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Sir
Henry Morgan was a famous Caribbean pirate and privateer.
He was one of the most successful pirates of all time.
Although very little is known about Morgan's early
life, he was supposedly born in 1635. Sometime in
the 1650's, Morgan made his way to Jamaica, where
his uncle was lieutenant governor. He soon married
his uncle's daughter and began a career at sea.
In
1667, Morgan was commissioned by the governor of Jamaica
to capture Spanish prisoners in Cuba to learn details
of a possible attack planned on Jamaica. With ten
ships and over 500 men, Morgan first sailed to Cuba
and destroyed the town of Puerto Principe. Morgan
then sailed to Panama, where he captured the fortified
town of Portobelo. Morgan and his crew only agreed
to leave Portobelo, and spare the city from incineration,
after the governor offered them a large ransom. Morgan
and his crew next sailed to their headquarters in
Port Royal, Jamaica, where they celebrated. Morgan's
exploits earned him the respect and trust of Jamaica's
governor, who subsequently sent him on plundering
missions again to Cuba and then to Venezuela. Morgan
next planned an attack on the isthmus of Panama.
On
December 15, 1670, Morgan and over 1,400 soldiers
attacked and occupied Santa Catalina Island off the
coast of Nicaragua before reaching Panama. On December
27, after a long battle in which 300 Spaniards were
killed, Morgan and his men took Chagres Castle and
then planned a major attack on Panama. On January
18, 1671, Morgan split his forces in two and routed
roughly 1,500 poorly trained Spanish soldiers stationed
in Panama. Morgan and his men left Panama with over
100,000 pounds of stolen goods and treasures before
burning Panama City to the ground. Residents of the
city were tortured until they revealed the locations
of more treasure. In 1674, the Queen of England knighted
Henry Morgan for his service to the crown. He then
returned to Jamaica and became the island's Lieutenant
Governor, a post he served for nine years before being
suspended in 1683. Morgan died in 1688, possibly of
tuberculosis or liver cirrhosis.
Sir
Henry Morgan has remained prominent in popular culture
well after his death. He is memorialized on the labels
of bottles of Captain Morgan's Spiced Rum. In 1926,
the famous author John Steinbeck wrote A Cup of Gold,
a fictional account of Morgan's life. It was Steinbeck's
first novel. Morgan's life was again dramatized in
Josephine Tey's 1952 novel The Privateer.
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