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2006 | 2007
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July Days 2006
 
1 When Death Inspires Art
2 Death Rays
3 The Art of Francis Bacon
4 Ghosts of the Old South
5 Hot Blood: The Anthology of Erotic Horror
6 Early Classics 0f Gothic Latin Cinema
7 Pirates, Pain and Punishment
8 William Kidd: Pirate or Privateer?
9 Captain Jack Sparrow
10 The Art of Enki Bilal
11 Iconic Images: 'Bat-Woman' by Penot
12 Absinthe: The truth behind the Green Fairy
13 The Vampire by Philip Burne-Jones
14 The Guillotine
15 Jim Henson's "Labyrinth"
16 The Labyrinth of Jareth Masquerade Ball
17 Kali, the Goddess of Destruction
18 Vampire by Edvard Munch
19 Paolo Serpieri's Dystopian Erotic Art
20 Evil and Innocence in Point Pleasant
21 The Lady of Shalott
22 Erotic Ghost Stories: Gotham
23 Erotic Ghost Stories: Haunted
24 The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer
25 The Exquisite Gates of Albert Paley
26 Madonna by Edvard Munch
27 Oscar Wilde's Salomé
28 The Art of Jean-Claude Claeys
29 Portrait of Madame Stuart Merrill
30 Brides of Blood
31 The 'subliminal' demon of The Exorcist
 
William Kidd: Pirate or Privateer?
   
Portrait of William Kidd   William Kidd burying his treasure on Gardnier's Island   A stone marker marks the place where Kidd's treasure was buried and later recovered.
 
July 8 , 2006
 

Kidd was born in Scotland around 1655. By 1689 he was in command of a vessel named the Blessed William which was operating as a privateer in the West Indies (A privateer ship is a warship that is privately owned, but has government permission to attack enemy ships. The privateer must split any spoils with the government). He was successful, but in 1691 his crew mutinied and left him stranded on the island of Antigua.

For the next half dozen years Kidd was in New York (a haven for pirates) doing favors for, and accepting favors from, powerful friends. In 1695 he set sail for England, hoping to obtain a royal commission as a privateer. He met with Richard Coote, earl of Bellomont and recently appointed Governor of New York and Massachusetts. Kidd had hopes of securing a privateering license. They concocted a scheme to capture pirates and keep the booty for themselves instead of returning it to its owners. They signed a contract in October with Coote staking £ 6,000 for outfitting Kidd in his expedition. (Coote made several other arrangements secretly that involved the Secretary of State, heads of the Admiralty and Judiciary Courts, and the King himself.) Kidd was granted three commissions by the king. The first allowed for the capture of French ships, the second allowed for the capture of pirates everywhere, and the third and most important to their cause, the suspension of all captured booty having to go through the courts. This allowed Kidd to keep the booty until time for surrender of booty to Governor Coote in Boston.

 

In February 1698, an Indian-owned ship, The Quedah Merchant, was spotted. Kidd and his crew attacked: the prize yielded money plus a cargo of silk, muslins, calico, sugar, opium, iron and saltpeter which could be sold at the nearest port for a rumored 7,000 pounds. Best of all she had French papers which made her a legal target for Kidd under his privateer commission. The Quedah Merchant was not just any cargo ship. It belonged to Muklis Khan, an influential and highly placed member in one of the eastern kingdoms, and he demanded that the East India Company make restitution. Kidd would be made to pay.

Kidd got wind of this and abandoned the damaged Adventure Galley, transferred the Quedah Merchant treasure to a small sloop, and ran for New York where he thought his patron Governor Bellamont could help him. Outside New York, Kidd buried the bulk of the treasure on Gardiner's Island (one of the few verified instances of a pirate actually burying a treasure) and attempted to use it as a bargaining chip for a pardon. It didn't work. Kidd was arrested and imprisoned and the treasure recovered. Despite his protests that he was only a privateer, Kidd was tried in London and executed in 1701. The papers that might have proved his innocence disappeared in Bellamont's possession and his logbook was burned. His corpse was displayed in an iron cage on the dock at Thames Estuary for several years as a warning to other would-be pirates.

 
   
 
 
           
           
 
 
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