Cohasset’s Pirate Ship
David Wadsworth
Reprinted with permission from the Cohasset Historical Society, Cohasset,
MA (Town of Cohasset, Mass.,, 2005), pp.50-52.
An unusual tale of an early Cohasset-owned merchant sailing vessel
engaged in activities bordering on seafaring piracy recently [late 1980s]
came to light in the maritime archives of the Cohasset Historical Society.
An old hand-written paper was found, telling of an eighteenth-century
sea voyage that led to stolen Spanish silver and then to a Caribbean
island prison. The writer of the paper was Benjamin Pratt, Sr.; the
vessel was his great-grandfather Aaron Pratt's Three Sisters, an early
Cohasset sloop; its shipmaster of piratical nature was Captain Zebulon
Wade, and the year was 1750. According to the writer . . . , the Three
Sisters actually was owned by Cohasseters Aaron Pratt (born in 1690),
Stephen Stoddard (born in 1674), and Israel Whitcomb (born in 1700),
and an otherwise unidentified Mrs. Binney "of Nantastick."
The seventy-five-ton sloop, locally built and on its maiden voyage,
left local waters in late spring of 1750, presumably bound on a trading
voyage to southern ports. Three Sisters soon was in sight of the dreaded
shoals of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. There, the ship's crew spotted
a vessel in distress, shipwrecked on the treacherous sands near the
Cape. The wrecked vessel was found to be Spanish, and its crew was still
on board. Captain Wade and Three Sisters "fell in" with the
Spanish ship and found her to be carrying a cargo of silver bars, coined.
Her voyage had originated in Spain's American colonies, called New Spaine,
and her destination had been "Old Spaine" in Europe. The ship
was carrying part of the Spanish treasure famed in both the Old and
New Worlds.
A second vessel soon arrived on the scene of the wreck, and both captains
struck a bargain with the doomed vessel's master, each agreeing to take
aboard part of the silver treasure and to transport it to the original
destination in Old Spaine. Captain Wade's Three Sisters took on board
seventy tons of silver bars, and the remainder was placed aboard the
other vessel, whose identity is not given. Unknown to the Spanish captain,
the masters of both ships had already reached an agreement not to take
the silver to Spain, but to take it to a West Indies island and bury
it for their own future use. Thus it was that Three Sisters and its
captain, Zebulon Wade, soon arrived at “Statia” (St. Eustacius,
today an island of the Netherlands Antilles), and part of the silver
was buried. The piratical venture soon was discovered by the authorities,
however, when the second vessel became stranded on a sand bar and was
boarded. Before he could bury all of the silver, Captain Wade was “found,
taken, and put into Jail.”
Benjamin Pratt’s story continues, “Wade, by having so
much silver, managed to get out of Jail and came home, but the vessel
was detained and became a total loss to her owners.” It then appeared
that the two like-minded ship’s captains, by now apparently experienced
in the ways of pirates, “became adventurers all over the world
. . . The buried silver was recovered by the Spanyards.” Pratt
reported that a second vessel was sent to Statia by Mrs. Binney, one
of the owners of Three Sisters. Aboard was Stephen Stoddard’s
“Negro man” named Mingo, who had been on [the ship] and
had helped Captain Wade bury the silver originally. Mingo and the second
ship returned home empty handed. “It was reported,” wrote
Pratt, “that the Spanyards had ploughed and dug the island near
all over and had found probably the most of it.”
The Cohasset owners of Three Sisters, Aaron Pratt, Stephen Stoddard,
and Israel Whitcomb, were neighbors residing on Beechwood Street. The
story of Captain Zebulon Wade and the sloop . . . had been passed down
through several generations of Aaron Pratt’s descendants before
Benjamin wrote it down . . . Aaron’s son Thomas had recalled having
helped his father “haul the timber to build the vessel, and she
was builded over in Briggs’ building yard, being on the Scituate
side of the Gulf Stream [River] on Turner’s pasture.”
As for Three Sisters, her first voyage for her owners also was her
last, for she never returned to her original home port. Of Captain Zebulon
Wade, he was known to have moved from his native Scituate to “Carolina,”
where his son later was found to be a ship’s pilot on the North
Carolina Rivers . . .
This story, written perhaps a century and a half ago, was recently
found among papers in the account book of Marshall Pratt’s store,
Beechwood Street. The tale of Captain Wade and the sloop Three Sisters
is unusual, for it dates from the earliest years of Cohasset’s
maritime era, a time from which few records have survived and of which
little is known.
From David Wadsworth, “History of Seafaring Piracy Found in Archives,”
Cohasset Mariner, January 7, 1988. Reprinted with permission
of the author.