<SPAN name="THE_LIFE_OF_CHARLES_GIBBS"></SPAN>
<h2>THE LIFE OF CHARLES GIBBS.</h2>
<i>
Containing an Account of his Atrocities committed in the West
Indies
</i>.
<p>This atrocious and cruel pirate, when very young became addicted
to vices uncommon in youths of his age, and so far from the gentle
reproof and friendly admonition, or the more severe chastisement of
a fond parent, having its intended effect, it seemed to render him
still worse, and to incline him to repay those whom he ought to
have esteemed as his best friends and who had manifested so much
regard for his welfare, with ingratitude and neglect. His infamous
career and ignominious death on the gallows; brought down the "grey
hairs of his parents in sorrow to the grave." The poignant
affliction which the infamous crimes of children bring upon their
relatives ought to be one of the most effective persuasions for
them to refrain from vice.</p>
<p>Charles Gibbs was born in the state of Rhode Island, in 1794;
his parents and connexions were of the first respectability. When
at school, he was very apt to learn, but so refractory and sulky,
that neither the birch nor good counsel made any impression on him,
and he was expelled from the school.</p>
<p>He was now made to labor on a farm; but having a great antipathy
to work, when about fifteen years of age, feeling a great
inclination to roam, and like too many unreflecting youths of that
age, a great fondness for the sea, he in opposition to the friendly
counsel of his parents, privately left them and entered on board
the United States sloop-of-war, Hornet, and was in the action when
she captured the British sloop-of-war Peacock, off the coast of
Pernambuco. Upon the return of the Hornet to the United States, her
brave commander, Capt. Lawrence, was promoted for his gallantry to
the command of the unfortunate Chesapeake, and to which he was
followed by young Gibbs, who took a very distinguished part in the
engagement with the Shannon, which resulted in the death of
Lawrence and the capture of the Chesapeake. Gibbs states that while
on board the Chesapeake the crew previous to the action, were
almost in a state of mutiny, growing out of the non payment of the
prize money, and that the address of Capt. Lawrence was received by
them with coldness and murmurs.</p>
<p>After the engagement, Gibbs became with the survivors of the
crew a prisoner of war, and as such was confined in Dartmoor prison
until exchanged.</p>
<p>After his exchange, he returned to Boston, where having
determined to abandon the sea, he applied to his friends in Rhode
Island, to assist him in commencing business; they accordingly lent
him one thousand dollars as a capital to begin with. He opened a
grocery in Ann Street, near what was then called the <i>
Tin
Pot
</i>, a place full of abandoned women and dissolute fellows. As
he dealt chiefly in liquor, and had a "<i>
License to retail
Spirits
</i>," his drunkery was thronged with customers. But he sold
his groceries chiefly to loose girls who paid him in their coin,
which, although it answered his purpose, would neither buy him
goods or pay his rent, and he found his stock rapidly dwindling
away without his receiving any cash to replenish it. By dissipation
and inattention his new business proved unsuccessful to him. He
resolved to abandon it and again try the sea for a subsistence.
With a hundred dollars in his pocket, the remnant of his property,
he embarked in the ship John, for Buenos Ayres, and his means being
exhausted soon after his arrival there, he entered on board a
Buenos Ayrean privateer and sailed on a cruise. A quarrel between
the officers and crew in regard to the division of prize money, led
eventually to a mutiny; and the mutineers gained the ascendancy,
took possession of the vessel, landed the crew on the coast of
Florida, and steered for the West Indies, with hearts resolved to
make their fortunes at all hazards, and where in a short time, more
than twenty vessels were captured by them and nearly <i>
Four
Hundred Human Beings Murdered
</i>!</p>
<p>Havana was the resort of these pirates to dispose of their
plunder; and Gibbs sauntered about this place with impunity and was
acquainted in all the out of the way and bye places of that hot bed
of pirates the Regla. He and his comrades even lodged in the very
houses with many of the American officers who were sent out to take
them. He was acquainted with many of the officers and was apprised
of all their intended movements before they left the harbor. On one
occasion, the American ship Caroline, was captured by two of their
piratical vessels off Cape Antonio. They were busily engaged in
landing the cargo, when the British sloop-of-war, Jearus, hove in
sight and sent her barges to attack them. The pirates defended
themselves for some time behind a small four gun battery which they
had erected, but in the end were forced to abandon their own vessel
and the prize and fly to the mountains for safety. The Jearus found
here twelve vessels burnt to the water's edge, and it was
