Mary Read
Mary Read (c. 1690 – April 1721) was an English pirate active in the Caribbean during the Golden Age of Piracy, renowned for disguising herself as a man to enlist in military and pirate crews, thereby enabling her participation in combat and raids.[1] Born illegitimately in England, she was raised by her mother, who dressed her as a boy to secure financial support from the maternal grandparents, a deception that continued into adulthood as Read sought employment at sea.[1] After serving in the British military under a male alias and experiencing personal losses, including a husband's death, she turned to piracy around 1719, eventually joining Captain John Rackham's crew aboard the sloop Revenge, where she fought alongside Anne Bonny, the only other woman aboard whose gender was initially concealed from the male pirates.[1][2] Captured by a British privateer on 22 October 1720 near Jamaica, Read was tried for piracy in Spanish Town, convicted on 28 November, and sentenced to death, but execution was reprieved upon revelation of her pregnancy; she succumbed to a prison fever or related complications months later without giving birth on record.[3][4] Her exploits, detailed primarily in Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 A General History of the Pyrates, represent one of the few documented cases of female involvement in organized piracy, confirmed by contemporary trial records despite embellishments in biographical narratives.[1][2]
Early Life
Childhood and Cross-Dressing Necessity
Mary Read was born in England in the late seventeenth century to a mother who had married young to a sailor. The couple had a son before the husband embarked on a voyage and perished at sea, after which the widow entered a relationship with another man of low status and conceived Mary out of wedlock.[5] With her circumstances severely diminished and burdened by an illegitimate daughter, Mary's mother returned to her own mother—Mary's maternal grandmother—for assistance.[5] The grandmother, who had previously extended support while believing the grandson survived, rejected any aid upon learning of his death, deeming her daughter too genteel for manual labor and unwilling to sustain a female illegitimate child.[5] To circumvent this refusal and secure ongoing maintenance, Mary's mother proposed disguising the infant daughter as a boy and presenting her as the deceased half-brother, thereby appealing to the grandmother's intent to favor a male heir.[5] This deception succeeded, allowing the family to subsist on the grandmother's provisions under the false identity.[5] Mary was thus reared from infancy in male attire, performing tasks and conducting herself as a boy, with the cross-dressing serving as an economic imperative to preserve the sole source of familial support in an era when illegitimate daughters faced destitution without male lineage or inheritance prospects.[5] As she matured to an age of comprehension, her mother disclosed her biological sex and the ruse, advising her to perpetuate the disguise until an opportune moment arose to leverage it for personal gain, such as marriage or fortune.[5] The account originates from the primary biographical narrative in A General History of the Pyrates (1724), attributed to Captain Charles Johnson, which blends reported facts with potential embellishments but remains the foundational source for Read's early life absent corroborating contemporary records.[5]Familial and Economic Pressures
Mary Read's mother, married young to a sailor, was widowed soon after when her husband perished at sea, leaving her with a young son dependent on maintenance payments from her mother-in-law.[6] The son's subsequent death eliminated this sole source of income, exacerbating the family's vulnerability in late 17th-century England, where widowed women with children faced severe barriers to employment and social support.[6] [7] Following an extramarital liaison, the mother gave birth to Mary Read, an illegitimate daughter whose existence carried additional stigma and offered no claim to familial aid.[6] To avert destitution, she concealed Mary's gender from infancy, dressing her as a boy and presenting her to the grandmother as the surviving grandson, thereby securing a weekly allowance of one crown—equivalent to roughly five shillings, a critical sum for basic sustenance.[6] [8] This ruse, rooted in economic necessity rather than mere convenience, reflected broader familial pressures: the unreliability of maritime livelihoods, the primacy of male heirs in inheritance and support systems, and the punitive societal structures for unwed mothers, which prioritized deception for survival over transparency.[6] [9] The arrangement endured until Mary was approximately 13, when the allowance ceased, compelling her departure from home and perpetuating a life of male impersonation for economic viability.[6] [10]Pre-Piracy Adulthood
Enlistment in Military and Merchant Service
