Snelgrave and his crew were captured by pirates on 1 April 1719, while their vessel was anchored in the mouth of the
Sierra Leone River in
West Africa. The 45 sailors on board were taken by surprise when a small pirate band led by
Thomas Cocklyn pulled alongside and scaled the side of their ship. Snelgrave ordered the crew to resist, but he was ignored. Instead, he was seized by one of the pirates who "with the but-end [of a pistol] endeavoured to beat out my brains." Some of the crew eventually intervened to beg that the pirates not kill their captain, upon which the badly injured Snelgrave was dragged before Cocklyn who told him his wounds were simply "the fortunes of war." Additional pirate vessels arrived over the course of the day, led by captains
Howell Davis and
Olivier Levasseur. On boarding Snelgrave's ship Davis apologised for the injuries inflicted by Cocklyn's men, saying they had become pirates to revenge themselves on cruel ship's commanders whereas "no one of my people gave me the least ill character ... it was plain they loved me." ==References==