satisfactorily ascertained that their crews, amounting to <i>
one
hundred and fifty persons had been murdered
</i>. The crews, if it
was thought not necessary otherways to dispose of them were sent
adrift in their boats, and frequently without any thing on which
they could subsist a single day; nor were all so fortunate thus to
escape. "Dead men can tell no tales," was a common saying among
them; and as soon as a ship's crew were taken, a short consultation
was held; and if it was the opinion of a majority that it would be
better to take life than to spare it, a single nod or wink from the
captain was sufficient; regardless of age or sex, all entreaties
for mercy were then made in vain; they possessed not the tender
feelings, to be operated upon by the shrieks and expiring groans of
the devoted victims! there was a strife among them, who with his
own hands could despatch the greatest number, and in the shortest
period of time.</p>
<p>Without any other motives than to gratify their hellish
propensities (in their intoxicated moments), blood was not
unfrequently and unnecessarily shed, and many widows and orphans
probably made, when the lives of the unfortunate victims might have
been spared, and without the most distant prospect of any evil
consequences (as regarded themselves), resulting therefrom.</p>
<p>Gibbs states that sometime in the course of the year 1819, he
left Havana and came to the United States, bringing with him about
$30,000. He passed several weeks in the city of New York, and then
went to Boston, whence he took passage for Liverpool in the ship
Emerald. Before he sailed, however, he has squandered a large part
of his money by dissipation and gambling. He remained in Liverpool
a few months, and then returned to Boston. His residence in
Liverpool at that time is satisfactorily ascertained from another
source besides his own confession. A female now in New York was
well acquainted with him there, where, she says, he lived like a
gentleman, with apparently abundant means of support. In speaking
of his acquaintance with this female he says, "I fell in with a
woman, who I thought was all virtue, but she deceived me, and I am
sorry to say that a heart that never felt abashed at scenes of
carnage and blood, was made a child of for a time by her, and I
gave way to dissipation to drown the torment. How often when the
fumes of liquor have subsided, have I thought of my good and
affectionate parents, and of their Godlike advice! But when the
little monitor began to move within me, I immediately seized the
cup to hide myself from myself, and drank until the sense of
intoxication was renewed. My friends advised me to behave myself
like a man, and promised me their assistance, but the demon still
haunted me, and I spurned their advice."</p>
<p>In 1826, he revisited the United States, and hearing of the war
between Brazil and the Republic of Buenos Ayres, sailed from Boston
in the brig Hitty, of Portsmouth, with a determination, as he
states, of trying his fortune in defence of a republican
government. Upon his arrival he made himself known to Admiral
Brown, and communicated his desire to join their navy. The admiral
accompanied him to the Governor, and a Lieutenant's commission
being given him, he joined a ship of 34 guns, called the 'Twenty
Fifth of May.' "Here," says Gibbs, "I found Lieutenant Dodge, an
old acquaintance, and a number of other persons with whom I had
sailed. When the Governor gave me the commission he told me they
wanted no cowards in their navy, to which I replied that I thought
he would have no apprehension of my cowardice or skill when he
became acquainted with me. He thanked me, and said he hoped he
should not be deceived; upon which we drank to his health and to
the success of the Republic. He then presented me with a sword, and
told me to wear that as my companion through the doubtful struggle
in which the republic was engaged. I told him I never would
disgrace it, so long as I had a nerve in my arm. I remained on
board the ship in the capacity of 5th Lieutenant, for about four
months, during which time we had a number of skirmishes with the
enemy. Having succeeded in gaining the confidence of Admiral Brown,
he put me in command of a privateer schooner, mounting two long 24
pounders and 46 men. I sailed from Buenos Ayres, made two good
cruises, and returned safely to port. I then bought one half of a
new Baltimore schooner, and sailed again, but was captured seven
days out, and carried into Rio Janeiro, where the Brazilians paid
me my change. I remained there until peace took place, then
returned to Buenos Ayres, and thence to New York.</p>
<p>"After the lapse of about a year, which I passed in travelling
from place to place, the war between France and Algiers attracted
my attention. Knowing that the French commerce presented a fine
opportunity for plunder, I determined to embark for Algiers and
offer my services to the Dey. I accordingly took passage from New
York, in the Sally Ann, belonging to Bath, landed at Barcelona,
crossed to Port Mahon, and endeavored to make my way to Algiers.