Following the death of a relative who had provided financial support, Mary Read, disguised as a male servant known as "Mark," briefly served as a foot-boy to a French gentlewoman at age thirteen before departing due to her restless nature. She then enlisted aboard a British man-of-war, where she performed duties in a masculine guise for an unspecified duration, gaining experience in naval operations during a period when women were barred from such roles.[11] Subsequently, Read transitioned to land-based military service by traveling to Flanders and enlisting in a regiment of foot, later advancing to a cavalry unit amid ongoing conflicts in the region. There, she participated in combat engagements, exhibiting notable bravery that earned commendations from superiors, though she failed to secure an officer's commission, as these were commonly purchased rather than awarded on merit.[11][12] These experiences in military enlistment, drawn primarily from Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 account—which blends trial testimonies with anecdotal narratives of uncertain veracity—preceded Read's involvement in merchant service. Disguised as a man, she later shipped out on a merchant vessel bound for the West Indies, undertaking sailor duties typical of the era's commercial maritime trade, though this phase directly followed a brief resumption of military attempts in Holland after personal setbacks.[11][9]Marriage, Widowhood, and Return to Sea
Following her discharge from military service in the Netherlands during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714), Mary Read, still disguised as a man under the name Mark, formed a romantic attachment to a fellow soldier in her regiment.[13] The two married and left the army to pursue a civilian life together in the countryside near Breda, where they briefly operated a public house or small establishment.[14] Their union produced one child, who died in infancy, after which Read's husband succumbed to illness, leaving her widowed and in financial ruin with no means of support.[13] These biographical details derive principally from the account in Captain Charles Johnson's A General History of the Pyrates (1724), a work blending trial records with narrative embellishments likely intended for popular appeal, as Johnson (possibly a pseudonym for Daniel Defoe) incorporated fictional elements in other pirate biographies to heighten drama.[15] While Read's existence and piratical activities are corroborated by Jamaican court records from November 1720, the specifics of her pre-piracy personal life lack independent verification and may reflect conventional tropes of female disguise and hardship common in 18th-century literature.[16] Destitute, Read resumed her male attire and sought employment at sea, enlisting as a sailor aboard a Dutch merchant vessel bound for the Caribbean.[13] This return to maritime life under disguise set the stage for her later capture by pirates and entry into their ranks, though no precise dates for her widowhood or embarkation are recorded in surviving documents.[4]Piratical Career
Recruitment into Rackham's Crew
Mary Read, widowed for a second time after her merchant husband's death in the West Indies, donned male clothing once more and shipped out on a Dutch merchant vessel heading to the Caribbean, adopting the alias Mark Read (or James Kidd in some accounts). This vessel encountered and was captured by the pirate sloop commanded by John "Calico Jack" Rackham in early 1720, during a period when Rackham had resumed piratical activities following a brief acceptance of a royal pardon in Nassau.[2][17] During the engagement, Read demonstrated exceptional ferocity in combat while still disguised as a man, wielding weapons with proficiency that caught the attention of Rackham's crew and prompted her to request enlistment rather than face potential marooning or return to lawful service. Rackham, recognizing her value as a fighter amid his small and understrength company—which numbered around a dozen men including his companion Anne Bonny—accepted her into the crew without initial knowledge of her sex.[2][9] Her integration bolstered the crew's capabilities just prior to their theft of the sloop William from Nassau harbor on August 22, 1720, an action in which she participated.[18] Read's gender secrecy held initially, but it surfaced later through interactions with Bonny, who mistook her for a male suitor and pursued her aggressively; upon revelation to Bonny alone, Read was permitted to remain, with the crew's broader knowledge emerging during a duel she fought to defend a favored male crewmate against a challenge, wherein she bested her opponent and disclosed her identity to prove her mettle and indispensability. This episode solidified her position, as Rackham opted against expelling her despite pirate customs frowning on women aboard, valuing her martial prowess over superstition.[17][19] The account of Read's recruitment derives primarily from Captain Charles Johnson's 1724 A General History of the Pyrates, the chief contemporary narrative, corroborated indirectly by Jamaican trial records from November 1720 listing her among Rackham's captured associates, though these documents provide scant detail on her entry.[2][20]Specific Raids and Combat Engagements
In August 1720, shortly after joining John Rackham's crew disguised as a man, Mary Read participated in the seizure of the sloop William from Nassau harbor in the Bahamas, an operation that marked one of the crew's bolder exploits amid increasing British naval patrols in the region.[2] The small crew, numbering around a dozen men plus Read and Anne Bonny, then cruised the waters off Jamaica and the Bahamas, capturing several lightly armed fishing boats and small merchant vessels to sustain their operations, though specific prizes beyond the William remain undocumented in surviving records.[21] Read demonstrated combat prowess in at least one internal crew altercation, reportedly engaging in a fatal duel with a fellow pirate who had attempted to assault her after she revealed her sex to him; she disarmed and killed him in single combat, an incident that underscored her skill with cutlass and pistol while maintaining her disguise among the crew.