1
00:00:10,000 --> 00:00:13,000
[dramatic swashbuckling music]

2
00:00:13,080 --> 00:00:16,680
[narrator]
Pirates. The stuff of myth and legend.

3
00:00:16,760 --> 00:00:18,680
-[man whimpering]
-Hold him.

4
00:00:18,760 --> 00:00:21,000
-[pirate] Keep him still!
-[agonized screaming]

5
00:00:21,080 --> 00:00:23,000
[narrator] Swashbuckling outlaws,

6
00:00:23,080 --> 00:00:26,520
bringing murder and mayhem
to the high seas.

7
00:00:28,520 --> 00:00:32,200
These wild-eyed scallywags
are not a Hollywood invention.

8
00:00:32,280 --> 00:00:33,720
They're all too real.

9
00:00:34,720 --> 00:00:38,800
My name is Blackbeard!

10
00:00:41,080 --> 00:00:43,160
[narrator] The Golden Age of Piracy

11
00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:47,240
starts after a war
between England and Spain.

12
00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:48,920
England wins,

13
00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:52,200
but the Spanish Empire
is still a force to be reckoned with…

14
00:00:52,280 --> 00:00:54,320
[dramatic music]

15
00:00:54,400 --> 00:00:58,240
…until the night
she loses her treasure fleet.

16
00:00:58,320 --> 00:01:00,560
[men shouting and yelling]

17
00:01:06,040 --> 00:01:07,240
[mast groans]

18
00:01:07,320 --> 00:01:10,080
[splash echoing]

19
00:01:12,200 --> 00:01:14,280
[narrator] Spain is broke,

20
00:01:14,360 --> 00:01:18,040
her riches scattered
at the bottom of the sea.

21
00:01:19,680 --> 00:01:23,640
The sunken booty
is a beacon for rogue sailors

22
00:01:23,720 --> 00:01:28,320
who prowl the Caribbean
and the East Coast of the Americas.

23
00:01:29,840 --> 00:01:30,760
The Benjamin!

24
00:01:31,360 --> 00:01:34,480
[narrator] Many of these pirates
become living legends.

25
00:01:34,560 --> 00:01:37,200
-[yelling]
-[swords clashing]

26
00:01:37,280 --> 00:01:38,520
[men cheering]

27
00:01:39,760 --> 00:01:42,560
[narrator] Men like Benjamin Hornigold…

28
00:01:43,720 --> 00:01:45,960
Time to trim that bastard Jennings' sails.

29
00:01:46,040 --> 00:01:47,360
[narrator] Henry Jennings…

30
00:01:47,440 --> 00:01:52,120
Which will break first?
Your will or my poor knuckles?

31
00:01:52,200 --> 00:01:53,880
[narrator] Black Sam Bellamy…

32
00:01:53,960 --> 00:01:55,480
Hoist the black flag!

33
00:01:55,560 --> 00:01:58,320
Right, lads, let's see
what these French sailors are made of.

34
00:01:58,400 --> 00:02:00,200
[narrator] And they're not all men.

35
00:02:00,280 --> 00:02:01,520
Anne Bonny.

36
00:02:01,600 --> 00:02:03,320
No! No!

37
00:02:04,120 --> 00:02:05,200
Hold!

38
00:02:05,280 --> 00:02:07,200
I think it's about time you let us leave.

39
00:02:07,280 --> 00:02:11,400
[narrator] And the most famous pirate
of them all, Edward Thatch,

40
00:02:11,480 --> 00:02:14,280
better known as Blackbeard.

41
00:02:14,360 --> 00:02:16,080
Course I'm mad.

42
00:02:17,320 --> 00:02:18,400
I'm as mad as a fox.

43
00:02:20,520 --> 00:02:21,560
[cannon fire echoing]

44
00:02:21,640 --> 00:02:22,920
On your feet.

45
00:02:23,000 --> 00:02:26,320
[narrator]
The pirates of the Caribbean strike terror

46
00:02:26,400 --> 00:02:29,200
into the world's most powerful empires.

47
00:02:29,280 --> 00:02:32,360
The rich rob the poor under cover of law.

48
00:02:33,720 --> 00:02:36,000
We plunder the rich by our own courage.

49
00:02:36,840 --> 00:02:40,480
[narrator] These Robin Hoods of the sea
changed the course of history.

50
00:02:40,560 --> 00:02:43,560
No sailor can get punished
without the agreement of the crew.

51
00:02:44,120 --> 00:02:47,440
[narrator] They believe in equality,
and liberate slaves.

52
00:02:48,120 --> 00:02:53,160
You are no longer slaves!
You are now subject to the laws of piracy!

53
00:02:53,240 --> 00:02:56,640
[narrator]
They even create a democratic republic.

54
00:02:56,720 --> 00:02:59,840
-[all] Aye!
-Nassau, the new Pirate Republic!

55
00:03:00,520 --> 00:03:04,720
[narrator] They are the real forefathers
of modern America.

56
00:03:04,800 --> 00:03:08,200
[epic, dramatic music]

57
00:03:12,440 --> 00:03:14,080
[action music]

58
00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:15,600
[blast echoing]

59
00:03:15,680 --> 00:03:19,000
[narrator] The pirates of the Caribbean
are forged in a brutal conflict.

60
00:03:19,080 --> 00:03:20,480
[cannon fire echoing]

61
00:03:20,560 --> 00:03:24,200
For 12 long years, Europe is at war.

62
00:03:24,280 --> 00:03:28,960
The War of Spanish Succession
might be better called World War Zero.

63
00:03:29,040 --> 00:03:31,920
[cannon fire echoing]

64
00:03:32,000 --> 00:03:33,360
[narrator] It all starts

65
00:03:33,440 --> 00:03:36,400
when Spain forms an alliance with France,

66
00:03:36,480 --> 00:03:39,440
to create the world's largest superpower.

67
00:03:42,280 --> 00:03:45,640
The other European powers,
the English, the Dutch and the Austrians,

68
00:03:45,720 --> 00:03:47,440
they considered that alliance a threat.

69
00:03:48,720 --> 00:03:51,240
[narrator]
The war quickly spreads to the Caribbean,

70
00:03:51,320 --> 00:03:53,920
the gateway to the New World,

71
00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:56,520
the source of Spain's incredible wealth.

72
00:03:56,600 --> 00:03:59,880
[male historian] The islands of the
Caribbean themselves were also the route

73
00:03:59,960 --> 00:04:01,080
through to South America,

74
00:04:01,160 --> 00:04:04,560
where the Spaniards were mining gold,

75
00:04:04,640 --> 00:04:07,080
and especially lots and lots of silver.

76
00:04:07,160 --> 00:04:10,840
All of that silver had to be traveled
through the Caribbean,

77
00:04:10,920 --> 00:04:12,560
back to Europe.

78
00:04:13,280 --> 00:04:17,400
[narrator] For a long time,
Spain has the Caribbean to herself.

79
00:04:17,480 --> 00:04:19,400
Then, the English move in.

80
00:04:19,480 --> 00:04:22,960
[Choundas] Spain discovered the New World
in the person of Christopher Columbus,

81
00:04:23,040 --> 00:04:26,320
and so the presence
of other European powers,

82
00:04:26,400 --> 00:04:29,440
be it England in Jamaica,
Barbados, Bermuda, Bahamas,

83
00:04:29,520 --> 00:04:33,120
that presence was trespass,
pure and simple,

84
00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:34,600
and Spain wanted them out.

85
00:04:36,480 --> 00:04:38,640
[narrator]
But the English refused to budge.

86
00:04:39,600 --> 00:04:43,000
The war is Spain's chance
to kick them out.

87
00:04:45,440 --> 00:04:48,360
Jamaica is Britain's foothold
in the region.