The vigilance of the French fleet prevented the accomplishment of
my design, and I proceeded to Tunis. There finding it unsafe to
attempt a journey to Algiers across the desert, I amused myself
with contemplating the ruins of Carthage, and reviving my
recollections of her war with the Romans. I afterwards took passage
to Marseilles, and thence to Boston."</p>
<p>An instance of the most barbarous and cold blooded murder of
which the wretched Gibbs gives an account in the course of his
confessions, is that of an innocent and beautiful female of about
17 or 18 years of age! she was with her parents a passenger on
board a Dutch ship, bound from Curracoa to Holland; there were a
number of other passengers, male and female, on board, all of whom
except the young lady above-mentioned were put to death; her
unfortunate parents were inhumanly butchered before her eyes, and
she was doomed to witness the agonies and to hear the expiring,
heart-piercing groans of those whom she held most dear, and on whom
she depended for protection! The life of their wretched daughter
was spared for the most nefarious purposes--she was taken by the
pirates to the west end of Cuba, where they had a rendezvous, with
a small fort that mounted four guns--here she was confined about
two months, and where, as has been said by the murderer Gibbs, "she
received such treatment, the bare recollection of which causes me
to shudder!" At the expiration of the two months she was taken by
the pirates on board of one of their vessels, and among whom a
consultation was soon after held, which resulted in the conclusion
that it would be necessary for their own personal safety, to put
her to death! and to her a fatal dose of poison was accordingly
administered, which soon proved fatal! when her pure and immortal
spirit took its flight to that God, whom, we believe, will avenge
her wrongs! her lifeless body was then committed to the deep by two
of the merciless wretches with as much unconcern, as if it had been
that of the meanest brute! Gibbs persists in the declaration that
in this horrid transaction he took no part, that such was his pity
for this poor ill-fated female, that he interceded for her life so
long as he could do it with safety to his own!</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/118.jpg" alt="Gibbs carrying the Dutch Girl on board his Vessel" height-obs="486" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>Gibbs carrying the Dutch Girl on board his Vessel.</i></h4>
Gibbs in his last visit to Boston remained there but a few days,
when he took passage to New Orleans, and there entered as one of
the crew on board the brig Vineyard; and for assisting in the
murder of the unfortunate captain and mate of which, he was justly
condemned, and the awful sentence of death passed upon him! The
particulars of the bloody transaction (agreeable to the testimony
of Dawes and Brownrigg, the two principal witnesses,) are as
follows: The brig Vineyard, Capt. William Thornby, sailed from New
Orleans about the 9th of November, for Philadelphia, with a cargo
of 112 bales of cotton, 113 hhds. sugar, 54 casks of molasses and
54,000 dollars in specie. Besides the captain there were on board
the brig, William Roberts, mate, six seamen shipped at New Orleans,
and the cook. Robert Dawes, one of the crew, states on examination,
that when, about five days out, he was told that there was money on
board, Charles Gibbs, E. Church and the steward then determined to
take possession of the brig. They asked James Talbot, another of
the crew, to join them. He said no, as he did not believe there was
money in the vessel. They concluded to kill the captain and mate,
and if Talbot and John Brownrigg would not join them, to kill them
also. The next night they talked of doing it, and got their clubs
ready. Dawes dared not say a word, as they declared they would kill
him if he did; as they did not agree about killing Talbot and
Brownrigg, two shipmates, it was put off. They next concluded to
kill the captain and mate on the night of November 22, but did not
get ready; but, on the night of the 23d, between twelve and one
o'clock, as Dawes was at the helm, saw the steward come up with a
light and a knife in his hand; he dropt the light and seizing the
pump break, struck the captain with it over the head or back of the
neck; the captain was sent forward by the blow, and halloed, oh!
and murder! once; he was then seized by Gibbs and the cook, one by
the head and the other by the heels, and thrown overboard. Atwell
and Church stood at the companion way, to strike down the mate when
he should come up. As he came up and enquired what was the matter
they struck him over the head--he ran back into the cabin, and
Charles Gibbs followed him down; but as it was dark, he could not
find him--Gibbs came on deck for the light, with which he returned.
Dawes' light being taken from him, he could not see to steer, and
he in consequence left the helm, to see what was going on below.