[22] The crew's piratical activities culminated in a decisive naval engagement on October 20, 1720, near Dry Harbour Bay (now Discovery Bay) off Jamaica's north coast, where Rackham's sloop was surprised at anchor by the armed sloop commanded by Captain Jonathan Barnet, a privateer commissioned by Jamaican authorities.[23] Barnet's vessel, crewed by about 40 men, approached under reduced sail to avoid detection; Rackham's pirates, caught off guard during a period of carousing, offered minimal resistance as most, including Rackham, fled below decks or surrendered quickly.[2] Read and Bonny, however, stood their ground on deck, fighting ferociously with swords and pistols against the boarders and reportedly accounting for several casualties among Barnet's men before the pair were subdued and the sloop captured with minimal overall bloodshed.[2] This encounter, detailed in trial testimonies and contemporary accounts, highlighted Read's resolve in combat, contrasting with the crew's general timidity, and led directly to the apprehension of Rackham's entire company.[24]Apprehension and Legal Consequences
Seizure by British Forces
In October 1720, Jonathan Barnet, a British privateer operating under commission from Jamaican Governor Nicholas Lawes to hunt pirates, captured the sloop commanded by John "Calico Jack" Rackham off the northern coast of Jamaica near Dry Harbour Bay.[25] Barnet's vessel, the Tyger, approached while Rackham's crew, including Mary Read, was ashore engaged in drinking and gambling, leaving the sloop lightly defended.[23] Rackham and most of his men returned to the ship upon sighting the pursuer but offered little resistance, with Rackham reportedly calling for quarter shortly after Barnet's crew boarded.[26] Mary Read and her shipmate Anne Bonny distinguished themselves by actively fighting back, firing pistols at the attackers and, according to contemporary accounts, throwing a grenade that wounded one of Barnet's men.[17] This resistance contrasted sharply with the capitulation of Rackham and the male crew members, who were described as incapacitated by alcohol. The capture yielded significant pirate spoils, including the sloop itself, which had been recently taken from legitimate commerce.[27] The prisoners, numbering around ten including Read, were transported to Spanish Town (St. Jago de la Vega), Jamaica, for judicial proceedings under English admiralty law. Barnet's action was part of broader efforts to curb piracy resurgence in the Caribbean following the pardon offers from Bahamian Governor Woodes Rogers, which Rackham had briefly accepted before resuming depredations.[25] Trial records confirm the identities of Read and Bonny among the captured, though narrative details of the engagement derive largely from Charles Johnson's 1724 A General History of the Pyrates, a source blending eyewitness reports with dramatic elements.[5]Trial Proceedings and Plea Strategy
Mary Read and Anne Bonny were brought to trial for piracy on November 28, 1720, before the High Court of Admiralty in Spanish Town, Jamaica, as part of proceedings against Jack Rackham's crew documented in the pamphlet The Tryals of Captain John Rackam and Other Pirates.[28] The charges centered on specific acts of piracy, including the October 1720 seizure of fishing vessels near Jamaica and prior attacks on merchant ships in the Caribbean, with testimony from over a dozen witnesses—such as deposed captains and crew—who described Read's direct involvement in boarding parties and armed assaults.[29] Both women initially pleaded not guilty, asserting coercion by male crew members, but the court rejected this defense given evidence of their voluntary participation and combat roles, leading to convictions under English admiralty law that prescribed death for such offenses.[30] Facing imminent execution by hanging, Read and Bonny invoked the traditional "plea of the belly," claiming pregnancy to secure a reprieve until after childbirth, a practice rooted in English common law that spared the fetus from capital punishment.[31] This strategy triggered an examination by a jury of matrons—typically local women tasked with confirming if the convict was "quick with child," evidenced by fetal movement—to validate the claim and delay sentencing.[32] Court records affirm the plea was accepted for both, postponing their deaths, though Rackham and the male pirates were hanged promptly on November 18, 1720, at Port Royal.[2] The maneuver's success hinged on contemporary legal norms prioritizing fetal life over immediate retribution, but its factual basis remains uncertain; Read died in prison on April 28, 1721, without recorded delivery, possibly from typhus or complications, suggesting the pregnancy may have been early-stage, miscarried, or unverified beyond initial acceptance.[30]Imprisonment and Fate
Prison Conditions in Jamaica
Mary Read and Anne Bonny were confined in the gaol at Spanish Town (St. Jago de la Vega), the administrative center of St. Catherine's Parish, following their piracy trial on November 28, 1720.[30] Early 18th-century colonial gaols in Jamaica, like those elsewhere in the British Empire, featured rudimentary stone or wooden structures with small, barred cells that offered minimal protection from tropical heat, humidity, and rain. Overcrowding was common, as facilities designed for local debtors and minor offenders strained under the influx of captured pirates during suppression campaigns, leading to shared spaces without adequate separation by sex or status despite nominal provisions for women.