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"Fortunes wheel never stands still -- the highest point is therefore
the most perilous."
-- Maria Edgeworth
A fleet of eight ships left Barataria Bay in April of 1817. Its crews
didnt look back. Many of his original colony, including brother Pierre and Dominique
Youx, followed Lafitte in search of a new port of call. They still called him bos.
They first docked in Santo Domingo, hoping to re-ingratiate themselves with the
smugglers there in hopes of returning to the profession they knew best. But, the
Hispanically-inclined government still remembered and resented the way the Baratarians had
picked on its ships. They were told to leave.
Realizing it would be much the same throughout the Caribbean, they returned to the Gulf
and settled on the deserted Galveston Island off Texas. Galveston was also owned by Spain,
but Mexico, of which Texas was a province, was fighting for its independence. In return
for being allowed to remain on the isle, Lafitte accepted a privateering commission from
the Mexican revolutionaries to attack as many Spanish ships as possible. The booty would
be his. It was like old times again.
Galveston -- Lafitte called it Campeche, its original name -- greatly resembled Grande
Terre. His experience in settling up a smuggling operation engendered Lafitte to make
lucrative contracts on the east coast of Texas through which he could transport his
contraband inland to growing towns that required provisioning. One of his slave runners
was a young adventurer and mercenary named James Bowie who would later reach hero status
after dying at the Battle of the Alamo.
On Campeche, Lafitte built a fine, two-story brick haven called Maison Rouge
(Red House) after the color he painted it. Half home, half fort, it offered excellent
living quarters and rooms in which to entertain business partners, as well as a barracks
for his men. Cannon barrels protruded from its upper portholes over the Gulf. Around it
sprang the warehouses of trade, a slave quarters, cattle pens, taverns and frame cottages
of his crew.
Lyle Saxon gives an excellent description of the village at its most active. "More
buccaneers arrived, bringing their women with them; an ever-increasing number of traders
came to the settlement; and there was a constant infusion of men of all nations --
gamblers, thieves, murderers and other criminals who joined Lafittes colony in order
to escape punishment for crimes committed within the borders of the United States.
Numerous rich prizes were brought in, including several captured slavers loaded with
Africans. Doubloons, says one writer, were as plentiful as
biscuits."
But, Campeche was not to last. The reasons were many.
For one, Lafitte had blundered in allowing too many fugitives-from-the-law to penetrate
his new colony. These were not of the sea-worthy kind he was used to dealing with; these
men were not of his kin; they were opportunists who felt no vested interest in Galveston
(nor to anything or anyone) as had the Baratarians on Grand Terre. He had trouble
controlling their behavior and had to endure constant interference and investigation from
both Mexican and U.S. officials pursuing their trails. Campeche was always under scrutiny.
Many of his old-time faithfuls such as Beluche or Dominique Youx, not approving of this
climate of circumstances, left for other parts.
As well, the Karankawa Indians, who lived on the island long before the white man,
proved meddlesome and even hostile. They were forever raiding Lafittes properties,
killing his men.
In late 1818, a great hurricane struck the island killing hundreds of men, flattening
the settlement, sinking the fleet, washing contraband to sea. It was a devastatingly
financial setback
Still, all of these could have been overcome. But, in the end, it was Lafittes
pirating activity that brought about his undoing. Continuing to harass Spanish ships for
Mexico, he insisted everthemore that he was and had always been a privateer making a
living off the liberties allowed in a letter of marque bestowed by a patron country. But,
the nation now eyed a new diplomacy of peace. The only thing that stood in its way of
developing a friendship with Spain was the constant harassment of Spanish ships by
buccaneers anchored off the American coast. President Madison issued an all-out war on
piracy. Lafitte had to go.
In late 1820, the USS Enterprise docked in Campeche Bay. On board was a
designated naval diplomat, Lieutenant Larry Kearney, who, in speaking for President
Madison, ordered Lafitte to abandon Galveston Island. For months, Lafitte stalled. But, a
subsequent visit by Kearney, accompanied this time by a war fleet on a May day in 1821,
produced a single command: Get off the island now or be blown to smithereens. This time,
the islands chief graciously consented.
"That night," writes Robert Tallant, "Lafitte set fire to Campeche. Men
aboard the USS Enterprise saw it burst into flames...When they went to shore at
dawn they found only ashes and rubble. The ships of Lafitte were gone..."
Lafitte, at this point, returns to the oblivion from whence he came. Where he traveled,
where he wound up, where or when he died, is mystery. There are, of course, many
conjectures. There is strong evidence he sailed to and settled in, at least for a while,
Charleston, South Carolina. Some writers say he fought with Bolivars rebels against
the South American nationalists. Other suppositions place him ahead of a band of pirates
in Santo Domingo or dying of a plague at age 47 on the Isle de Las Mujeres near Yucatan.
The site of his burial continues to lure researchers and would-be archaeologists.
"Today, Baratarians cherish the fantasy that the Gentleman Pirate is buried in an
unmarked grave along the bayou that runs through the village of Lafitte," says New
Orleans writer Mel Leavitt. Concluding, tongue in cheek, he adds, "He rests, some
say, next to the unmarked graves of Napoleon Bonaparte and John Paul Jones. Around
here, say the natives, Lafittes buried in everybodys
backyard."
The book, Louisiana - A Narrative History by Edwin Adams Davis cites a rather
new and surprising theory that spots Lafittes final years in Americas Midwest.
Claimants say he married in Charleston, moved west with his wife, bore children and died
in Alton, Illinois on May 5,1854. A supposed letter written in 1833 to his brother in law
indicates a bitter man. It reads: "I saved the Union from the Octopus, but the city
of Washington remains deaf and dumb. I have received eulogies, but not recompense -- not
even a wooden medal."
One thing is certain. When Jean Lafitte left America he did so failing to understand
why the nation he trusted never trusted him. He would say it over and over again: "I
am not a pirate-- I am a corsair, a privateer!" But in the end he may have found
solace, somewhere out there in the only country that had never disappointed him. The sea.
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