Gibbs found the mate and seized him, while Atwell and Church came
down and struck him with a pump break and a club; he was then
dragged upon deck; they called for Dawes to come to them, and as he
came up the mate seized his hand, and gave him a death gripe! three
of them then hove him overboard, but which three Dawes does not
know; the mate when cast overboard was not dead, but called after
them twice while in the water! Dawes says he was so frightened that
he hardly knew what to do. They then requested him to call Talbot,
who was in the forecastle, saying his prayers; he came up and said
it would be his turn next! but they gave him some grog, and told
him not to be afraid, as they would not hurt him; if he was true to
them, he should fare as well as they did. One of those who had been
engaged in the bloody deed got drunk, and another became crazy!
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/120.jpg" alt="Gibbs shooting a comrade" height-obs="363" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>Gibbs shooting a comrade.</i></h4>
After killing the captain and mate, they set about overhauling the
vessel, and got up one keg of Mexican dollars. They then divided
the captain's clothes, and money--about 40 dollars, and a gold
watch. Dawes, Talbot and Brownrigg, (who were all innocent of the
murder,) were obliged to do as they were commanded--the former, who
was placed at the helm, was ordered to steer for Long Island. On
the day following, they divided several kegs of the specie,
amounting to five thousand dollars each--they made bags and sewed
the money up. After this division, they divided the remainder of
the money without counting it. On Sunday, when about 15 miles
S.S.E. of Southampton Light, they got the boats out and put half
the money in each--they then scuttled the vessel and set fire to it
in the cabin, and took to the boats. Gibbs, after the murder, took
charge of the vessel as captain. From the papers they learnt that
the money belonged to Stephen Girard. With the boats they made the
land about daylight. Dawes and his three companions were in the
long boat; the others, with Atwell, were in the jolly boat--on
coming to the bar the boats struck--in the long boat, they threw
overboard a trunk of clothes and a great deal of money, in all
about 5000 dollars--the jolly boat foundered; they saw the boat
fill, and heard them cry out, and saw them clinging to the
masts--they went ashore on Barron Island, and buried the money in
the sand, but very lightly. Soon after they met with a gunner, whom
they requested to conduct them where they could get some
refreshments. They were by him conducted to Johnson's (the only man
living on the island,) where they staid all night--Dawes went to
bed at about 10 o'clock--Jack Brownrigg set up with Johnson, and in
the morning told Dawes that he had told Johnson all about the
murder. Johnson went in the morning with the steward for the
clothes, which were left on the top of the place where they buried
the money, but does not believe they took away the money.
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/122.jpg" alt="Captain Thornby murdered and thrown overboard by Gibbs and the steward" height-obs="373" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4>
<i>
Captain Thornby murdered and thrown overboard by Gibbs and
the steward.
</i>
</h4>
The prisoners, (Gibbs and Wansley,) were brought to trial at the
February term of the United States Court, holden in the city of New
York; when the foregoing facts being satisfactorily proved, they
were pronounced guilty, and on the 11th March last, the awful
sentence of the law was passed upon them in the following affecting
and impressive manner:--The Court opened at 11 o'clock, Judge Betts
presiding. A few minutes after that hour, Mr. Hamilton, District
Attorney, rose and said--May it please the Court, Thomas J.
Wansley, the prisoner at the bar, having been tried by a jury of
his country, and found guilty of the murder of Captain Thornby, I
now move that the sentence of the Court be pronounced upon that
verdict.
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/124.jpg" alt="Gibbs and Wansley burying the Money" height-obs="497" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>Gibbs and Wansley burying the Money.</i></h4>
<i>By the Court</i>. Thomas J. Wansley, you have heard what has
been said by the District Attorney--by the Grand Jury of the South
District of New York, you have been arraigned for the wilful murder
of Captain Thornby, of the brig Vineyard; you have been put upon
your trial, and after a patient and impartial hearing, you have
been found Guilty. The public prosecutor now moves for judgment on
that verdict; have you any thing to say, why the sentence of the
law should not be passed upon you?
<p><i>Thomas J. Wansley</i>. I will say a few words, but it is
perhaps of no use. I have often understood that there is a great
deal of difference in respect of color, and I have seen it in this
Court. Dawes and Brownrigg were as guilty as I am, and these
witnesses have tried to fasten upon me greater guilt than is just,
for their life has been given to them. You have taken the blacks
from their own country, to bring them here to treat them ill. I
have seen this. The witnesses, the jury, and the prosecuting
Attorney consider me more guilty than Dawes, to condemn me--for
otherwise the law must have punished him; he should have had the
same verdict, for he was a perpetrator in the conspiracy.
