Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: High Tides, Atlantic Waters
- 1 The Pilots of Pill
- 2 The Hazards of the Bristol Slave Trade
- 3 Slave-ship Sociology
- 4 The Unfortunate Shipwright, or, the Trials of Robert Barker
- 5 Mutiny and Murder on Bristol’s Long-haul Ships, 1720–70
- 6 Bristol Privateering in the Mid-eighteenth Century
- 7 The Impressment of James Caton, 1779
- 8 New York in Bristol: the Crugers
- 9 The Politics of Abolition in Late Eighteenth-century Bristol
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - The Pilots of Pill
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: High Tides, Atlantic Waters
- 1 The Pilots of Pill
- 2 The Hazards of the Bristol Slave Trade
- 3 Slave-ship Sociology
- 4 The Unfortunate Shipwright, or, the Trials of Robert Barker
- 5 Mutiny and Murder on Bristol’s Long-haul Ships, 1720–70
- 6 Bristol Privateering in the Mid-eighteenth Century
- 7 The Impressment of James Caton, 1779
- 8 New York in Bristol: the Crugers
- 9 The Politics of Abolition in Late Eighteenth-century Bristol
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In 1777, the regulating officer for Bristol, Captain William Hamilton, the man responsible for recruiting seafaring men into the navy, ran into a spot of trouble. His lieutenant had impressed a couple of pilots for assisting men to escape the clutches of the press gangs, and the whole river came to a standstill. As Hamilton explained to their lordships at the Admiralty, the pilots and their assistants were responsible for the navigation of all inward and outward boats to Bristol, and he had no choice but to release the men his lieutenant had detained. The pilots, who all lived at Crockerne Pill, a village some five miles from Bristol and two miles from the mouth of the river on the Somersetshire side of the Avon, were ‘absolutely necessary to the trade of this City & have always been considered as such’, he remarked.1 The master of the Society of Merchant Venturers had applied for their discharge and Hamilton had conceded. What else could he do but continue to garner good relations with the merchant elite whose co-operation was always important to the manning of the British navy.
Hamilton was not the only regulating officer to be confronted with this dilemma. In March 1742, the lieutenant of a naval tender impressed another pilot, one James Rumney. He lived in Pill with his wife and four children, and predictably his fellow pilots swung into action, threatening to close the port in protest to his detention. As the town clerk reminded the Admiralty, it was quite irregular to impress pilots on duty. ‘If such Grievances are overlookt, or winkt at’, he continued, the merchants’ ‘Shipps must be kept riding at their anchors, which they shall rather choose than to hazard them loaden down our Channel without the assistance of these so usefull and necessary Conductors.’
Huge tides, blustery winds, treacherous rocks, and shifting quicksand meant that pilots were essential to the commerce of Bristol. John Stuckey remarked that the tides to Bristol ran ‘at a prodigious rate’ with a range of nearly 6 fathoms or 36 feet. Without an experienced pilot and his hobblers, ships could easily be beached on the serpentine Avon, bringing traffic to a standstill. The approach to the Avon estuary was equally treacherous.
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- Maritime Bristol in the Slave-Trade Era , pp. 13 - 33Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2024