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Mary Read, Pirate

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About Mary Read
Mary Read, Pirate

Mary Read, in a colorized engraving (date unknown)

Getty Images / Hulton Archive

Mary Read Facts

Known for: female pirate
Dates: about 1692 - December 4, 1720. Trial for piracy: November 28, 1720
Also known as:

Mary Read Biography:

Mary Read was the daughter of Polly Read. Polly had a son by her husband, Alfred Read; Alfred then went to sea and didn't return. Mary was the result of a different, later relationship. When the son died, Polly tried to pass off Mary as her son in applying to her husband's family for money. As a result, Mary grew up dressing as a boy, and passing for a boy. Even after her grandmother died and the money was cut off, Mary continued to dress as a boy.

Mary, still disguised as male, disliked a first job as a footboy, or servant, and signed up for service on a ship's crew. She served for a time in the military in Flanders, keeping up her appearance as a man until she married a fellow soldier.

With her husband, and dressed as a female, Mary Read ran an inn, until her husband died and she could not keep up the business. She signed up to serve in the Netherlands as a soldier, then as a sailor on the crew of a Jamaica-bound Dutch ship -- again disguised as a male.

Piracy

The ship was taken by Caribbean pirates, and Mary joined the pirates. In 1718, Mary accepted a mass amnesty offered by George I, and she signed up to fight the Spanish. But she returned, soon, to piracy. She joined the crew of Captain Rackam, "Calico Jack," still disguised as a man.

On that ship, she met Anne Bonny, who was disguised as a man, also, though she was the mistress of Captain Rackam. By some accounts, Anne tried to seduce Mary Read. In any case, Mary revealed that she was a woman, and they became friends, possibly lovers.

Anne and Captain Rackam had also accepted the 1718 amnesty and then returned to piracy. They were among those named by the Bahamian governor who proclaimed the three as "Pirates and Enemies to the Crown of Great Britain." When the ship was captured, Anne, Rackham and Mary Read resisted capture, while the rest of the crew hid below deck. Mary fired a pistol into the hold, to try to move the crew to join the resistance. She was reported to have yelled, "If there's a man among ye, yell come up and fight like the man ye are to be!"

All were put on trial for piracy in Jamaica. Both Anne Bonny and Mary Read, after conviction, revealed they were pregnant, so they were not hanged when the male pirates were, on November 28, 1720. Mary Read died in prison of a fever on December 4.

Mary Read's Story

The story of Mary Read and Anne Bonny was told in a book published in 1724. The author was "Captain Charles Johnson," which may have been a nom de plume for Daniel Defoe. The two may have inspired some of the details about Defoe's 1721 heroine, Moll Flanders.

A number of others, including captives of the pirates, testified to the activities of these two women, including that they wore "women's cloaths" at times, and that they were "cursing and swearing much."

In a time when a single woman had few options for economic survival, Mary Read's cross-dressing made available to her some of the options men had -- flouting not only gender norms but the law itself.

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