Notwithstanding my participating, they have sworn falsely for the
purpose of taking my life; they would not even inform the Court,
how I gave information of money being on board; they had the
biggest part of the money, and have sworn falsely. I have said
enough. I will say no more.</p>
<p><i>By the Court</i>. The Court will wait patiently and hear all
you have to say; if you have any thing further to add, proceed.</p>
<p><i>Wansley</i> then proceeded. In the first place, I was the
first to ship on board the Vineyard at New Orleans, I knew nobody;
I saw the money come on board. The judge that first examined me,
did not take my deposition down correctly. When talking with the
crew on board, said the brig was an old craft, and when we arrived
at Philadelphia, we all agreed to leave her. It was mentioned to me
that there was plenty of money on board. Henry Atwell said "let's
have it." I knew no more of this for some days. Atwell came to me
again and asked "what think you of taking the money." I thought it
was a joke, and paid no attention to it. The next day he said they
had determined to take the brig and money, and that they were the
strongest party, and would murder the officers, and he that
informed should suffer with them. I knew Church in Boston, and in a
joke asked him how it was made up in the ship's company; his reply,
that it was he and Dawes. There was no arms on board as was
ascertained; the conspiracy was known to the whole company, and had
I informed, my life would have been taken, and though I knew if I
was found out my life would be taken by law, which is the same
thing, so I did not inform. I have committed murder and I know I
must die for it.</p>
<p><i>By the Court</i>. If you wish to add any thing further you
will still be heard.</p>
<p><i>Wansley</i>. No sir, I believe I have said enough.</p>
<p>The District Attorney rose and moved for judgment on Gibbs, in
the same manner as in the case of Wansley, and the Court having
addressed Gibbs, in similar terms, concluded by asking what he had
to say why the sentence of the law should not now be passed upon
him.</p>
<p><i>Charles Gibbs</i> said, I wish to state to the Court, how far
I am guilty and how far I am innocent in this transaction. When I
left New Orleans, I was a stranger to all on board, except Dawes
and Church. It was off Tortugas that Atwell first told me there was
money on board, and proposed to me to take possession of the brig.
I refused at that time. The conspiracy was talked of for some days,
and at last I agreed that I would join. Brownrigg, Dawes, Church,
and the whole agreed that they would. A few days after, however,
having thought of the affair, I mentioned to Atwell, what a
dreadful thing it was to take a man's life, and commit piracy, and
recommended him to "abolish," their plan. Atwell and Dawes
remonstrated with me; I told Atwell that if ever he would speak of
the subject again, I would break his nose. Had I kept to my
resolution I would not have been brought here to receive my
sentence. It was three days afterwards that the murder was
committed. Brownrigg agreed to call up the captain from the cabin,
and this man, (pointing to Wansley,) agreed to strike the first
blow. The captain was struck and I suppose killed, and I lent a
hand to throw him overboard. But for the murder of the mate, of
which I have been found guilty, I am innocent--I had nothing to do
with that. The mate was murdered by Dawes and Church; that I am
innocent of this I commit my soul to that God who will judge all
flesh--who will judge all murderers and false swearers, and the
wicked who deprive the innocent of his right. I have nothing more
to say.</p>
<p><i>By the Court</i>. Thomas J. Wansley and Charles Gibbs, the
Court has listened to you patiently and attentively; and although
you have said something in your own behalf, yet the Court has heard
nothing to affect the deepest and most painful duty that he who
presides over a public tribunal has to perform.</p>
<p>You, Thomas J. Wansley, conceive that a different measure of
justice has been meted out to you, because of your color. Look back
upon your whole course of life; think of the laws under which you
have lived, and you will find that to white or black, to free or
bond, there is no ground for your allegations; that they are not
supported by truth or justice. Admit that Brownrigg and Dawes have
sworn falsely; admit that Dawes was concerned with you; admit that
Brownrigg is not innocent; admit, in relation to both, that they
are guilty, the whole evidence has proved beyond a doubt that you
are guilty; and your own words admit that you were an active agent
in perpetrating this horrid crime. Two fellow beings who confided
in you, and in their perilous voyage called in your assistance, yet
you, without reason or provocation, have maliciously taken their
lives.</p>
<p>If, peradventure, there was the slightest foundation for a doubt
of your guilt, in the mind of the Court, judgment would be
arrested, but there is none; and it now remains to the Court to
pronounce the most painful duty that devolves upon a civil
magistrate. The Court is persuaded of your guilt; it can form no
other opinion. Testimony has been heard before the Court and
Jury--from that we must form our opinion. We must proceed upon
testimony, ascertain facts by evidence of witnesses, on which we
must inquire, judge and determine as to guilt or innocence, by that
evidence alone. You have been found guilty. You now stand for the
last time before an earthly tribunal, and by your own
acknowledgments, the sentence of the law falls just on your heads.
