Before I moved to Devon from London I had already been interested in one of the more colourful eighteenth century characters associated with the North Coast: Thomas Benson, merchant trader and gentleman smuggler.
Although his exploits were a little later than the setting for my nautical adventure series the Sea Witch Voyages, dated circa the 1720's, he would have been a boy when my fictional ex-pirate, Captain Jesamiah Acorne, came to drop anchor in the estuary confluence of the rivers Taw and Torridge opposite the pleasant little town of Appledore. Thomas, therefore, made an ideal ‘extra’ for Voyage Four Ripples In The Sand, and he will be appearing in the Fifth, On The Account (my present Work In Progress) when he sails off on an adventure with my rogue of a protagonist and his crew aboard the Sea Witch.
One of the things I enjoy about writing my series is the challenge of blending made-up fiction (and a touch of fantasy) with historical fact. To have readers believe the imaginary bits the other bits have to be believable, so my nautical references are as accurate as I can get them, thanks to the diligent proof-reading by US author and seaman James L. Nelson, http://www.jameslnelson.com/, and I diligently research the historical facts, although I do occasionally use a little poetic licence with these – always making a comment in my author’s note, however, if I do so.
So it was with personal and work-related interest that I looked into Master Benson’s infamous role in Devonshire’s smuggling history.
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Appledore today (Photo Simon Murgatroyd) |
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Knapp House (photo Jo Field) |
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River Torridge from below Knapp House (photo Jo Field) |
He entered politics, being elected unopposed as Whig MP for Barnstaple in 1747, and was awarded the title High Sheriff of Devon, an office he held until 1749. The move was a good one because he could now procure some very lucrative government contracts, which included one for transporting convicts to Maryland and Virginia therefore subsidising the outward journeys of his regular tobacco trading.
Things did not always go so well, however. He had a brush with customs authorities in 1750 owing £922 for an unpaid import duty of tobacco, followed by a deception involving a breach of contract – he had built up an illegal business of smuggling, tax evasion, and insurance fraud, which was to lead eventually to his undoing.
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Appledore today – a quaint old town with narrow cobbled streets |
By 1752 Benson was increasingly under pressure from the Customs authorities for his tobacco smuggling, and several writs had been served on him and his lawyers were instructed to pursue every loophole to postpone judgement, but the total debt to the Crown was £8229, a substantial sum of not much less than £700,000 in today's money.
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The Taw / Torridge Estuary |
Nightingale first dropped anchor in the Lundy Road to shelter from a strengthening westerly wind and to undertake the first part of the plan. The entire cargo, apart from three-hundred-and-fifty bushels of salt, were off-loaded and concealed on the island. The ship was then scuttled. The crew were rescued by a passing boat - with the wrecking well-timed for a vessel to be near-by for this purpose.
However, some of the crew were not happy about the events and the truth came out in damaging detail. Captain Lancey was arrested, tried in February 1754 and hanged for fraud on June 17th, 1754 at Execution Dock in Wapping, the usual place for death sentences passed by the Admiralty Court.
And our ‘hero’, Thomas Benson? Unfortunately he was not quite the hero smuggler and privateer after all. He fled into exile in Portugal where he had several contacts, abandoning Lancey to his fate.
Thomas Benson died in the 1770s after building up a successful trading company in Lisbon. Whether it was a legitimate or illegal one we do not know – but his life was certainly the stuff of a plot for a good nautical adventure read.
You might be interested to know that the stretch of beach used in the image for the cover of Ripples In The Sand is Instow Beach, across the river from Appledore - Thomas Benson would have known it well.
Bibliography
The Nightingale Scandal: The story of Thomas Benson and Lundy Stanley Thomas, Devon W.G Hoskins
Illustrated History of Appledore, David Carter
Appledore Handmaid of the Sea, John Beara
Links - More about Benson
http://www.devonperspectives.co.uk/thomasbenson.html
http://www.devonperspectives.co.uk/benson_nightingale.html
Behind the Scenes – images of the real places used in my novels
http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/p/a-look-behind-scenes.html
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The Sea Witch Voyages http://www.helenhollick.net/bookshelf_seawitch.html