
Davis, lived on to pass down the intense account of the shipwreck to Cape Cod
folklore.