When men in ordinary cases come under the penalty of the law there
is generally some palliative--something to warm the sympathy of the
Court and Jury. Men may be led astray, and under the influence of
passion have acted under some long smothered resentment, suddenly
awakened by the force of circumstances, depriving him of reason,
and then they may take the life of a fellow being. Killing, under
that kind of excitement, might possibly awaken some sympathy, but
that was not your case; you had no provocation. What offence had
Thornby or Roberts committed against you? They entrusted themselves
with you, as able and trustworthy citizens; confiding implicitly in
you; no one act of theirs, after a full examination, appears to
have been offensive to you; yet for the purpose of securing the
money you coolly determined to take their lives--you slept and
deliberated over the act; you were tempted on, and yielded; you
entered into the conspiracy, with cool and determined calculation
to deprive two human beings of their lives, and it was done.</p>
<p>You, Charles Gibbs, have said that you are not guilty of the
murder of Roberts; but were you not there, strongly instigating the
murderers on, and without stretching out a hand to save him?--It is
murder as much to stand by and encourage the deed, as to stab with
a knife, strike with a hatchet, or shoot with a pistol. It is not
only murder in law, but in your own feelings and in your own
conscience. Notwithstanding all this, I cannot believe that your
feelings are so callous, so wholly callous, that your own minds do
not melt when you look back upon the unprovoked deeds of
yourselves, and those confederated with you.</p>
<p>You are American citizens--this country affords means of
instruction to all: your appearance and your remarks have added
evidence that you are more than ordinarily intelligent; that your
education has enabled you to participate in the advantages of
information open to all classes. The Court will believe that when
you were young you looked with strong aversion on the course of
life of the wicked. In early life, in boyhood, when you heard of
the conduct of men, who engaged in robbery--nay more, when you
heard of cold blooded murder--how you must have shrunk from the
recital. Yet now, after having participated in the advantages of
education, after having arrived at full maturity, you stand here as
robbers and murderers.</p>
<p>It is a perilous employment of life that you have followed; in
this way of life the most enormous crimes that man can commit, are
MURDER AND PIRACY. With what detestation would you in early life
have looked upon the man who would have raised his hand against his
officer, or have committed piracy! yet now you both stand here
murderers and pirates, tried and found guilty--you Wansley of the
murder of your Captain, and you, Gibbs, of the murder of your Mate.
The evidence has convicted you of rising in mutiny against the
master of the vessel, for that alone, the law is DEATH!--of murder
and robbery on the high seas, for that crime, the law adjudges
DEATH--of destroying the vessel and embezzling the cargo, even for
scuttling and burning the vessel alone the law is DEATH; yet of all
these the evidence has convicted you, and it only remains now for
the Court to pass the sentence of the law. It is, that you, Thomas
J. Wansley and Charles Gibbs be taken hence to the place of
confinement, there to remain in close custody, that thence you be
taken to the place of execution, and on the 22d April next, between
the hours of 10 and 4 o'clock, you be both publicly hanged by the
neck until you are DEAD--and that your bodies be given to the
College of Physicians and Surgeons for dissection.</p>
<p>The Court added, that the only thing discretionary with it, was
the time of execution; it might have ordered that you should
instantly have been taken from the stand to the scaffold, but the
sentence has been deferred to as distant a period as prudent--six
weeks. But this time has not been granted for the purpose of giving
you any hope for pardon or commutation of the sentence;--just as
sure as you live till the twenty-second of April, as surely you
will suffer death--therefore indulge not a hope that this sentence
will be changed!</p>
<p>The Court then spoke of the terror in all men of death!--how
they cling to life whether in youth, manhood or old age. What an
awful thing it is to die! how in the perils of the sea, when rocks
or storms threaten the loss of the vessel, and the lives of all on
board, how the crew will labor, night and day, in the hope of
escaping shipwreck and death! alluded to the tumult, bustle and
confusion of battle--yet even there the hero clings to life. The
Court adverted not only to the certainty of their coming doom on
earth, but to THINK OF HEREAFTER--that they should seriously think
and reflect of their FUTURE STATE! that they would be assisted in
their devotions no doubt, by many pious men.</p>
<p>When the Court closed, Charles Gibbs asked, if during his
imprisonment, his friends would be permitted to see him. The Court
answered that that lay with the Marshal, who then said that no
