HENRY MORGAN:
Henry Morgan (b. 1635, Llanrhymney, Glamorgan, Wales--d. Aug. 25, 1688, probably Lawrencefield,
Jam.), Welsh buccaneer, was the most famous of the adventurers who plundered Spain's Caribbean
colonies during the late 17th century. Operating with the unofficial support of the English
government, he undermined Spanish authority in the West Indies.
Morgan's origins and early career are obscure. He was probably a member of the expedition that
in 1655 seized Jamaica from the Spanish and converted it into an English colony. He may have
participated in an expedition against Cuba in 1662; and during the second Anglo-Dutch War
(1665-67), he was second in command of the buccaneers operating against Dutch colonies in the
Caribbean.
Selected commander of the buccaneers in 1668, Morgan quickly captured Puerto Príncipe (now
Camagüey), Cuba, and--in an extraordinarily daring move--stormed and sacked the well-fortified
city of Portobelo on the Isthmus of Panama. In 1669 he made a successful raid on wealthy Spanish
settlements around Lake Maracaibo on the coast of Venezuela.
Finally, in August 1670 Morgan,
with 36 ships and nearly 2,000 buccaneers, set out to capture Panamá, one of the chief cities
of Spain's American empire. Crossing the Isthmus of Panama, he defeated a large Spanish force
(Jan. 18, 1671) and entered the city, which burned to the ground while his men were looting it. On
the return journey he deserted his followers and absconded with most of the booty.
Because Morgan's raid on Panamá had taken place after the conclusion of a peace between
England and Spain, he was arrested and transported to London (April 1672). Nevertheless,
relations with Spain quickly deteriorated, and in 1674 King Charles II knighted Morgan and sent
him out again as deputy governor of Jamaica, where he lived as a wealthy and respected planter
until his death.
An exaggerated account of Morgan's exploits, written by one of his crew, created his popular
reputation as a bloodthirsty pirate.
Click here to go to some questions about these bloodthirsty pirates.