According to
Spanish colonial court records, Spanish government officials arrested
Samuel Mason and his men, early in 1803, at the Little Prairie settlement, now
Caruthersville, in southeastern Missouri. Mason and his gang, including his family members, were taken to the Spanish colonial government in
New Madrid, Spanish Upper Louisiana Territory, along the Mississippi River, where a three-day hearing was held to determine whether Mason was truly involved in river piracy, as he had been formally accused of this crime. Although Mason claimed he was simply a farmer who had been maligned by his enemies, the presence of $7,000 in currency and twenty human
scalps found in his baggage convinced the Spanish he indeed was a river pirate. Mason and his family were taken under armed guard to
New Orleans, where the Spanish colonial governor ordered them handed over to the American authorities in the
Mississippi Territory, as all crimes they had been convicted of appeared to have taken place in American territory or against American river boats. While being transported up the Mississippi River, Samuel Mason and gang members
Wiley Harpe and Alston overpowered their guards and escaped, with Mason being shot in the head during the escape. One of the 1803 accounts {Rothert. p. 247} claimed Captain Robert McCoy, the commandant of New Madrid, was killed by Mason during their escape. McCoy actually died in 1840, and was neither crippled nor killed by Mason. American territorial governor William C. C. Claiborne immediately issued a reward for their recapture, prompting Harpe and Alston to bring Mason's head in an attempt to claim the reward money. Whether they killed Mason or whether he died from his wound suffered in the escape attempt has never been established. Setton and May were recognized and identified as wanted criminals, Harpe and Alston were arrested, tried in
U.S. federal court, found guilty of piracy, and hanged in
Old Greenville,
Jefferson County,
Mississippi Territory in early 1804. ==Gallery==