Lafitte’s
men captured
our
imagination
for many years
By W. T.
Block
First
published in
Beaumont
Enterprise on
Saturday
September 18,
1999.
From
1822 until
Civil War
days, a few of
Lafitte’s
ex-pirates
remained in or
near
Galveston, and
newspaper
reporters
found them
quite a
curiosity that
they wished to
write about.
However they
usually found
the old
buccaneers
quite
close-mouthed,
because dead
men and
ex-pirates,
whether living
or dead, “tell
no tales.”
Many
of them, such
as Capt. James
Campbell,
would admit
that they had
sailed for
Lafitte, but
otherwise they
told little
about
themselves,
perhaps
fearing that a
charge of
piracy could
still be
leveled
against them.
Mary
Campbell lived
on Galveston
Island
throughout the
Lafitte years,
1817-1821,
while her
husband
battled
Spanish
galleons from
the decks of
the Hotspur or
Concord. In
1838 she and
her husband
bought a
1,500-acre
farm on the
West Pass,
opposite
Galveston
Island.
Near
the end of her
life in 1885,
Mrs. Campbell
told many
stories about
Lafitte’s men,
but she always
maintained
that they were
privateers who
fought under
letters of
marquee from
the Republic
of New
Cartegena.
Until his
death in 1856,
Jim Campbell
raised cattle,
cotton, and
produce on his
farm at
Virginia
Point.
Campbell
had also
served as a
gunner aboard
Old Ironsides
during the War
of 1812 and
during the
Battle of Lake
Erie.
Another
ex-pirate of
Galveston was
Steven
Churchill, who
had served as
Jean Lafitte’s
bar pilot for
Galveston Bay.
For ten years
he lived in
the only house
on Galveston
Island, while
he was bar
pilot for the
Mexican
government and
later for the
Republic of
Texas.
When
M. B. Menard
surveyed the
City of
Galveston in
1837, he
deeded to
Churchill the
house that
stood upon Lot
4, Block 730,
of the
Galveston town
site. In 1838
Churchill
became
ferryman from
West Pass on
Galveston
Island to
Virginia Point
on the
mainland,
which he
operated until
his death in
1855.
There
were other
ex-pirates at
or near
Galveston,
about who much
less is known.
John Lambert
was a
Galveston
butcher for
many years,
but he had
been a Lafitte
pirate only at
Barrataria
Bay, La., and
later he moved
back to
Mobile, AL.
about 1850.
Much less is
known about
Capt. Roach
(or
Delaroche),
Burrill
Franks, or
John McHenry,
who visited
Galveston
occasionally.
Galveston
News reporter
Ben Stuart
(who is buried
in Magnolia
Cemetery)
published much
about pirates,
based on his
interviews
with Mrs.
Campbell and
Charles
Cronea. The
latter sailed
for Capt.
Campbell as
cabin boy
during the
eight-month
cruise of the
Hotspur in
1820. Later
Cronea lived
the remainder
of his life at
either Sabine
Pass or
Rollover on
Bolivar
Peninsula, and
he is buried
in High Island
Cemetery. When
he died at age
88 in Feb.
1893, Cronea
was the last
of Lafitte’s
pirates to be
“keelhauled”
into eternity.
Another
of the
well-known
Galveston
ex-pirates was
Benjamin
Dollivar, whom
most
Galvestonians
considered
mentally
impaired.
“Crazy Ben”
had sailed on
the Vengeance,
until it
burned in
Galveston Bay
in 1818, and
later on the
Hotspur. He
lived
year-round in
an open
sailcloth
hovel on the
north shore of
Galveston
Island,
opposite
Pelican Spit.
Ben often
visited the
Oyster Saloon
during his
weekly drunken
sprees, and he
always paid
for his drinks
with a single
gold doubloon.
When
Ben was jailed
in the
‘Crescent
City’ in July,
1847, the New
Orleans Delta
wrote of him:
“...His nose
is sharp and
crooked enough
to serve as a
boat hook in
an
emergency...
His little
gray eyes
twinkled in
their sockets
with a
semi-piratical
ferocity...”
Even
in January,
Dollivar could
often be seen
dragging his
seine in the
surf for the
fish that was
his principal
diet. Once
every three
months, Ben
would sail
away in his
whaleboat to
replenish his
supply of
doubloons; and
although
Galvestonians
sought for 2
decades to
learn the
whereabouts of
Ben’s gold
cache, he died
with his
secret still
unrevealed.
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