difficulty would exist on that score. The remarks of the Prisoners
were delivered in a strong, full-toned and unwavering voice, and
they both seemed perfectly resigned to the fate which inevitably
awaited them. While Judge Betts was delivering his address to them,
Wansley was deeply affected and shed tears--but Gibbs gazed with a
steady and unwavering eye, and no sign betrayed the least emotion
of his heart. After his condemnation, and during his confinement,
his frame became somewhat enfeebled, his face paler, and his eyes
more sunken; but the air of his bold, enterprising and desperate
mind still remained. In his narrow cell, he seemed more like an
object of pity than vengeance--was affable and communicative, and
when he smiled, exhibited so mild and gentle a countenance, that no
one would take him to be a villain. His conversation was concise
and pertinent, and his style of illustration quite original.</p>
<p>Gibbs was married in Buenos Ayres, where he has a child now
living. His wife is dead. By a singular concurrence of
circumstances, the woman with whom he became acquainted in
Liverpool, and who is said at that time to have borne a decent
character, was lodged in the same prison with himself. During his
confinement he wrote her two letters--one of them is subjoined, to
gratify the perhaps innocent curiosity which is naturally felt to
know the peculiarities of a man's mind and feelings under such
circumstances, and not for the purpose of intimating a belief that
he was truly penitent. The reader will be surprised with the
apparent readiness with which he made quotations from
Scripture.<br/>
</p>
<p>"BELLEVUE PRISON, March 20, 1831.</p>
<p>"It is with regret that I take my pen in hand to address you with
these few lines, under the great embarrassment of my feelings
placed within these gloomy walls, my body bound with chains, and
under the awful sentence of death! It is enough to throw the
strongest mind into gloomy prospects! but I find that Jesus Christ
is sufficient to give consolation to the most despairing soul. For
he saith, that he that cometh to me I will in no ways cast out. But
it is impossible to describe unto you the horror of my feelings. My
breast is like the tempestuous ocean, raging in its own shame,
harrowing up the bottom of my soul! But I look forward to that
serene calm when I shall sleep with Kings and Counsellors of the
earth. There the wicked cease from troubling, and there the weary
are at rest!--There the prisoners rest together--they hear not the
voice of the oppressor; and I trust that there my breast will not
be ruffled by the storm of sin--for the thing which I greatly
feared has come upon me. I was not in safety, neither had I rest;
yet trouble came. It is the Lord, let him do what seemeth to him
good. When I saw you in Liverpool, and a peaceful calm wafted
across both our breasts, and justice no claim upon us, little did I
think to meet you in the gloomy walls of a strong prison, and the
arm of justice stretched out with the sword of law, awaiting the
appointed period to execute the dreadful sentence. I have had a
fair prospect in the world, at last it budded, and brought forth
the gallows. I am shortly to mount that scaffold, and to bid adieu
to this world, and all that was ever dear to my breast. But I trust
when my body is mounted on the gallows high, the heavens above will
smile and pity me. I hope that you will reflect on your past, and
fly to that Jesus who stands with open arms to receive you. Your
character is lost, it is true. When the wicked turneth from the
wickedness that they have committed, they shall save their soul
alive.</p>
<p>"Let us imagine for a moment that we see the souls standing
before the awful tribunal, and we hear its dreadful sentence,
depart ye cursed into everlasting fire. Imagine you hear the awful
lamentations of a soul in hell. It would be enough to melt your
heart, if it was as hard as adamant. You would fall upon your knees
and plead for God's mercy, as a famished person would for food, or
as a dying criminal would for a pardon. We soon, very soon, must go
the way whence we shall ne'er return. Our names will be struck off
the records of the living, and enrolled in the vast catalogues of
the dead. But may it ne'er be numbered with the damned.--I hope it
will please God to set you at your liberty, and that you may see
the sins and follies of your life past. I shall now close my letter
with a few words which I hope you will receive as from a dying man;
and I hope that every important truth of this letter may sink deep
in your heart, and be a lesson to you through life.</p>
<p>"Rising griefs distress my soul,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
And tears on tears successive
roll--
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
For many an evil voice is
near,
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
To chide my woes and mock my
fear--
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
And silent memory weeps
alone,
</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">
O'er hours of peace and gladness
known.