88
00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:54,000
But the crown has no money
to fund the Navy halfway around the world,

89
00:04:54,080 --> 00:04:57,520
so they unleash their own pirate force.

90
00:04:57,600 --> 00:04:59,200
She looks loaded, lads.

91
00:04:59,280 --> 00:05:00,440
[pirates] Yeah!

92
00:05:00,520 --> 00:05:03,840
[narrator] Of course, it would be
too vulgar to call them pirates.

93
00:05:03,920 --> 00:05:05,760
They're given a posher title.

94
00:05:05,840 --> 00:05:07,320
Privateers.

95
00:05:07,400 --> 00:05:11,280
Sailors of fortune,
funded by private money.

96
00:05:12,400 --> 00:05:16,240
They then fight the Spanish
under the Crown's official license,

97
00:05:16,320 --> 00:05:19,640
known as a letter of marque.

98
00:05:19,720 --> 00:05:21,640
During the Spanish War of Succession,

99
00:05:21,720 --> 00:05:25,120
1,622 letters of marque were given

100
00:05:25,200 --> 00:05:27,280
by the English Royal Court of Admiralty.

101
00:05:27,360 --> 00:05:31,440
That is 1,622 pieces of paper,

102
00:05:31,520 --> 00:05:35,760
which allowed a captain
to go out and rob a Spanish vessel.

103
00:05:35,840 --> 00:05:36,680
[explosion]

104
00:05:36,760 --> 00:05:39,720
[narrator] The Crown gets
a mercenary navy for nothing,

105
00:05:40,800 --> 00:05:44,800
and the privateers make
big money robbing the Spanish.

106
00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:50,800
Then, after 12 years,
the war grinds to a halt.

107
00:05:50,880 --> 00:05:54,680
The cost of the war
had reached crippling levels

108
00:05:54,760 --> 00:05:56,640
for all of the participants in the war.

109
00:05:57,240 --> 00:05:59,640
The British came out the clear winner.

110
00:05:59,720 --> 00:06:02,880
[narrator] They win,
but King George I is broke

111
00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:06,360
and wants peace at any cost.

112
00:06:06,440 --> 00:06:08,800
Attacks on Spanish traders must stop,

113
00:06:08,880 --> 00:06:09,960
pronto.

114
00:06:10,040 --> 00:06:12,160
[pirates talking indistinctly]

115
00:06:12,240 --> 00:06:16,080
[Choundas] The end of the war meant that
privateering commissions lost all value.

116
00:06:16,160 --> 00:06:19,840
[somber music]

117
00:06:19,920 --> 00:06:21,280
No enemy, no plunder,

118
00:06:21,360 --> 00:06:25,280
and so thousands of privateers
lost their livelihoods,

119
00:06:25,360 --> 00:06:27,720
but they found themselves

120
00:06:27,800 --> 00:06:32,320
in a sea of other unemployed able seamen.

121
00:06:32,400 --> 00:06:34,680
The Navy scaled right back
in terms of size.

122
00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:40,440
It went from about 50,000
in 1712 to just 14,000.

123
00:06:42,320 --> 00:06:44,040
[Fox] Massive unemployment,

124
00:06:44,120 --> 00:06:48,160
but particularly, massive unemployment
amongst a community of people

125
00:06:48,240 --> 00:06:52,560
who knew nothing but sailing,
fighting, and stealing.

126
00:06:53,280 --> 00:06:56,080
There's been 12 years of loyal service.

127
00:06:57,040 --> 00:06:59,560
To be tossed aside
without pay off or pension,

128
00:06:59,640 --> 00:07:01,200
it's nothing short of betrayal!

129
00:07:01,280 --> 00:07:02,720
I hear you, my friend.

130
00:07:03,680 --> 00:07:04,720
I hear you.

131
00:07:05,960 --> 00:07:08,560
But it'll do you no good
to go against the Crown.

132
00:07:08,640 --> 00:07:09,800
Ugh! Same again.

133
00:07:09,880 --> 00:07:11,800
I can't see the peace holding up.

134
00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:15,480
Men like Benjamin Hornigold

135
00:07:15,560 --> 00:07:18,960
really made their careers
in the War of the Spanish Succession,

136
00:07:19,040 --> 00:07:21,760
where he operated as a privateer.

137
00:07:21,840 --> 00:07:23,640
We don't know much about his background

138
00:07:23,720 --> 00:07:26,760
because it wasn't documented,
mainly because he was a merchant sailor.

139
00:07:26,840 --> 00:07:29,880
So, he was just, you know,
an AB on a ship.

140
00:07:30,680 --> 00:07:34,720
Hornigold was left marooned,
effectively, by the British,

141
00:07:34,800 --> 00:07:37,240
and told to make his own way in the world.

142
00:07:37,320 --> 00:07:38,520
[man] Twelve years.

143
00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:40,520
[Hornigold] Shh, quiet, friend.

144
00:07:41,080 --> 00:07:42,800
While there's a garrison still here,

145
00:07:43,880 --> 00:07:46,000
well, I'd keep
treasonous talk to yourself.

146
00:07:46,080 --> 00:07:47,240
[man] Not fair.

147
00:07:47,760 --> 00:07:50,680
[narrator]
Hornigold knows you can't trust anyone,

148
00:07:50,760 --> 00:07:54,560
least of all his rival, Henry Jennings.

149
00:07:55,360 --> 00:07:57,720
Jennings was from
an established Bermuda family.

150
00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:00,240
In addition to the Bermuda Holdings,

151
00:08:00,320 --> 00:08:03,160
Jennings owned an estate in Jamaica.

152
00:08:03,840 --> 00:08:06,960
[narrator] During the war,
Henry Jennings is notorious

153
00:08:07,040 --> 00:08:10,040
as the cruelest of privateer captains,

154
00:08:10,120 --> 00:08:14,840
and he sees himself
as a cut above rogues like Hornigold.

155
00:08:14,920 --> 00:08:18,000
Well, well, well,
here he comes, Henry Jennings.

156
00:08:18,080 --> 00:08:22,160
Captain at sea,
master on land, bastard on both.

157
00:08:22,240 --> 00:08:25,320
[men laugh]

158
00:08:26,360 --> 00:08:28,320
Uh!

159
00:08:32,280 --> 00:08:35,640
Keep your fucking men under control…

160
00:08:36,520 --> 00:08:37,840
or I will.

161
00:08:39,800 --> 00:08:41,680
-[man groaning]
-[blows landing]

162
00:08:41,760 --> 00:08:44,920
[sinister music]

163
00:08:48,040 --> 00:08:50,400
[Lawrence]
He's grown up among the plantations,

164
00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:52,320
he has seen how you treat slaves,

165
00:08:52,400 --> 00:08:57,720
he knows how to make people do as he says
pretty much through torture and fear.

166
00:09:00,120 --> 00:09:03,160
[dramatic music]

167
00:09:12,160 --> 00:09:13,640
You're all right, aren't you?

168
00:09:15,720 --> 00:09:16,680
Let's have a drink.

169
00:09:18,280 --> 00:09:20,120
[narrator] What irks Hornigold

170
00:09:20,200 --> 00:09:23,960
is that, while the King forbids him
from attacking the Spanish,

171
00:09:24,040 --> 00:09:28,280
the old enemy continues
to attack England's merchant ships.

172
00:09:29,840 --> 00:09:34,880
The Spanish Guarda Costa
were a legitimate force of privateers

173
00:09:34,960 --> 00:09:37,720
employed by the Spanish government
in the Caribbean,

174
00:09:37,800 --> 00:09:42,640
and their job, in theory, was to protect
the Spanish trade interests there,

175
00:09:42,720 --> 00:09:45,840
but in practice,
they were a menace to trade.

