Despite claims from
A General History, John Rackham does not appear in records prior to August 1720. His name was not on Vincent Pearse's list of pirates who surrendered upon
promise of a pardon, nor does any newspaper mention him by name. In all likelihood, Rackham was not even a pirate until the year 1720.
Pirate career according to A General History Captain Charles Johnson writes that, in 1719, Rackham sailed into
Nassau in the Bahamas, taking advantage of a
general amnesty for pirates to obtain a royal pardon and commission from Governor
Woodes Rogers. Rogers had been sent to the Bahamas to address the problem of pirates in the Caribbean who had started to attack and steal from British ships. Rackham and his men were at a town in Cuba refitting their small sloop when a Spanish warship charged with patrolling the Cuban coast entered the harbour, along with a small English sloop which they had captured. The Spanish warship saw the pirates but could not get at them at low tide, so they anchored in the harbour entrance to wait for morning. That night, Rackham and his men rowed over to the captured English sloop and overpowered the Spanish guards there. As dawn broke, the warship began blasting Rackham's old ship, now empty, as Rackham and his men silently sailed past in their new prize. Rackham and his men made their way back to Nassau, where they appeared before Governor Rogers and asked for the royal pardon, claiming that Vane had forced them to become pirates. Rogers hated Vane and chose to believe them, granting them the pardon and allowing them to stay. Their time as honest men, however, did not last long.
Anne Bonny ''
A General History claims after taking the pardon, Rackham began an affair with a woman named
Anne Bonny. Johnson claims Bonny had come to Nassau with her husband, and the two became pirates shortly sometime after. Bonny is referred to as a
spinster in her trial making this claim unlikely. What relationship Bonny had with Rackham, and why they decided to become pirates, is unclear. On the 22nd of August 1720, Rackham, Bonny, and a crew including another woman,
Mary Read, stole the merchant sloop
William owned by merchant and former pirate
John Ham. Rackham managed to escape Nassau harbor with ease, beginning a short pirate career. == Capture, trial and death ==