William Coward (pirate) explained

William Coward was a minor pirate active off the coast of Massachusetts. He is known for a single incident involving the seizure of one small vessel, largely thanks to events surrounding his trial.

History

Coward and three other men slipped their rowboat alongside the ketch Elinor in November 1689 in Boston Harbor off Nantasket. Elinors crew and its captain, William Shortriggs, were afflicted with smallpox and offered no resistance. Coward and his men robbed Elinor and sailed it to Cape Cod but were soon caught and imprisoned.[1]

Coward, formerly a sailor on the warship HMS Rose, was tried in January 1690. He and his men were tried alongside pirates Thomas Hawkins and Thomas Pound and their crew, who had been jailed for piracy in the same area at the same time;[2] because of this Coward's trial and his piracy is often conflated with that of Pound and Hawkins. Coward refused to enter a plea, arguing that piracy could not be tried in common-law court, but only in Admiralty court. Further, since the presiding Vice-Admiralty judge was the now-deposed Governor Andros, there was no Admiralty court in the province.[3] The court, headed by justice Samuel Sewall, convicted Coward anyway and sentenced him to hang.[4] He was imprisoned with Pound, Hawkins, and the others, as well as "Mary Glover the Irish Catholic Witch," and both Sewall and Cotton Mather prayed with him. He received a reprieve and a pardon from Andros' successor Governor Bradstreet, as did the rest of his crew.[5]

Coward's further activities are not known. Two years later Sewall would authorize the use of pressing against accused witch Giles Corey for his refusal to enter a plea and acknowledge the court's authority - a decision Sewell would later lament – though he did not do so against Coward.[6] Pound and Hawkins also escaped the gallows, as did all but one of their crew; they sailed back to England as prisoners aboard Coward's former ship HMS Rose. A French privateer attacked Rose en route; Pound fought in the ship's defense and was granted a pardon for his piracy conviction, though Hawkins was killed during the battle.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gosse. Philip. The Pirates' Who's Who by Philip Gosse. 1924. Burt Franklin. New York. 23 June 2017.
  2. Book: Assistants. Massachusetts Court of. Records of the Court of Assistants of the Colony of the Massachusetts Bay, 1630-1692 …. 1901. county of Suffolk. Boston MA. 319–321. 14 November 2017. en.
  3. Book: Jameson. John Franklin. Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period by J. Franklin Jameson. 1923. Macmillan. New York. 26 June 2017.
  4. Book: Rogers. Alan. Murder and the Death Penalty in Massachusetts. 2008. Univ of Massachusetts Press. Boston. 978-1558496330. 14–15. 14 November 2017. en.
  5. Book: Edmonds. John Henry. Captain Thomas Pound. 1918. J. Wilson and son. Cambridge MA. 38–39. 14 November 2017. en.
  6. Book: Baker. Emerson W.. A Storm of Witchcraft: The Salem Trials and the American Experience. 2014. Oxford University Press. New York. 9780199890354. 190. 14 November 2017. en.
  7. Book: Dow. George Francis. Edmonds. John Henry. The Pirates of the New England Coast 1630-1730. 2012. Courier Corporation. New York. 9780486138145. 70. 6 October 2017. en.