176
00:09:46,600 --> 00:09:48,160
[cannon fire echoing]

177
00:09:48,240 --> 00:09:52,240
At the end of hostilities,
these coastal defense vessels

178
00:09:52,320 --> 00:09:53,960
continued to seize English ships,

179
00:09:54,040 --> 00:09:56,440
especially those coming
back-and-forth out of Jamaica.

180
00:09:56,520 --> 00:09:59,520
[dramatic music]

181
00:10:02,720 --> 00:10:05,160
[Hornigold]
Our problem, it's not complicated.

182
00:10:06,200 --> 00:10:09,160
The Spanish continue
to plunder our ships and get rich.

183
00:10:10,480 --> 00:10:14,720
And while we live under the noses
of the Royal Navy garrison at Port Royal,

184
00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:16,720
my hands are tied.

185
00:10:18,560 --> 00:10:19,600
So…

186
00:10:21,240 --> 00:10:23,880
let's move
from under the noses of the Navy.

187
00:10:24,760 --> 00:10:26,600
Leave? Port Royal?

188
00:10:28,280 --> 00:10:29,520
He's starting to get it.

189
00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:33,120
Somewhere where we can be free
to do what we do best:

190
00:10:33,200 --> 00:10:34,880
get rich off Spanish trade ships.

191
00:10:34,960 --> 00:10:35,920
[all chuckle]

192
00:10:36,000 --> 00:10:37,800
And that place…

193
00:10:39,480 --> 00:10:40,360
is right here…

194
00:10:43,160 --> 00:10:44,840
in the middle of the Bahamas.

195
00:10:49,800 --> 00:10:51,880
[Woodward] The Bahamas
was an excellent choice,

196
00:10:51,960 --> 00:10:54,360
particularly if you wanted
to raid Spanish territories,

197
00:10:54,440 --> 00:10:57,920
because it was located
astride the main sea routes.

198
00:10:58,680 --> 00:11:02,960
[narrator] The trade winds mean
no cargo can head for Spain

199
00:11:03,040 --> 00:11:05,800
without running the gauntlet
of these islands.

200
00:11:05,880 --> 00:11:08,600
[hulls creaking]

201
00:11:08,680 --> 00:11:12,880
The sailors aren't the only ones
losing out to the Spanish.

202
00:11:12,960 --> 00:11:15,520
[cannon fire blasting]

203
00:11:15,600 --> 00:11:18,120
The local merchants in Jamaica,

204
00:11:18,200 --> 00:11:22,280
as well as the merchants in England
who traded with Jamaica,

205
00:11:22,360 --> 00:11:26,000
were unanimous in clamoring
for something to be done

206
00:11:26,080 --> 00:11:27,680
to deal with the Guarda Costas.

207
00:11:28,840 --> 00:11:31,640
[narrator] So, they lobby
the Governor of Jamaica,

208
00:11:31,720 --> 00:11:33,680
Lord Archibald Hamilton.

209
00:11:33,760 --> 00:11:35,600
Does the King know

210
00:11:35,680 --> 00:11:38,920
that he is the only one
pursuing the peace?

211
00:11:39,000 --> 00:11:42,440
I assure you,
I have raised the issue with His Majesty,

212
00:11:42,520 --> 00:11:44,320
and he is not for turning.

213
00:11:44,400 --> 00:11:49,160
Does he know that the Spanish
are still taking our vessels?

214
00:11:51,440 --> 00:11:55,880
[narrator] For Captain Henry Jennings,
it's an opportunity too good to miss.

215
00:11:56,760 --> 00:11:57,760
They're right, my lord.

216
00:11:58,920 --> 00:12:01,440
The so-called Spanish Coastguard
are nothing but pirates.

217
00:12:02,720 --> 00:12:05,920
Our cargoes were safer
during the war, for God's sake!

218
00:12:07,720 --> 00:12:10,160
We're all plantation owners,

219
00:12:10,960 --> 00:12:14,040
and we have the means
to do something about it.

220
00:12:14,120 --> 00:12:16,440
[narrator] Jennings needs two things:

221
00:12:16,520 --> 00:12:18,280
a good sized fleet,

222
00:12:18,360 --> 00:12:20,720
and a letter of marque from the Crown.

223
00:12:20,800 --> 00:12:22,760
What say you all to this?

224
00:12:22,840 --> 00:12:26,000
No one has cut more
Spanish ears than you, Henry.

225
00:12:27,400 --> 00:12:31,240
Now, I propose a fleet of gunships,
with you at the helm.

226
00:12:31,920 --> 00:12:35,560
A kind of defense force, if you will.

227
00:12:35,640 --> 00:12:36,680
Well,

228
00:12:37,440 --> 00:12:39,480
it would be an honor, my lord.

229
00:12:40,760 --> 00:12:45,400
Jennings was an ideal person
to be employed by Archibald Hamilton,

230
00:12:45,480 --> 00:12:49,120
um, not only because
of his experience of privateering,

231
00:12:49,200 --> 00:12:54,440
but also because he was a member
of the upper echelons of Jamaican society.

232
00:12:56,200 --> 00:13:01,080
[narrator] Jennings has command of a fleet
funded by the island's merchants,

233
00:13:01,720 --> 00:13:06,160
but with no letter of marque,
he can't attack Spanish ships.

234
00:13:07,440 --> 00:13:10,240
[dramatic music]

235
00:13:10,320 --> 00:13:13,040
[narrator]
Hornigold needs no official endorsement

236
00:13:13,120 --> 00:13:17,840
as he arrives in the Bahamas
with his gang of out-of-work privateers.

237
00:13:21,480 --> 00:13:25,760
This archipelago
of hundreds of uncharted islands

238
00:13:25,840 --> 00:13:29,120
with uncharted and unmarked
reefs in between them,

239
00:13:29,200 --> 00:13:32,960
and 1,000 hiding places
that a vessel could sneak into

240
00:13:33,040 --> 00:13:35,920
and remain unmolested and undetected.

241
00:13:36,000 --> 00:13:39,440
[narrator]
Hornigold identifies the perfect base:

242
00:13:39,520 --> 00:13:43,120
the town of Nassau
on the island of New Providence.

243
00:13:43,200 --> 00:13:46,000
[jaunty pirate music playing]

244
00:13:53,880 --> 00:13:56,800
Gentlemen, welcome to New Providence,

245
00:13:57,760 --> 00:14:00,080
and our new home, Nassau.

246
00:14:04,240 --> 00:14:08,760
Nassau was less a town
than just a collection of huts and hovels.

247
00:14:12,160 --> 00:14:16,040
[narrator] During the war,
the Spanish had laid waste to Nassau.

248
00:14:17,800 --> 00:14:22,040
The Crown had turned its back
on the shanty town years before.

249
00:14:22,120 --> 00:14:26,120
But for starving sailors,
it is a paradise,

250
00:14:26,200 --> 00:14:28,360
a safe Caribbean home.

251
00:14:28,440 --> 00:14:29,800
There's fresh water here,

252
00:14:29,880 --> 00:14:32,440
and Hog Island yonder,
that's got meat aplenty.

253
00:14:34,840 --> 00:14:36,240
[narrator] In better times,

254
00:14:36,320 --> 00:14:39,320
these could be privateers
with commissions.

255
00:14:40,880 --> 00:14:43,000
It's very simple math.

256
00:14:43,080 --> 00:14:46,320
Privateers minus commissions
equals pirates.

257
00:14:46,400 --> 00:14:49,680
-[grunting]
-[blades clanking]

258
00:14:59,960 --> 00:15:02,000
[birds calling peacefully]

259
00:15:02,080 --> 00:15:05,640
[narrator] But the old Colonial settlers
who stayed in Nassau

260
00:15:05,720 --> 00:15:11,200
don't take kindly to this invasion
of uncouth Jamaican pirates.

