Edward Welch[a] (died 1708) was best known for leading a pirate settlement and trading post at Madagascar.
History
editAdam Baldridge ran a well-known trading post on St. Mary’s Island off Madagascar in the 1690s, supplied by merchants such as New York’s Frederick Philipse. He escaped a slaughter in 1697 when Malagasy natives, angered by Baldridge’s slave-trading, attacked his settlement and killed many of the pirates who had been lodging there.[1] Welch has been living on the island since 1691 and soon took over the trading post, adding prostitutes to the services he offered visiting pirates.[2] Welch was known as “Little King;” a captured sailor described the fort as “inhabited by negroes under the command of Edward Welch, who came from New England thither when he was a boy.” Welch had “6 guns at his house, which have no command of the place where the shipping lie.”[b][3]
William Kidd arrived in mid-1698 to find Robert Culliford in residence. Kidd’s crew mutinied and joined Culliford, and without enough men to crew his ships, Kidd and his remaining loyalists transferred to the captured Quedagh Merchant to return to New York. Kidd had been storing his treasure chest at Welch’s house; Culliford’s men ransacked the chest anyway.[1] Smuggler Tempest Rogers bought some of the goods looted from Kidd’s ships. Rogers left ex-pirate Edward Davis behind; Welch helped Davis try to signal Rogers to return but to no avail, so Davis sailed back with Kidd.[4] Welch traded liquor to the mutineers in exchange for Kidd’s bales of textiles.
Pirate-trader Giles Shelley also visited in 1698 and loaded his ship with “muslins and callicoes, spoilt by salt water, from one Edward Welsh, who hath lived for seven years in that island. The stuffs came from a wrecked ship, cast away at that place.” Shelley reported no sign of Kidd.[5]
By Christmas 1698 Culliford and Dirk Chivers had returned and were living at Welch’s settlement along with John Swann. The stripped and partially sunken remains of Kidd’s Rouparelle (aka November) and Adventure Galley were still visible.[3] The following year Chivers and others left the island with trader Samuel Burgess. Philipse had advised Burgess to ply Welch for good deals, “especially with liquor.”[4]
Welch’s trading depot was never as successful as Baldridges’s. After being injured in a skirmish[2] he served in the court of the Saklava King as a representative handling trade with Westerners. Illness and age took their toll and he died in 1708.[6] The pirate trading post at St. Mary’s was revived by James Plantain in 1720.[2]
See also
edit- John Pro, Thomas Collins, and Abraham Samuel - Other pirate traders who ran trading posts on and near Madagascar.
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Jameson, John Franklin (1923). Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period by J. Franklin Jameson. New York: Macmillan. Retrieved 26 June 2017.
- ^ a b c Travers, Tim (2012). Pirates: A History: A History. Charleston SC: The History Press. pp. 130–132. ISBN 9780752488271. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ a b Headlam, Cecil (1908). Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies: Volume 17, 1699 and Addenda 1621-1698 (Vol.17 ed.). London: His Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 283–291. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
- ^ a b Zacks, Richard (5 June 2002). The Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd. New York: Hyperion Books. ISBN 978-0-7868-6533-8. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
- ^ Harris, Graham (September 2002). Treasure and Intrigue: The Legacy of Captain Kidd. Toronto: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-55002-409-8. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
- ^ Hooper, Jane (2011). "Pirates and Kings: Power on the Shores of Early Modern Madagascar and the Indian Ocean". Journal of World History. 22 (2): 215–242. ISSN 1045-6007. JSTOR 23011710. Retrieved 29 June 2022.