The Gravelly Point Pirates

The Gravelly Point Pirates

Bound by the tide.
by Gloria Merchant

Goat Island Lighthouse, 2013.
Goat Island Lighthouse stands at the northern end of Goat Island, near the spot where the pirates were buried. (June 15, 2013).

Bright sunshine enhanced the holiday spirit in Newport, Rhode Island on July 19, 1723. Drinking began early at the White Horse Tavern. Its patrons poured into the streets to join Newport's citizens lining the route from the prison on Bull Street, to the Parade in front of the Towne House, north on Thames Street and through the Point section to Water Street.

Newporters fortunate enough to live along the route hung out of second-story windows. Children and dogs ran ahead of the crowd to the gallows erected between the high and low water mark on Gravelly Point at the south end of Water Street.

Small boats full of merrymakers vied for position in the Basin and Newport Harbor. Sailors climbed the rigging of ships at anchor to get a good view of the spectacle.

Expectations were high.

Blaskowitz-Faden map of Newport, 1777.
Gravelly Point is the bulge of land (red arrow) to the right of Long Wharf in this 1777 map of Newport. (Library of Congress).

On June 10th, Captain Solgard, commander of the man-of-war The Greyhound, engaged two Caribbean pirate ships off Block Island. One, captained by the notorious Ned Low, escaped. The Greyhound captured the other, a sloop called Ranger. Captain Charles Harris, thirty-five surviving crewmembers, and the badly damaged Ranger arrived in Newport Harbor on June 14th.

It was the largest pirate capture to occur in the colonies. New Englanders rejoiced at the news. Admiralty Judges, including Rhode Island's Governor Cranston, assembled in Newport.

Witnesses and colonists from Maine to New York filled Newport's boardinghouses. One Witness, Captain Welland, arrived minus his right ear—Low had hacked it off. Tales of capture and abuse at the pirates' hands made the rounds of Newport's taverns. The court of public opinion ran against the pirates during the three day trial.

By July 12th the final judgment was in: twenty-six guilty verdicts, eight acquittals and two reprieves.

On execution day, the expectant crowd turned in the direction of a funereal cadence beat by a single drummer. Sheriff Brenton, carrying a miniature silver oar, symbol of the admiralty, followed the drummer on horseback. An armed guard surrounded the pirates.

Prayers and a sermon preceded the hangings. Many pirates accepted the invitation to speak to the crowd. It took two hours to execute all twenty-six men; the largest mass execution in the colonies. By two in the afternoon, their bodies had been buried between the low and high water mark at the north end of Goat Island.

The Gravelly Point executions marked the end of Newport's role as a pirate haven. Early colonial pirates attacked foreign, not local shipping. Newport welcomed their goods and gold. By 1714, Caribbean pirates victimized many Newporters. The colony turned against them.

The Basin and Gravelly Point were filled in during the nineteenth century. Today, Long Wharf leads past the Newport Yacht Club and the Wyndham Inn. Gravelly Point is buried beneath them. An important episode in Rhode Island history is buried there as well.

Mary Ferrazzoli Park, 2021.
Today Gravelly Point is occupied by a yachting club and a hotel, but the executed pirates are remembered by a historical info stand in adjacent Mary Ferrazzoli Park. (May 28, 2021).

The Twenty-Six

William Blades Thomas Hagget Edward Lawson Joseph Sound
John Bright Charles Harris Joseph Libbey James Sprinkly
John Brown Thomas Hazel Thomas Linicar William Studfield
Charles Church Daniel Hyde Stephen Mundon John Tomkins
Peter Cues William Jones Thomas Powell John Waters
Edward Eaton Abraham Lacy William Read
John Fisgerald Francis Laughton Owen Rice

Gloria Merchant is the author of Pirates of Colonial Newport (History Press 2014).

Last Edited
2021-06-16