[33] Sanitation was virtually nonexistent, with prisoners using chamber pots or open buckets emptied irregularly, fostering infestations of lice, rats, and vermin in the damp, unventilated confines. Provisions consisted of basic rations such as bread, water, and occasional salted meat or yam, often insufficient and contaminated, supplemented only if family or sympathizers provided extras—a rarity for condemned pirates like Read. Shackles and irons restrained inmates, exacerbating physical discomfort and restricting movement, while medical care was limited to rudimentary interventions by local surgeons when available. These factors created ideal conditions for epidemics, including gaol fever (typhus), transmitted via body lice thriving in the filth and proximity of bodies.[4] Read's pregnancy granted a reprieve from hanging under English common law, which postponed execution for "pleading the belly" pending verification by a jury of matrons, but offered no amelioration of the environment. She contracted typhus in prison, succumbing on April 28, 1721, as recorded in St. Catherine's Parish burial registers, without evidence of childbirth. Bonny survived longer, possibly due to better resilience or external aid, but the gaol's mortality rate underscored its lethality: fevers and infections routinely felled inmates faster than formal sentences. Such conditions reflected broader colonial priorities, where prisons served deterrence over rehabilitation, prioritizing containment amid Jamaica's volatile mix of enslaved labor unrest and maritime threats.[30][4]Cause of Death and Burial
Mary Read died in prison in Spanish Town, Jamaica, in April 1721, evading execution due to her pregnancy plea at trial but succumbing to disease amid harsh incarceration conditions.[2][30] Historical accounts attribute her death to a fever, with one analysis specifying typhus as the likely pathogen, contracted in the prison's unsanitary environment; she did not deliver her child prior to dying.[34][30] No definitive autopsy or medical record survives, leaving the precise etiology uncertain beyond infectious illness prevalent in colonial Jamaican jails.[10] Parish registers of St. Catherine's Church document her burial on 28 April 1721 in Spanish Town, confirming the timing shortly after death.[35] The interment occurred in an unmarked grave at the church cemetery, typical for executed or imprisoned felons without family claims; no separate record exists for her fetus, consistent with death in utero.[36][37] This burial site, now part of Spanish Town Cathedral Cemetery, represents the sole verifiable endpoint of her documented life, underscoring the brevity of her post-capture existence.[38]Historical Sources and Verification
Narrative in A General History of the Pyrates
A General History of the Pyrates (1724), attributed to Captain Charles Johnson, provides the earliest and most detailed account of Mary Read's life, portraying her as a woman who adopted male disguise to navigate military and piratical spheres. Johnson describes Read's birth in England to a mother married young to a sailor who vanished at sea shortly after, leaving her pregnant. To secure a weekly crown allowance from her maternal grandfather, the mother disguised the infant Read as a boy following the death of Read's legitimate half-brother, maintaining the deception even after remarrying a man of inferior condition. This ruse allowed the family to subsist on the grandfather's support until his death, after which Read, still presenting as male, worked as a foot-boy at age 13 before enlisting on a man-of-war.[6][5] Johnson recounts Read's military service in Flanders, where she joined a foot regiment, demonstrated bravery in combat, and earned officers' esteem, later transferring to a horse regiment as a trooper. There, she fell in love with a fellow soldier, revealed her sex, and married him; the couple briefly prospered by running an eating-house in Breda until his death from fever. Bereft, Read resumed her male persona, boarded a merchant ship bound for the West Indies, and was captured en route by English pirates, whom she joined under compulsion. Later, having turned privateer under Woodes Rogers in the Bahamas, she reverted to piracy when her crew mutinied, eventually serving aboard John Rackham's sloop while disguised as the man "Mark Read."[6][5] The narrative emphasizes Read's interactions with Anne Bonny and Rackham's crew, noting that Bonny, Rackham's mistress, developed an attraction to the disguised Read, leading Read to disclose her gender to avoid advances; the two women formed a close bond, with Johnson implying intimacy "like two frolling Lovers." Read then became enamored of a young crewman, whom she protected by killing a challenging pirate in a duel, declaring she stood "betwixt him and Death." Her fighting prowess shone during Rackham's crew's capture by Captain Jonathan Barnet on November 28, 1720, near Jamaica, where Read and Bonny alone resisted fiercely—Read firing pistols into the hold to kill a hiding crewman—while most men cowered drunk below decks. Johnson highlights this as evidence of their superior valor to the males.[6][5] At their trial for piracy in Spanish Town, Jamaica, on November 28, 1720, Read and her crewmates were convicted despite pleas of compulsion; however, Read's revelation of pregnancy—by the young crewman she deemed her husband—secured a respite from execution. Johnson reports she died of a prison fever before delivery or further proceedings, contrasting her fate with Bonny's uncertain escape via family influence. The author asserts the account's credibility based on "many thousand witnesses" in Jamaica and likens Read's audacity to infamous male pirates like Bartholomew Roberts, while noting her crimes did not erase her innate modesty.[6][5]