261
00:15:11,280 --> 00:15:13,880
Thomas Walker was a Colonial official,

262
00:15:13,960 --> 00:15:16,200
and, in fact,
he was the only Colonial official left.

263
00:15:17,400 --> 00:15:18,600
[Walker] Excuse me, sir.

264
00:15:20,920 --> 00:15:23,560
Tell me, what is your business in Nassau?

265
00:15:24,200 --> 00:15:25,480
To make it our home.

266
00:15:27,200 --> 00:15:29,840
Allow me to introduce you
to your new neighbors.

267
00:15:30,400 --> 00:15:32,320
And what would that business be, sir?

268
00:15:32,920 --> 00:15:34,320
Patriots, sir.

269
00:15:35,040 --> 00:15:37,040
Patriots doing our duty to the Crown

270
00:15:37,120 --> 00:15:40,320
by doing to Spanish shipping
what they are doing to ours.

271
00:15:40,400 --> 00:15:41,640
Are you mad?

272
00:15:42,280 --> 00:15:44,840
The Spanish need
no excuse to attack us, sir,

273
00:15:44,920 --> 00:15:47,800
and your business
will provoke them even further!

274
00:15:47,880 --> 00:15:51,440
I reckon they'll think twice
about returning to Nassau, now.

275
00:15:52,640 --> 00:15:53,880
You think of us as security.

276
00:15:55,480 --> 00:15:57,120
You'll get us all killed!

277
00:16:00,120 --> 00:16:01,920
You haven't heard the last of this!

278
00:16:03,920 --> 00:16:04,920
Cheerio.

279
00:16:05,960 --> 00:16:08,160
[flames crackling]

280
00:16:08,240 --> 00:16:12,320
[narrator] As Hornigold
and his band of pirates fall for Nassau,

281
00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:14,320
1,200 miles north,

282
00:16:14,400 --> 00:16:19,080
a future legend of the pirate world,
young Samuel Bellamy,

283
00:16:19,160 --> 00:16:20,960
is falling in love.

284
00:16:23,160 --> 00:16:26,320
Like hundreds of other
English sailors after the war,

285
00:16:26,400 --> 00:16:29,240
he's been dumped by the Navy in America.

286
00:16:29,320 --> 00:16:32,520
Now, he's unemployed and broke.

287
00:16:32,600 --> 00:16:36,400
[somber hornpipe music]

288
00:16:44,680 --> 00:16:49,400
Somehow or another,
he winds up in Eastern Massachusetts

289
00:16:49,480 --> 00:16:51,400
and then legend takes over.

290
00:16:54,680 --> 00:16:57,600
[romantic music]

291
00:17:02,480 --> 00:17:07,400
He met our heroine,
our wonderful Mary Hallett.

292
00:17:11,120 --> 00:17:13,480
Sam Bellamy
took one look at her, fell in love,

293
00:17:13,560 --> 00:17:15,960
but he is a poor, impoverished sailor.

294
00:17:16,760 --> 00:17:19,160
[romantic music continues]

295
00:17:26,120 --> 00:17:27,120
Please.

296
00:17:27,880 --> 00:17:28,760
[softly] Mary.

297
00:17:28,840 --> 00:17:30,920
No, Sam Bellamy.

298
00:17:37,120 --> 00:17:40,640
My love, you have been hurt.

299
00:17:40,720 --> 00:17:41,880
[screaming]

300
00:17:41,960 --> 00:17:44,240
[narrator] Mary is falling in love

301
00:17:44,320 --> 00:17:47,560
with a man
from the wrong side of the tracks.

302
00:17:48,160 --> 00:17:50,000
[thunder rumbling, whip cracking]

303
00:17:50,080 --> 00:17:52,440
Sometimes it's better
to be in jail than on board a ship.

304
00:17:53,320 --> 00:17:55,720
-[groans]
-[whip cracking]

305
00:17:55,800 --> 00:17:57,640
The brutality and the bullying

306
00:17:57,720 --> 00:18:00,080
and the predation
of many of the captains that are known.

307
00:18:00,160 --> 00:18:02,160
[thunder rumbling]

308
00:18:02,920 --> 00:18:06,480
This is a culture of horrendous violence.

309
00:18:06,560 --> 00:18:09,840
Now, men could be beaten,
sometimes to death,

310
00:18:09,920 --> 00:18:11,400
for minor indiscretions.

311
00:18:11,480 --> 00:18:13,000
[whip cracking]

312
00:18:14,840 --> 00:18:15,680
Ah!

313
00:18:16,840 --> 00:18:18,160
Do they repulse you?

314
00:18:19,320 --> 00:18:20,520
Not at all.

315
00:18:25,560 --> 00:18:26,840
I'm pleased to hear that…

316
00:18:30,560 --> 00:18:34,760
because women rarely marry
men they find repulsive.

317
00:18:34,840 --> 00:18:36,160
[soft laugh]

318
00:18:36,240 --> 00:18:38,920
[narrator]
Sam Bellamy's forbidden love for Mary

319
00:18:39,000 --> 00:18:41,040
will drive this honest sailor

320
00:18:41,120 --> 00:18:45,120
to become one of the most
effective pirates of all time,

321
00:18:45,200 --> 00:18:47,160
but not yet.

322
00:18:48,440 --> 00:18:51,680
[dramatic music]

323
00:18:55,080 --> 00:18:56,520
[narrator] From their new home,

324
00:18:56,600 --> 00:19:00,400
Hornigold's men are making
short work of Spanish traders.

325
00:19:00,480 --> 00:19:03,360
[light, suspenseful music]

326
00:19:05,240 --> 00:19:07,120
[cannon fire echoing]

327
00:19:13,960 --> 00:19:16,040
Hornigold, operating out of the Bahamas,

328
00:19:16,120 --> 00:19:19,120
continued trading up,
getting stronger and stronger vessels.

329
00:19:25,360 --> 00:19:29,320
[Hornigold] Don't thank me, gentlemen.
I'll make you all rich before long.

330
00:19:29,400 --> 00:19:31,920
Good days work for a fair share, right?

331
00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:36,160
What will the Spanish do
with all that money anyway?

332
00:19:37,840 --> 00:19:40,000
[narrator] The pirates are making a mint,

333
00:19:40,080 --> 00:19:43,840
but the old Nassau
colonists are freaking out.

334
00:19:45,960 --> 00:19:50,640
Thomas Walker was extremely
concerned that the pirates' actions,

335
00:19:50,720 --> 00:19:52,720
the raiding of Spanish vessels,

336
00:19:52,800 --> 00:19:56,560
were going to elicit
a military response from Spain.

337
00:19:57,200 --> 00:20:00,160
He started sending letters to ask for help

338
00:20:00,240 --> 00:20:02,760
from authorities
elsewhere and from London.

339
00:20:04,120 --> 00:20:07,040
[narrator] Walker's complaints
are also picked up by the press.

340
00:20:08,440 --> 00:20:10,960
[Choundas] Pretty soon,
Hornigold was finding himself

341
00:20:11,040 --> 00:20:14,520
on the pages of
the only newspaper in North America,

342
00:20:14,600 --> 00:20:17,160
a newspaper called The Boston News-Letter.

343
00:20:18,920 --> 00:20:21,640
[narrator] Walker wants to draw
the attention of the Crown

344
00:20:21,720 --> 00:20:23,560
to Hornigold's piracy,

345
00:20:24,320 --> 00:20:26,000
but it backfires.

346
00:20:27,080 --> 00:20:30,480
Tales of men
getting rich on sunken treasure

347
00:20:30,560 --> 00:20:34,360
are an open invitation
to any would-be pirate.

348
00:20:35,120 --> 00:20:38,160
Inspired by the exploits of Hornigold,

349
00:20:38,240 --> 00:20:41,080
Paulsgrave Williams, our next player,

350
00:20:41,160 --> 00:20:45,640
is a businessman in need of a skipper.

351
00:20:46,840 --> 00:20:48,000
Ahem.

352
00:20:49,760 --> 00:20:51,160
You look in need of a drink.

353
00:20:51,800 --> 00:20:52,760
You're telling me.

354
00:20:52,840 --> 00:20:56,520
Paulsgrave Williams was the son
of Rhode Island's attorney general,

355
00:20:56,600 --> 00:20:59,480
and his mother was descended
from the Plantagenet kings of England.

356
00:21:00,520 --> 00:21:04,720
Bellamy was a trained sailor
and probably a trained combatant,

357
00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:09,120
and Williams was looking for somebody
who could handle themselves under sail.

358
00:21:10,320 --> 00:21:14,520
I have problems, too.
I thought we might share them.

359
00:21:15,680 --> 00:21:17,840
For a drink, I'll talk to anyone.

360
00:21:17,920 --> 00:21:19,880
Sam Bellamy, ex-Navy,

361
00:21:20,480 --> 00:21:23,040
in love with
the most beautiful girl in Cape Cod.

362
00:21:23,120 --> 00:21:24,280
Paulsgrave Williams.

363
00:21:24,880 --> 00:21:27,000
Neither seem like a problem to me.

364
00:21:27,080 --> 00:21:29,000
Ah, the girl has a father,

365
00:21:29,720 --> 00:21:34,400
and he won't give up his daughter to
"a penniless, no-prospect bum" like me.

366
00:21:35,480 --> 00:21:39,840
Well, then, I might have a solution.

367
00:21:42,920 --> 00:21:47,200
On April 5th,
Benjamin Hornigold took a Spanish ship

368
00:21:47,280 --> 00:21:50,000
with a cargo of silk, rum and sugar,

369
00:21:50,080 --> 00:21:56,120
and money, estimated
at 52,700 pieces of eight.

370
00:21:56,200 --> 00:21:57,240
Just

371
00:21:57,320 --> 00:21:58,240
took it.

372
00:21:58,960 --> 00:22:02,320
Now, I'm a shrewd businessman,
a silversmith,

373
00:22:02,400 --> 00:22:06,320
and I can tell fool's gold
from real and silver from pewter,

374
00:22:06,400 --> 00:22:10,040
so when I see a return like this
for a single day's work?

375
00:22:10,640 --> 00:22:14,120
Well, I recognize
an industry worth exploring, hmm?

376
00:22:14,200 --> 00:22:16,840
So, here's my problem.

377
00:22:17,680 --> 00:22:20,640
-I'm an islander who can't sail.
-[chuckles]

378
00:22:20,720 --> 00:22:23,200
Who knew such a creature existed?

379
00:22:24,480 --> 00:22:28,840
I've the money to fund
an expedition to disrupt trade.

380
00:22:28,920 --> 00:22:32,960
English, Spanish,
what the fuck do we Scots care?

381
00:22:33,040 --> 00:22:36,440
-But I need a good captain.
-Mm.

382
00:22:36,520 --> 00:22:39,720
Well, if you're half as good a sailor
as your reputation suggests,

383
00:22:39,800 --> 00:22:42,680
then it seems to me we have two problems

384
00:22:42,760 --> 00:22:44,360
with a single solution.

385
00:22:49,360 --> 00:22:50,280
[sighs]

386
00:22:51,280 --> 00:22:53,040
I'm not just a good sailor,

387
00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:55,120
I'm a great sailor.

388
00:22:55,200 --> 00:22:56,400
[Williams laughs]

389
00:22:56,480 --> 00:22:57,440
But…

390
00:22:58,600 --> 00:23:01,280
if Mary's father
won't let her marry a bum,

391
00:23:01,360 --> 00:23:03,480
my Mary would never marry a criminal.

392
00:23:04,360 --> 00:23:06,440
Thanks for the drink, and the offer,

393
00:23:07,440 --> 00:23:08,640
but I'm afraid

394
00:23:08,720 --> 00:23:10,240
I still have my problem,

395
00:23:10,880 --> 00:23:11,960
and you yours.

396
00:23:15,120 --> 00:23:17,880
[somber music]

397
00:23:28,400 --> 00:23:32,360
[narrator] And so the richest
partnership in pirate history

398
00:23:32,440 --> 00:23:35,080
seems destined to be stillborn.

399
00:23:36,920 --> 00:23:38,320
[thunder rumbling]

400
00:23:38,400 --> 00:23:43,360
Until a single event
turns the Caribbean upside down.

401
00:23:44,120 --> 00:23:47,360
July 23rd, 1715.

402
00:23:47,440 --> 00:23:52,800
The most valuable flotilla in history
leaves Havana for Spain.

403
00:23:52,880 --> 00:23:57,480
The so-called Plate Fleet
is laden with gold and silver,

404
00:23:57,560 --> 00:24:00,600
mined in Spanish colonies
in South America.

405
00:24:01,480 --> 00:24:04,520
Spain relied on this fleet
for hard currency,

406
00:24:04,600 --> 00:24:06,520
for treasure, for revenue.

407
00:24:06,600 --> 00:24:09,440
It was the most obvious way

408
00:24:09,520 --> 00:24:12,960
for Spain to shore up
its adventurism around the world,

409
00:24:13,040 --> 00:24:16,400
but also its maintenance
and its operations at home.

410
00:24:17,680 --> 00:24:21,920
[narrator] War and weather prevent
the fleet from sailing for over a decade,

411
00:24:22,000 --> 00:24:24,480
but now Spain needs the money.

412
00:24:25,080 --> 00:24:28,000
Spain is almost bankrupt by the end
of the Spanish War of Succession.

413
00:24:28,080 --> 00:24:29,120
It's desperate.

414
00:24:30,240 --> 00:24:36,400
That treasure aboard those 11 ships
constituted about 14 million pesos,

415
00:24:36,480 --> 00:24:40,120
which is hundreds of millions
of dollars in current US currency.

416
00:24:41,280 --> 00:24:46,080
[narrator] The cargo is the most valuable
ever to set sail across the Atlantic,

417
00:24:47,040 --> 00:24:50,720
but the Spanish know they're taking
a major gamble with the weather.

418
00:24:50,800 --> 00:24:53,160
This is hurricane season.

419
00:24:54,080 --> 00:24:57,200
As the fleet made its way
up the coast of Florida,

420
00:24:57,280 --> 00:24:59,560
the worst anticipated happened.

421
00:24:59,640 --> 00:25:01,160
[ropes creaking]

422
00:25:01,240 --> 00:25:04,720
[narrator] The treasure fleet
heads straight into the eye of a storm.

423
00:25:04,800 --> 00:25:09,960
Imagine the fear of the Spanish fleet
when it sees the sky begin to darken.

424
00:25:10,040 --> 00:25:14,000
-[thunder cracks]
-[crew shouting]

425
00:25:17,040 --> 00:25:20,200
They are facing 40, 50-foot waves.

426
00:25:20,280 --> 00:25:22,840
[dramatic music]

427
00:25:22,920 --> 00:25:25,360
These things are crashing down on them.

428
00:25:25,440 --> 00:25:27,760
[crew shouting]

429
00:25:27,840 --> 00:25:30,680
It's not so much the waves
that are the problem, it's the wind.

430
00:25:30,760 --> 00:25:31,960
[wind howling]

431
00:25:32,040 --> 00:25:34,760
The ships were being pushed further
and further by the storm

432
00:25:34,840 --> 00:25:36,160
against the beaches

433
00:25:36,240 --> 00:25:38,880
-[thunder crashing]
-[men shouting]

434
00:25:41,120 --> 00:25:44,760
If you don't get your rigging
down in time, your mast will snap.

435
00:25:44,840 --> 00:25:47,320
[wood groaning, mast crashing]

436
00:25:47,400 --> 00:25:48,640
[crew groaning]

437
00:25:48,720 --> 00:25:50,400
One by one the ships begin to crack.

438
00:25:50,480 --> 00:25:52,280
[wood creaking]

439
00:25:53,320 --> 00:25:56,200
[crew screaming]

440
00:25:56,280 --> 00:25:59,200
[echoing splash]

441
00:26:02,440 --> 00:26:04,200
A thousand men are drowned.

442
00:26:05,400 --> 00:26:08,160
[narrator]
Eleven Spanish galleons are wrecked,

443
00:26:08,240 --> 00:26:13,520
scattering a fortune in gold and silver
just off Vero Beach in Florida.

444
00:26:14,920 --> 00:26:17,720
[somber music]

445
00:26:24,080 --> 00:26:27,080
More money
than you could earn in ten lifetimes

446
00:26:27,160 --> 00:26:28,240
are in these boats.

447
00:26:28,320 --> 00:26:32,640
[narrator] News of the wrecks
spreads faster than the plague.

448
00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:38,480
This is like discovering oil
on another level.

449
00:26:41,760 --> 00:26:44,600
[narrator]
And the man best placed to cash in?

450
00:26:44,680 --> 00:26:46,600
Benjamin Hornigold.

451
00:26:46,680 --> 00:26:50,040
He's one of the first Englishmen
to reach the Spanish treasure,

452
00:26:50,120 --> 00:26:52,440
and a quick fortune.

453
00:26:52,520 --> 00:26:54,480
[laughs]

454
00:26:54,560 --> 00:26:56,000
[gold clinking]

455
00:26:58,440 --> 00:27:01,760
[narrator] It isn't long before
the news of Hornigold's windfall

456
00:27:01,840 --> 00:27:04,120
hits Port Royal in Jamaica.

457
00:27:06,160 --> 00:27:08,440
Governor Hamilton, when he hears word

458
00:27:08,520 --> 00:27:11,960
that the Spanish treasure fleet
has been wrecked on Florida,

459
00:27:12,040 --> 00:27:16,080
his first reaction
is actually to get in on the action.

460
00:27:16,160 --> 00:27:17,960
This is getting ridiculous.

461
00:27:18,040 --> 00:27:19,320
[Jennings] Lord Hamilton!

462
00:27:21,160 --> 00:27:22,400
You wanted me.

463
00:27:23,880 --> 00:27:25,280
The Spanish treasure.

464
00:27:25,360 --> 00:27:29,200
You have a well-armed fleet
sitting in port.

465
00:27:30,120 --> 00:27:33,800
Should the investors
sit by while pirates get rich?

466
00:27:38,440 --> 00:27:40,680
[narrator] The temptation is so great

467
00:27:40,760 --> 00:27:44,880
it needs some official skullduggery.

468
00:27:46,600 --> 00:27:50,120
Let me be clear
you know exactly what you're asking.

469
00:27:51,320 --> 00:27:54,520
The Spanish have declared
the treasure protected.

470
00:27:54,600 --> 00:27:57,560
Any scavenging will be seen
as an act of aggression.

471
00:27:58,880 --> 00:28:03,680
But let's say
the Commission isn't to… [laughs]

472
00:28:03,760 --> 00:28:06,040
…isn't to scavenge Spanish ships,

473
00:28:06,120 --> 00:28:09,960
but to, uh, catch pirates
drawn to the treasure.

474
00:28:11,200 --> 00:28:15,200
[narrator]
Jennings' defense fleet has one purpose:

475
00:28:15,280 --> 00:28:18,040
to rob the pirates
who'd robbed the Spaniards.

476
00:28:18,680 --> 00:28:24,280
And if some of this stolen treasure
falls into our hands?

477
00:28:24,360 --> 00:28:28,280
Well, I see no act
against the Spanish in that.

478
00:28:30,840 --> 00:28:32,400
[narrator] A deal is struck.

479
00:28:32,480 --> 00:28:36,040
Jennings has his letter of marque
and is off the leash.

480
00:28:37,000 --> 00:28:40,800
It's a decision
Hamilton will live to regret.

481
00:28:40,880 --> 00:28:43,440
[sinister music]

482
00:28:44,400 --> 00:28:46,840
[narrator]
Jennings sets off on his treasure hunt,

483
00:28:46,920 --> 00:28:50,840
but weeks pass
with no sign of the Spanish wrecks.

484
00:28:50,920 --> 00:28:52,560
He grows frustrated.

485
00:28:54,440 --> 00:28:58,400
But then a Spanish
mail ship crosses his path.

486
00:29:01,600 --> 00:29:03,680
It's one of life's mysteries.

487
00:29:04,680 --> 00:29:10,120
Hornigold's navigator can take him
straight to the Spanish wrecks,

488
00:29:10,200 --> 00:29:14,520
while mine flails up and down the coast

489
00:29:14,600 --> 00:29:17,560
like a blinded bat!

490
00:29:19,320 --> 00:29:23,040
Luckily, I have you…

491
00:29:24,600 --> 00:29:27,080
my very own Spanish captain,

492
00:29:27,160 --> 00:29:28,880
to take me to the treasure.

493
00:29:30,200 --> 00:29:33,920
Now,
I'm going to take your early reticence

494
00:29:34,000 --> 00:29:35,520
as a passing phase.

495
00:29:37,800 --> 00:29:39,440
You will tell me.

496
00:29:39,520 --> 00:29:41,320
The question is,

497
00:29:41,400 --> 00:29:43,120
which will break first?

498
00:29:44,000 --> 00:29:45,200
Your will

499
00:29:46,160 --> 00:29:48,040
or my poor knuckles?

500
00:29:55,600 --> 00:29:58,760
[narrator]
Amongst Jennings's hardcore crew is…

501
00:29:58,840 --> 00:30:01,360
With your permission, sir.

502
00:30:01,440 --> 00:30:05,280
[narrator] …a vicious thug
who gives pirates a bad name.

503
00:30:05,360 --> 00:30:07,880
Who the fuck are you?

504
00:30:07,960 --> 00:30:08,920
Charles Vane.

505
00:30:09,000 --> 00:30:10,080
Sir.

506
00:30:10,600 --> 00:30:11,720
At your service.

507
00:30:17,800 --> 00:30:18,880
Very well.

508
00:30:26,240 --> 00:30:28,040
[sinister music]

509
00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:44,400
[inhaling deeply]

510
00:30:48,400 --> 00:30:50,880
[Conniff]
Charles Vane is born in London, Wapping,

511
00:30:50,960 --> 00:30:54,080
and London is an incredibly tough
and brutal existence at the time.

512
00:30:54,160 --> 00:30:56,440
[gulls crying]

513
00:30:56,520 --> 00:30:59,040
[narrator] Little is known
about Vane's early life

514
00:30:59,120 --> 00:31:01,400
in London's crime-ridden streets.

515
00:31:02,120 --> 00:31:05,760
As the sinner's choking agony
reaches your ears,

516
00:31:06,600 --> 00:31:07,440
behold…

517
00:31:07,520 --> 00:31:11,360
[Conniff] Try to imagine
what it's like, a boy growing up

518
00:31:11,440 --> 00:31:13,160
on the roughness of those streets.

519
00:31:13,800 --> 00:31:18,400
Death, violence, the public execution
is public entertainment…

520
00:31:18,480 --> 00:31:21,000
[suspenseful music]

521
00:31:21,080 --> 00:31:23,120
-[clunk]
-[man grunts]

522
00:31:25,120 --> 00:31:29,840
[narrator] No surprises then,
that when society so brutalizes a child,

523
00:31:29,920 --> 00:31:32,560
it spawns a brutal monster,

524
00:31:34,040 --> 00:31:38,720
and, in Vane's case,
everybody's worst nightmare.

525
00:31:43,360 --> 00:31:44,960
[Spanish captain] No. No. No.

526
00:31:45,040 --> 00:31:46,280
-No?
-[Spanish captain] No!

527
00:31:46,360 --> 00:31:48,880
-Sí. Sí.
-No!

528
00:31:50,520 --> 00:31:52,560
[Spanish captain] No! No! No!

529
00:31:52,640 --> 00:31:55,080
-[Vane laughs]
-[in Spanish] There is a camp.

530
00:31:56,800 --> 00:31:59,560
-[in English] Anyone here speak gibberish?
-[Spanish captain] No!

531
00:31:59,640 --> 00:32:00,560
[speaking Spanish]

532
00:32:02,840 --> 00:32:05,400
[Spanish captain whimpering]
No! No! No! No!

533
00:32:05,480 --> 00:32:07,960
[in Spanish] They have the gold.

534
00:32:08,040 --> 00:32:09,520
[Vane laughs]

535
00:32:12,320 --> 00:32:14,160
[in English] Your witness, Captain.

536
00:32:15,960 --> 00:32:17,240
Charles Vane.

537
00:32:18,640 --> 00:32:21,800
[narrator]
With Vane's powers of persuasion,

538
00:32:21,880 --> 00:32:26,480
Jennings learns something more valuable
than the location of the wrecks.

539
00:32:26,560 --> 00:32:29,960
He discovered that a lot of treasure
had already been retrieved,

540
00:32:30,040 --> 00:32:32,480
and was being stored
in a camp on the shore.

541
00:32:35,000 --> 00:32:38,720
[narrator] As Jennings sets sail
in a quest for Spanish treasure,

542
00:32:38,800 --> 00:32:43,200
young Sam Bellamy appears
to have struck gold with Mary Hallett.

543
00:32:46,640 --> 00:32:49,400
[panting softly]

544
00:32:51,600 --> 00:32:54,960
Her parents were not in favor
of any kind of union between them.

545
00:32:55,040 --> 00:32:57,920
They were wealthy farmers,
and they didn't think that

546
00:32:58,000 --> 00:33:01,360
he would be able to provide for Mary
in the way that she was used to.

547
00:33:02,080 --> 00:33:04,720
No way is she going to marry
this horrible man,

548
00:33:04,800 --> 00:33:06,520
according to her parents.

549
00:33:06,600 --> 00:33:09,320
However, she has another idea.

550
00:33:09,400 --> 00:33:12,360
[panting softly]

551
00:33:16,240 --> 00:33:19,840
[Cale]
This was a very strict religious society.

552
00:33:21,000 --> 00:33:24,000
This is not a society
that has any kind of tolerance

553
00:33:24,080 --> 00:33:26,120
for anything like premarital sex.

554
00:33:27,200 --> 00:33:28,720
[older man] Mary?

555
00:33:28,800 --> 00:33:30,800
[Mary panting]

556
00:33:32,160 --> 00:33:34,200
-[older man] Slut!
-Keep your hands off her.

557
00:33:35,400 --> 00:33:39,080
If I hear you touched a hair on her head,
I'll come back, I'll set you straight.

558
00:33:39,160 --> 00:33:42,080
-You're not worthy of my daughter!
-Stop it. Stop shouting.

559
00:33:42,160 --> 00:33:43,080
[Samuel] Mary?

560
00:33:43,160 --> 00:33:46,080
I'll be back. I swear.

561
00:33:46,160 --> 00:33:49,280
I'll be back with more than enough
means to satisfy your father.

562
00:33:49,360 --> 00:33:52,480
And you, you don't lay a finger on her.

563
00:33:52,560 --> 00:33:55,440
[shouting] Leave my property, now!

564
00:33:56,640 --> 00:34:00,720
[narrator] And so the Spanish treasure
becomes Bellamy's only hope…

565
00:34:00,800 --> 00:34:02,880
[indistinct tavern chatter]

566
00:34:02,960 --> 00:34:06,280
…and Paulsgrave Williams
has the means to get it.

567
00:34:09,240 --> 00:34:10,760
With every passing day

568
00:34:10,840 --> 00:34:14,760
this Hornigold character
impresses me more.

569
00:34:14,840 --> 00:34:19,600
Picking a fortune from the Florida sands
under the noses of the Spanish themselves.

570
00:34:19,680 --> 00:34:20,760
God. [laughs].

571
00:34:22,160 --> 00:34:23,320
[slams pint down]

572
00:34:23,400 --> 00:34:26,080
Breaks my heart, but what a nerve, huh?

573
00:34:26,160 --> 00:34:28,280
[tavern patrons] Yeah! Yeah.

574
00:34:29,960 --> 00:34:32,200
I'll have that drink
you owe me, Paulsgrave.

575
00:34:33,560 --> 00:34:37,600
Decided that the bachelor life
is for you after all, eh, Sam?

576
00:34:38,400 --> 00:34:40,080
My Mary won't marry a villain,

577
00:34:41,600 --> 00:34:44,480
but I don't think
there's a law against scavenging.

578
00:34:45,280 --> 00:34:48,920
Bellamy wants the money,
so he can go back home to his sweetheart

579
00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:51,400
and convince her parents
that he's a good bet.

580
00:34:52,400 --> 00:34:55,360
Get Captain Bellamy a drink.

581
00:35:02,160 --> 00:35:04,640
[dramatic music]

582
00:35:10,880 --> 00:35:13,440
Captain? Captain Jennings?

583
00:35:27,440 --> 00:35:28,680
There they are.

584
00:35:33,120 --> 00:35:35,400
[narrator]
The Spanish gold is being guarded

585
00:35:35,480 --> 00:35:38,160
by a paltry crew of Spaniards.

586
00:35:38,240 --> 00:35:43,240
No contest for a bunch
of seasoned British privateers.

587
00:35:43,320 --> 00:35:47,800
Under cover of darkness,
he lands three detachments of soldiers.

588
00:35:51,280 --> 00:35:54,960
Jennings definitely had
a profit motive in mind.

589
00:35:55,040 --> 00:35:57,400
There was an enormous
amount of treasure there

590
00:35:57,480 --> 00:35:59,880
and he was beelining right to it.

591
00:35:59,960 --> 00:36:01,960
He may have felt that
there was nothing immoral

592
00:36:02,040 --> 00:36:04,840
about him taking treasure
back from the Spanish.

593
00:36:07,480 --> 00:36:10,560
[narrator] And they know
full well they're playing with fire.

594
00:36:11,080 --> 00:36:14,320
The Florida coast is Spanish territory.

595
00:36:15,680 --> 00:36:18,400
[sinister music]

596
00:36:25,320 --> 00:36:26,760
-[men shouting]
-[blades clashing]

597
00:36:26,840 --> 00:36:28,320
[male Spaniard] Captain!

598
00:36:29,280 --> 00:36:31,800
On your feet. Quickly!

599
00:36:33,760 --> 00:36:34,880
[grunts]

600
00:36:42,920 --> 00:36:45,280
-[in Spanish] Is this war?
-[mocking speech]

601
00:36:46,400 --> 00:36:48,960
Admiral Salmon tried
to negotiate his way out of it,

602
00:36:49,040 --> 00:36:52,560
you know, offering them 25,000 pesos
if they'd just go in peace.

603
00:36:52,640 --> 00:36:53,800
They would have none of it.

604
00:36:53,880 --> 00:36:55,400
[man coughing]

605
00:36:55,480 --> 00:36:59,280
We want everything. Comprende?

606
00:36:59,360 --> 00:37:00,480
[speaking Spanish]

607
00:37:00,560 --> 00:37:04,400
Uh-uh. Every fucking thing.

608
00:37:04,480 --> 00:37:06,480
[man on ground keeps coughing]

609
00:37:06,560 --> 00:37:08,120
-And if you… [sighs]
-[man groans]

610
00:37:08,200 --> 00:37:10,640
I can't hear myself think.

611
00:37:12,040 --> 00:37:14,400
Vane? Could you…?

612
00:37:15,360 --> 00:37:16,760
[man coughing wetly]

613
00:37:16,840 --> 00:37:19,080
-[man chokes]
-[Vane] Shh.

614
00:37:19,160 --> 00:37:21,520
[choking and coughing]

615
00:37:21,600 --> 00:37:23,960
Men? Take everything.

616
00:37:25,080 --> 00:37:26,200
Leave nothing.

617
00:37:26,280 --> 00:37:28,200
[man chokes softly]

618
00:37:29,280 --> 00:37:30,200
Gracias.

619
00:37:30,280 --> 00:37:31,880
[man keeps choking]

620
00:37:31,960 --> 00:37:32,800
[bone snaps]

621
00:37:32,880 --> 00:37:34,000
[silence]

622
00:37:34,920 --> 00:37:36,680
[in Spanish] Yes.

623
00:37:36,760 --> 00:37:38,560
[in Spanish] It's war.

624
00:37:43,240 --> 00:37:48,000
Jennings and his men ended up
leaving with almost £80,000 in treasure.

625
00:37:48,760 --> 00:37:51,240
Spain and Britain
were at peace at this point,

626
00:37:51,320 --> 00:37:54,280
so it risked re-igniting open conflict.

627
00:37:55,680 --> 00:37:57,600
[narrator] On the way back to Jamaica,

628
00:37:57,680 --> 00:38:01,280
Jennings decides
to take a detour to Nassau

629
00:38:01,360 --> 00:38:04,560
to rub his triumph in Hornigold's face.

630
00:38:05,880 --> 00:38:10,280
[Woodward] There's this archness
condescension that you'd actually do that.

631
00:38:10,360 --> 00:38:13,240
Who are you, Hornigold,
with your rag-tag group of men

632
00:38:13,320 --> 00:38:16,080
operating out of this
crappy failed colony?

633
00:38:17,000 --> 00:38:21,080
[narrator] But Hornigold's
Flying Gang is growing by the day,

634
00:38:21,160 --> 00:38:23,880
and the latest recruit is a diamond.

635
00:38:23,960 --> 00:38:25,920
-Mr. Hornigold, sir.
-Who wants him?

636
00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:28,400
-Another fan, Captain.
-[Hornigold laughs]

637
00:38:28,480 --> 00:38:32,080
Uh, apologies. I'm Edward Thatch.

638
00:38:32,160 --> 00:38:33,360
You're a legend, sir.

639
00:38:34,000 --> 00:38:36,280
Been reading
The Boston News-Letter by any chance?

640
00:38:36,360 --> 00:38:38,520
-What can I do for you?
-[Thatch] Um…

641
00:38:38,600 --> 00:38:40,160
I'm from Jamaica.

642
00:38:40,240 --> 00:38:41,720
My family own land there.

643
00:38:41,800 --> 00:38:45,320
[Woodward] Thatch gave
his inheritance to family members

644
00:38:45,400 --> 00:38:48,360
and had been a mate
on Jamaican merchant vessels.

645
00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:53,080
It suggests that
he was relatively educated,

646
00:38:53,160 --> 00:38:54,840
not completely penniless.

647
00:38:54,920 --> 00:38:58,360
I was interested in joining your crew,
you know, to learn the ropes.

648
00:38:58,440 --> 00:38:59,920
I can pay you for my own keep.

649
00:39:00,000 --> 00:39:01,520
Oh. [laughs]

650
00:39:01,600 --> 00:39:03,800
-[Hornigold laughs] Pirate's apprentice?
-Yeah.

651
00:39:03,880 --> 00:39:05,920
Well, I reckon I've heard it all now.

652
00:39:11,440 --> 00:39:12,560
You handle a musket?

653
00:39:12,640 --> 00:39:13,960
Yeah.

654
00:39:14,040 --> 00:39:15,400
Lift a barrel?

655
00:39:15,480 --> 00:39:16,800
[chuckles] Yeah.

656
00:39:16,880 --> 00:39:19,000
Neck grog and not spew your ring?

657
00:39:19,080 --> 00:39:20,200
[grunts]

658
00:39:20,280 --> 00:39:22,680
Waste your wages on women?

659
00:39:22,760 --> 00:39:25,400
Catch a rat? Sleep with lice?

660
00:39:25,480 --> 00:39:28,600
Captain? We've trouble.

661
00:39:28,680 --> 00:39:32,280
Jennings is in town.
He's fresh from the wrecks and he's flush.

662
00:39:32,880 --> 00:39:34,520
[Hornigold] You come as a pair, do you?

663
00:39:36,200 --> 00:39:37,560
Very much so.

664
00:39:42,520 --> 00:39:45,480
Quartermaster, set these two men to work.

665
00:39:48,840 --> 00:39:51,720
[narrator] Hornigold doesn't
welcome Jennings and his gang

666
00:39:51,800 --> 00:39:54,880
disturbing the peace of his pirate haven.

667
00:39:54,960 --> 00:39:58,360
Oh, no, no. Mine, I think you'll find.

668
00:39:58,440 --> 00:40:01,160
-[laughs] Whoa, feisty.
-Get off!

669
00:40:01,240 --> 00:40:03,440
-[Jennings] Feisty, huh?
-[woman] Get off!

670
00:40:03,520 --> 00:40:05,520
-[Jennings laughs]
-[woman] Stop!

671
00:40:05,600 --> 00:40:08,480
You wanna play,
you pay like everyone else, Jennings.

672
00:40:08,560 --> 00:40:12,400
Fuck off, Hornigold!
You jumped up powder monkey.

673
00:40:12,480 --> 00:40:14,800
-[blade clinks]
-This isn't Port Royal.

674
00:40:15,360 --> 00:40:17,480
The women here need to be treated--

675
00:40:17,560 --> 00:40:19,000
[Vane tuts]

676
00:40:22,240 --> 00:40:25,200
I don't think you've met Mr. Vane.
He's quite mad.

677
00:40:26,960 --> 00:40:28,480
[sniffing]

678
00:40:29,120 --> 00:40:32,280
No, I mean properly, properly insane.

679
00:40:33,520 --> 00:40:35,680
I wouldn't upset him
any further if I were you.

680
00:40:36,560 --> 00:40:37,680
[pistol clicks]

681
00:40:44,720 --> 00:40:48,840
[narrator] Hornigold has
his own enforcer, Edward Thatch.

682
00:40:51,960 --> 00:40:54,960
And so, battle lines are drawn

683
00:40:55,800 --> 00:40:59,240
between two very different pirate leaders,

684
00:40:59,800 --> 00:41:03,080
united by their greed and opportunism.

685
00:41:05,720 --> 00:41:07,680
[wind blowing]

686
00:41:17,520 --> 00:41:19,480
[knocking at door]

687
00:41:19,560 --> 00:41:21,200
[pirate] Mr. Hornigold?

688
00:41:21,280 --> 00:41:23,800
-[knocking continues]
-[pirate at door] Hornigold, sir.

689
00:41:25,200 --> 00:41:26,360
What?

690
00:41:26,440 --> 00:41:28,320
[pirate] It's Jennings.

691
00:41:28,400 --> 00:41:30,400
[sinister music]

692
00:41:39,200 --> 00:41:42,280
[narrator]
That night, Jennings sails off to Jamaica…

693
00:41:47,800 --> 00:41:49,880
in Hornigold's ship.

694
00:41:53,360 --> 00:41:54,200
Fuck!

695
00:41:54,280 --> 00:41:57,520
[dramatic swashbuckling music]

