Knight may have lived in
Port Royal, Jamaica since 1675, but by September 1684 he and 50 men set out to raid the Spanish, crossing the
Isthmus of Panama, building canoes once they reached the Pacific coast. Some of his sailors became separated, joining with
Francis Townley,
Edward Davis, and
Charles Swan, as well as French buccaneers under
Francois Grogniet and
Jean L’Escuyer. Knight and the rest of his crew cruised off El Salvador and Ecuador then joined the larger group in March 1685. The buccaneers engaged a Spanish fleet in June but were forced to retreat. The English and French contingents blamed each other and subsequently separated after a failed assault on
Remedios. Knight, Swan, Townley, and Peter Harris left in July to attack Nicaragua, sacking
León and
Realejo but with little to show for it. Davis and Knight left for Peru in September, raiding up and down the coast into 1686. That March they raided
Sana, taking over 100,000 pesos (£25,000). This was one of the richest captures of the buccaneer era. Davis’ crew elected to stay in the Pacific and continue their raids, having lost much of treasure gambling; they looted
Arica in Chile then assisted a French contingent under
Pierre Le Picard in taking
Guayaquil. though in 1688 he was called to give testimony in Jamaica against French buccaneers who had sailed with Townley. Given the dates and the association with Dampier, Davis, and Swan's crew, this may have been William Knight. ==See also==