</span></p>
<p>"I still remain your sincere friend, CHARLES GIBBS."<br/>
</p>
<p>In another letter which the wretched Gibbs wrote after his
condemnation to one who had been his early friend, he writes as
follows:--"Alas! it is now, and not until now, that I have become
sensible of my wicked life, from my childhood, and the enormity of
the crime, for which I must shortly suffer an ignominious death!--I
would to God that I never had been born, or that I had died in my
infancy!--the hour of reflection has indeed come, but come too late
to prevent justice from cutting me off--my mind recoils with horror
at the thoughts of the unnatural deeds of which I have been
guilty!--my repose rather prevents than affords me relief, as my
mind, while I slumber, is constantly disturbed by frightful dreams
of my approaching awful dissolution!"</p>
<p>On Friday, April twenty-second, Gibbs and Wansley paid the
penalty of their crimes. Both prisoners arrived at the gallows
about twelve o'clock, accompanied by the marshal, his aids, and
some twenty or thirty United States' marines. Two clergymen
attended them to the fatal spot, where everything being in
readiness, and the ropes adjusted about their necks, the Throne of
Mercy was fervently addressed in their behalf. Wansley then prayed
earnestly himself, and afterwards joined in singing a hymn. These
exercises concluded, Gibbs addressed the spectators nearly as
follows:<br/>
</p>
<p>MY DEAR FRIENDS,</p>
<p>My crimes have been heinous--and although I am now about to
suffer for the murder of Mr. Roberts, I solemnly declare my
innocence of the transaction. It is true, I stood by and saw the
fatal deed done, and stretched not forth my arm to save him; the
technicalities of the law believe me guilty of the charge--but in
the presence of my God--before whom I shall be in a few minutes--I
declare I did not murder him.</p>
<p>I have made a full and frank confession to Mr. Hopson, which
probably most of my hearers present have already read; and should
any of the friends of those whom I have been accessary to, or
engaged in the murder of, be now present, before my Maker I beg
their forgiveness--it is the only boon I ask--and as I hope for
pardon through the blood of Christ, surely this request will not be
withheld by man, to a worm like myself, standing as I do, on the
very verge of eternity! Another moment, and I cease to exist--and
could I find in my bosom room to imagine that the spectators now
assembled had forgiven me, the scaffold would have no terrors, nor
could the precept which my much respected friend, the marshal of
the district, is about to execute. Let me then, in this public
manner, return my sincere thanks to him, for his kind and
gentlemanly deportment during my confinement. He was to me like a
father, and his humanity to a dying man I hope will be duly
appreciated by an enlightened community.</p>
<p>My first crime was <i>piracy</i>, for which my <i>life</i> would
pay for forfeit on conviction; no punishment could be inflicted on
me further than that, and therefore I had nothing to fear but
detection, for had my offences been millions of times more
aggravated than they are now, <i>death</i> must have satisfied
all.<br/>
</p>
<p>Gibbs having concluded, Wansley began. He said he might be
called a pirate, a robber, and a murderer, and he was all of these,
but he hoped and trusted God would, through Christ, wash away his
aggravated crimes and offences, and not cast him entirely out. His
feelings, he said, were so overpowered that he hardly knew how to
address those about him, but he frankly admitted the justness of
the sentence, and concluded by declaring that he had no hope of
pardon except through the atoning blood of his Redeemer, and wished
that his sad fate might teach others to shun the broad road to
ruin, and travel in that of virtue, which would lead to honor and
happiness in this world, and an immortal crown of glory in that to
come.</p>
<p>He then shook hands with Gibbs, the officers, and
clergymen--their caps were drawn over their faces, a handkerchief
dropped by Gibbs as a signal to the executioner caused the cord to
be severed, and in an instant they were suspended in air. Wansley
folded his hands before him, soon died with very trifling
struggles. Gibbs died hard; before he was run up, and did not again
remove them, but after being near two minutes suspended, he raised
his right hand and partially removed his cap, and in the course of
another minute, raised the same hand to his mouth. His dress was a
blue round-about jacket and trousers, with a foul anchor in white
on his right arm. Wansley wore a white frock coat, trimmed with
black, with trousers of the same color.</p>
<p>After the bodies had remained on the gallows the usual time,
they were taken down and given to the surgeons for dissection.</p>
<p>Gibbs was rather below the middle stature, thick set and
powerful. The form of Wansley was a perfect model of manly
beauty.</p>
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