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Who's Who in the Queue? The Real Pirates of the Caribbean

Rating: 2 votes, 5.00 average.
by , 06-22-2011 at 07:32 PM


As you wait inside the queue for Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean, you surely have noticed the fine drawings on the wall. What you might not be aware of is that these pirates are the real deal. Well most of them anyway. In doing research for the attraction, Imagineer Marc Davis was inspired by real pirates and their stories. In fact, the attraction was originally going to be a walk-through attraction featuring famous pirates. But the humor started to win out and the walk-through became a boat ride and the rest is history. Let's take a look at the walls and meet the real and unreal pirates of the Caribbean.



Anne Bonny (March 8, 1700-possibly April 25, 1782)
&
Mary Read (unknown-1721)

Anne Bonny -Just as you enter the door, take a look to the right and tucked away is a painting of two women looking rather happy. One is Anne Bonny and the other is Mary Read. Their fame is due to being the only known women to be convicted of piracy in the Caribbean. What is known about Anne Bonny comes from Captain Charles Johnson’s A General History of the Pyrates. She stabbed a servant girl when she was 13, married small-time pirate James Bonny, then moved to the Bahamas only to have an affair with another pirate named John “Calico Jack” Rackham. James wanted her flogged for adultery but she and Calico Jack escape to become successful pirates. She later hooked up with Mary Read and they made a go of it until they were captured in October 1720. She left jail under unknown circumstances and died at the age of eighty-two in 1782.

Mary Read - When Mary Read was very young, her mother began to dress her as a boy after the death of her brother in order to continue receiving aide from a Grandmother. Mary continued to dress as a man when she got her first job on a ship. She fell in love and married a Flemish solider and dressed as a woman for the first time. However, he died and she got back into men’s clothes and went back to the sea. After her ship was taken over by pirate Calico Jack and Anne Bonny, she decided to join the crew. It seems Anne Bonny took a liking to Mary only to be surprised that she was a woman. That didn’t matter as the trio terrorized the Caribbean. She was captured in 1720 and sent to prison where she died in 1721.


Sir Francis Verney (1584-1615)


Sir Francis Verney was the product of a famous and powerful British family. Always pictured as the perfect country gentleman by his neighbors, they were shocked when he got into an inheritance dispute with his family and decided to make some drastic changes. He left his wife and estate and “turned Turk”. He moved to Morocco and converted to Islam. He plied the Barbary Coast with great success. He was captured and died penniless in Sicily after two years.


Captain Jack Sparrow (Unknown)


Jack is most at home on the sea and was born onboard a ship caught in the middle of a typhoon. He was the son of Captain Teague but rejected the hectic life of being part of a pirate family and snuck away to Tortuga with only the clothes on his back. Always looking for opportunities, he lifted the Sword of Cortes, which gave him the ability to control storms. A very helpful tool if you are a sailor. After much success and many adventures he moved on to his most famous commission, the Black Pearl. He has been described as a blend of Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones and Pepe Le Pew. The final chapters of his life are not well documented. But one thing was certain; he was known to enhance his reputation through fanciful tales.


Sir Henry Mainwaring (1587-1653)

While many pirates were products of poverty, Sir Maiwaring was born to an elite class. His family were contemporaries of William the Conqueror and his Grandfather was the Vice-Admiral of Sussex. He graduated from Oxford University at the age of 15 with a law degree. His sailing career began with a commission to hunt down a famous pirate. But he turned his weapons on anything Spanish. He was so dominant, the Spanish government decided to hire him and his fleet in exchange for a full pardon. Britain also granted him a full pardon and he went on to write a Discourse of Pirates in 1618. He was knighted in 1618 and became a Vice-Admiral. Not your typical pirate.


Captain Hector Barbossa


Known as the Pirate Lord of the Caspian Sea, Hector Barbossa was born from unknown origins and extreme poverty. He went to sea at the age of 13. He led a successful career and ended up on the crew of the Black Pearl rising to the rank of First Mate. The stories of that time are legendary and would make for a good movie. He traveled all over the world including Singapore. Throughout his journeys the East India Trading Company pursued him. Another merciless pirate, his reputation for brutality was legendary as was his morbid sense of humor. At one point Tia Dalma also known as Calypso also resurrected him from the dead. He returned the favor by helping to release Calypso from her human bonds. From this point his story gets murky but research into his life continues with further tales sure to be told.


Charles Gibbs (November 5, 1798 – April 22, 1831)


Charles Gibbs real name was James D. Jeffers and was born in Newport, Rhode Island. He would be one of the last active pirates in the Caribbean and one of the last executed. He claims to have slaughter as many as 400 victims and his legend grew after his death. Born to a sea captain, Gibbs started his career in the United States Navy. His claim to fame was his brutality towards prisoners including chopping off their arms and legs or burning entire crews alive. He was captured in Long Island and executed on Ellis Island in 1831.


Edward “Ned” Low (1690 – 1724)


Ever since Ned low was young he was always in trouble. He was a pickpocket and burglar. After his wife died in childbirth, