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{{Infobox pirate
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==History==
==History==


Notorious French pirate [[L'Olonnais]] put into [[Jamaica]] in 1668 to sell one of his [[prize ship]]s, an 80-ton 12-gun Spanish [[brigantine]]. It was purchased by [[Roc Brasiliano]], whom became Captain, with Lecat as his first mate.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas">{{cite book|last1=Marley|first1=David|title=Pirates of the Americas|date=2010|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara CA|isbn=9781598842012|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bU6ML_VnXTwC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> Together they cruised near [[Puerto Bello]] and [[Cartagena, Colombia|Cartagena]], where they soon captured another Spanish ship. Brasiliano took the new capture while Lecat became Captain of the brigantine.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
Notorious French pirate [[L'Olonnais]] put into [[Jamaica]] in 1668 to sell one of his [[prize ship]]s, an 80-ton 12-gun Spanish [[brigantine]]. It was purchased by [[Roc Brasiliano]], who became Captain, with Lecat as his first mate.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas">{{cite book|last1=Marley|first1=David|title=Pirates of the Americas|date=2010|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara CA|isbn=9781598842012|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bU6ML_VnXTwC|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> Together they cruised near [[Puerto Bello]] and [[Cartagena, Colombia|Cartagena]], where they soon captured another Spanish ship. Brasiliano took the new capture, while Lecat became Captain of the brigantine.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />


In spring 1669 they partnered with English Captain [[Joseph Bradley (buccaneer)|Joseph Bradley]] to raid the Spanish. Impatient for plunder, Lecat loaded his ship with logwood while Brasiliano and Bradley blockaded the port of [[Campeche]].<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> A Spanish fleet soon chased the trio away. Brasiliano's ship was wrecked in the escape; Lecat rescued him, putting him aboard Bradley's ship. Lecat then sailed with [[Jan Erasmus Reyning|Jan Reyning]], capturing a merchantman, which they kept and renamed ''Seviliaen'' after sinking the brigantine.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> He also sailed briefly alongside English buccaneer [[Francis Witherborn]].<ref name="Disputatious">{{cite book|last1=Barber|first1=S.|title=The Disputatious Caribbean: The West Indies in the Seventeenth Century|date=2014|publisher=Springer|location=New York|isbn=9781137480019|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q-caBgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false|accessdate=6 March 2018|language=en}}</ref>
In spring 1669, they partnered with English Captain [[Joseph Bradley (buccaneer)|Joseph Bradley]] to raid the Spanish. Impatient for plunder, Lecat loaded his ship with logwood, while Brasiliano and Bradley blockaded the port of [[Campeche]].<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> A Spanish fleet soon chased the trio away. Brasiliano's ship was wrecked in the escape; Lecat rescued him, putting him aboard Bradley's ship. Lecat then sailed with [[Jan Erasmus Reyning|Jan Reyning]], capturing a merchantman, which they kept and renamed ''Seviliaen'' after sinking the brigantine.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> He also sailed briefly alongside English buccaneer [[Francis Witherborn]].<ref name="Disputatious">{{cite book|last1=Barber|first1=S.|title=The Disputatious Caribbean: The West Indies in the Seventeenth Century|date=2014|publisher=Springer|location=New York|isbn=9781137480019|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q-caBgAAQBAJ|accessdate=6 March 2018|language=en}}</ref>


Henry Morgan assembled a fleet to sack [[Panama]] in 1670 which included Brasiliano, Reyning, Bradley, and Lecat. Bradley was killed assaulting a Spanish fort, and the rest marched overland across Panama into 1671.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> Lecat and Reyning left the group after disagreeing with Morgan over the division of spoils. They sailed for [[Jamaica]], where they refused a pardon and rendezvoused in the [[Cayman Islands]] instead. After raiding [[Cuba]] they captured a Spanish ''guarda costa'' vessel, which Lecat kept for his own, giving the ''Seviliaen'' to Reyning.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
Henry Morgan assembled a fleet to [[Henry Morgan's Panama expedition|sack Panama in 1670]], including Brasiliano, Reyning, Bradley, and Lecat. Bradley was killed assaulting a Spanish fort, and the rest marched overland across Panama into 1671.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> Lecat and Reyning left the group after disagreeing with Morgan over the division of spoils. They sailed for [[Jamaica]], where they refused a [[Pardon (piracy)|pardon]] and rendezvoused in the [[Cayman Islands]] instead. After raiding [[Cuba]] they captured a Spanish ''guarda costa'' vessel, which Lecat kept for himself, giving the ''Seviliaen'' to Reyning.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />


Sailing back to Campeche, they [[Marooning|marooned]] the English members of their crew and took a commission from the Spanish,<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> who may have paid them a huge sum to switch sides, possibly purchasing one of their old ships as well.<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who" /> They brought the English logwood trade to a standstill off the coast of [[Honduras]],<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who" /> capturing over a dozen ships for the Spanish.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" /> Lecat stayed at sea, bringing in prize ships and valuable cargo while Reyning stayed in port, acting as their agent to help dispose of plunder and captured ships.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
Sailing back to Campeche, they [[Marooning|marooned]] the English members of their crew and took a commission from the Spanish,<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" /> who may have paid them a huge sum to switch sides, possibly purchasing one of their old ships as well.<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who" /> They brought the English logwood trade to a standstill off the coast of [[Honduras]],<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who" /> capturing over a dozen ships for the Spanish.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" /> Lecat stayed at sea, bringing in prize ships and valuable cargo while Reyning stayed in port, acting as their agent to help dispose of plunder and captured ships.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
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Reyning sailed on his own in the ''Serviliaen'' in late 1672 on an escort mission. He waited to rendezvous with Lecat, who never arrived. The following year ''Serviliaen'' was lost in a storm near [[Hispaniola]], though Reyning escaped.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
Reyning sailed on his own in the ''Serviliaen'' in late 1672 on an escort mission. He waited to rendezvous with Lecat, who never arrived. The following year ''Serviliaen'' was lost in a storm near [[Hispaniola]], though Reyning escaped.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />


Lecat was apparently still active enough to warrant the attention of officials in England. He had been legendary in his skill and luck evading capture: English officials tried several times to hire privateers and former raiders to capture Lecat with no success. Reyning himself may have been originally sent to hunt down Lecat, though they joined forces instead.<ref name="Pirate Hunting" /> In 1670 Jamaican Governor [[Thomas Modyford|Modyford]] sent [[John Morris (pirate)|a buccaneer named Morris (Morrice)]] to arrest Lecat, who was vulnerable while [[careening]] his ship. Morris ignored Lecat and captured a Spaniard instead.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers">{{cite book|last1=Sainsbury|first1=W. Noel|title=Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies {{!}} British History Online|date=1889|publisher=Her Majesty's Stationery Office|location=London|pages=110–559|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/colonial/america-west-indies/vol7|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> Modyford's successor [[Thomas Lynch (governor)|Thomas Lynch]] sent Captain Wilgres after Lecat, but Wilgres went buccaneering on his own.<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who">{{cite book|last1=Gosse|first1=Philip|title=The Pirates' Who's Who by Philip Gosse|date=1924|publisher=Burt Franklin|location=New York|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19564/19564-h/19564-h.htm|accessdate=23 June 2017}}</ref> The warship ''HMS Assistance'' under [[William Beeston (governor)|William Beeston]] hunted Lecat in 1671, only to have him shelter under the guns of a Spanish fort during a brief period of neutrality; Beeston instead captured Witherborn and a French pirate named Du Mangles. The following year Lynch dispatched Morris again, along with Captain Allword. Morris turned to logwood hauling<ref name="Pirate Hunting">{{cite book|last1=Little|first1=Benerson|title=Pirate Hunting: The Fight Against Pirates, Privateers, and Sea Raiders from Antiquity to the Present|date=2010|publisher=Potomac Books, Inc.|location=Washington DC|isbn=9781597972918|page=159|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IDlCCgKkH9sC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> while Allword became a smuggler.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" />
Lecat was apparently still active enough to warrant the attention of officials in England. He had been legendary in his skill and in luck evading capture. English officials tried several times to hire privateers and former raiders to capture Lecat with no success. Reyning himself may have been originally sent to hunt down Lecat, though they joined forces instead.<ref name="Pirate Hunting" /> In 1670, Jamaican Governor [[Thomas Modyford|Modyford]] sent [[John Morris (pirate)|a buccaneer named Morris (Morrice)]] to arrest Lecat, who was vulnerable while [[careening]] his ship. Morris ignored Lecat and captured a Spaniard instead.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers">{{cite book|last1=Sainsbury|first1=W. Noel|title=Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies {{!}} British History Online|date=1889|publisher=Her Majesty's Stationery Office|location=London|pages=110–559|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/colonial/america-west-indies/vol7|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> Modyford's successor [[Thomas Lynch (governor)|Thomas Lynch]] sent Captain Wilgres after Lecat, but Wilgres went buccaneering on his own.<ref name="Gosse - Who’s Who">{{cite book|last1=Gosse|first1=Philip|title=The Pirates' Who's Who by Philip Gosse|date=1924|publisher=Burt Franklin|location=New York|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/19564/19564-h/19564-h.htm|accessdate=23 June 2017}}</ref> The warship ''HMS Assistance'' under [[William Beeston (governor)|William Beeston]] hunted Lecat in 1671, only to have him shelter under the guns of a Spanish fort during a brief period of neutrality; Beeston instead captured Witherborn and a French pirate named Du Mangles. The following year, Lynch dispatched Morris again, this time along with Captain Allword. Morris turned to logwood hauling<ref name="Pirate Hunting">{{cite book|last1=Little|first1=Benerson|title=Pirate Hunting: The Fight Against Pirates, Privateers, and Sea Raiders from Antiquity to the Present|date=2010|publisher=Potomac Books, Inc.|location=Washington DC|isbn=9781597972918|page=159|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IDlCCgKkH9sC|accessdate=22 August 2017|language=en}}</ref> while Allword became a smuggler.<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" />


In 1672 the English Trade and Plantations committee warned logwood ships to sail in convoy<ref name="Buccaneers in the West Indies" /> and prepare to defend themselves. Finally in 1674 [[Charles II of England|the King]] issued a pardon specifically for Lecat and an Irish pirate named [[Philip Fitzgerald (pirate)|Philip Fitzgerald]], forbidding them from serving other nations, offering them forgiveness if they surrendered, and authorizing the Jamaican Governor to hunt them down if not: “and in regard Captains Yellows and Fitzgerald, two of his Majesty's subjects, appeared to be the chief instruments of said depredations, That a Proclamation be issued for recalling his Majesty's subjects from the service of any foreign Prince between the tropics in America, with promise of pardon if they render themselves within a convenient time; and that the Governor of Jamaica receive speedy order for securing both said persons if found so offending after the time limited within his Government, and cause them to be sent prisoners to England.”<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" /> Little is known of Lecat's further activities.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
In 1672 the English Trade and Plantations committee warned logwood ships to sail in convoy<ref name="Buccaneers in the West Indies" /> and prepare to defend themselves. Finally in 1674 [[Charles II of England|the King]] issued a pardon specifically for Lecat and an Irish pirate named [[Philip Fitzgerald (pirate)|Philip Fitzgerald]], forbidding them from serving other nations, offering them forgiveness if they surrendered, and authorizing the Jamaican Governor to hunt them down if not: “and in regard Captains Yellows and Fitzgerald, two of his Majesty's subjects, appeared to be the chief instruments of said depredations, That a Proclamation be issued for recalling his Majesty's subjects from the service of any foreign Prince between the tropics in America, with promise of pardon if they render themselves within a convenient time; and that the Governor of Jamaica receive speedy order for securing both said persons if found so offending after the time limited within his Government, and cause them to be sent prisoners to England.”<ref name="Calendar of State Papers" /> Little is known of Lecat's further activities.<ref name="Pirates of the Americas" />
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[[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing]]
[[Category:Year of death missing]]
[[Category:Year of death missing]]
[[Category:Dutch pirates]]
[[Category:Pirates from the Dutch Republic]]
[[Category:17th-century pirates]]
[[Category:17th-century pirates]]
[[Category:Caribbean pirates]]
[[Category:Caribbean pirates]]
[[Category:17th-century Dutch criminals]]

Latest revision as of 03:21, 15 March 2024

Jelles de Lecat
NationalityDutch
Occupation(s)Pirate and buccaneer
Years active1668-1674
Known forServed with Henry Morgan
Piratical career
Nickname"Yellahs," "Yallahs," or “Captain Yellows.”
AllegianceFor and against both the English and Spanish

Jelles de Lecat (fl. 1668-1674, last name also Lescat) was a Dutch pirate and buccaneer who sailed for and against both the English and Spanish. He served with Henry Morgan and was often called "Yellahs," "Yallahs,"[1] or “Captain Yellows.”[2]

History

[edit]

Notorious French pirate L'Olonnais put into Jamaica in 1668 to sell one of his prize ships, an 80-ton 12-gun Spanish brigantine. It was purchased by Roc Brasiliano, who became Captain, with Lecat as his first mate.[3] Together they cruised near Puerto Bello and Cartagena, where they soon captured another Spanish ship. Brasiliano took the new capture, while Lecat became Captain of the brigantine.[3]

In spring 1669, they partnered with English Captain Joseph Bradley to raid the Spanish. Impatient for plunder, Lecat loaded his ship with logwood, while Brasiliano and Bradley blockaded the port of Campeche.[3] A Spanish fleet soon chased the trio away. Brasiliano's ship was wrecked in the escape; Lecat rescued him, putting him aboard Bradley's ship. Lecat then sailed with Jan Reyning, capturing a merchantman, which they kept and renamed Seviliaen after sinking the brigantine.[3] He also sailed briefly alongside English buccaneer Francis Witherborn.[4]

Henry Morgan assembled a fleet to sack Panama in 1670, including Brasiliano, Reyning, Bradley, and Lecat. Bradley was killed assaulting a Spanish fort, and the rest marched overland across Panama into 1671.[3] Lecat and Reyning left the group after disagreeing with Morgan over the division of spoils. They sailed for Jamaica, where they refused a pardon and rendezvoused in the Cayman Islands instead. After raiding Cuba they captured a Spanish guarda costa vessel, which Lecat kept for himself, giving the Seviliaen to Reyning.[3]

Sailing back to Campeche, they marooned the English members of their crew and took a commission from the Spanish,[3] who may have paid them a huge sum to switch sides, possibly purchasing one of their old ships as well.[5] They brought the English logwood trade to a standstill off the coast of Honduras,[5] capturing over a dozen ships for the Spanish.[6] Lecat stayed at sea, bringing in prize ships and valuable cargo while Reyning stayed in port, acting as their agent to help dispose of plunder and captured ships.[3]

Reyning sailed on his own in the Serviliaen in late 1672 on an escort mission. He waited to rendezvous with Lecat, who never arrived. The following year Serviliaen was lost in a storm near Hispaniola, though Reyning escaped.[3]

Lecat was apparently still active enough to warrant the attention of officials in England. He had been legendary in his skill and in luck evading capture. English officials tried several times to hire privateers and former raiders to capture Lecat with no success. Reyning himself may have been originally sent to hunt down Lecat, though they joined forces instead.[2] In 1670, Jamaican Governor Modyford sent a buccaneer named Morris (Morrice) to arrest Lecat, who was vulnerable while careening his ship. Morris ignored Lecat and captured a Spaniard instead.[6] Modyford's successor Thomas Lynch sent Captain Wilgres after Lecat, but Wilgres went buccaneering on his own.[5] The warship HMS Assistance under William Beeston hunted Lecat in 1671, only to have him shelter under the guns of a Spanish fort during a brief period of neutrality; Beeston instead captured Witherborn and a French pirate named Du Mangles. The following year, Lynch dispatched Morris again, this time along with Captain Allword. Morris turned to logwood hauling[2] while Allword became a smuggler.[6]

In 1672 the English Trade and Plantations committee warned logwood ships to sail in convoy[1] and prepare to defend themselves. Finally in 1674 the King issued a pardon specifically for Lecat and an Irish pirate named Philip Fitzgerald, forbidding them from serving other nations, offering them forgiveness if they surrendered, and authorizing the Jamaican Governor to hunt them down if not: “and in regard Captains Yellows and Fitzgerald, two of his Majesty's subjects, appeared to be the chief instruments of said depredations, That a Proclamation be issued for recalling his Majesty's subjects from the service of any foreign Prince between the tropics in America, with promise of pardon if they render themselves within a convenient time; and that the Governor of Jamaica receive speedy order for securing both said persons if found so offending after the time limited within his Government, and cause them to be sent prisoners to England.”[6] Little is known of Lecat's further activities.[3]

See also

[edit]
  • Jean Hamlin, another French buccaneer who used some of Morgan's old hideouts, and who was hunted by Governor Lynch.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Haring, Clarence Henry (1910). The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the XVII Century. New York: E. P. Dutton. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Little, Benerson (2010). Pirate Hunting: The Fight Against Pirates, Privateers, and Sea Raiders from Antiquity to the Present. Washington DC: Potomac Books, Inc. p. 159. ISBN 9781597972918. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Marley, David (2010). Pirates of the Americas. Santa Barbara CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781598842012. Retrieved August 22, 2017.
  4. ^ Barber, S. (2014). The Disputatious Caribbean: The West Indies in the Seventeenth Century. New York: Springer. ISBN 9781137480019. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Gosse, Philip (1924). The Pirates' Who's Who by Philip Gosse. New York: Burt Franklin. Retrieved June 23, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d Sainsbury, W. Noel (1889). Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies | British History Online. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 110–559. Retrieved August 22, 2017.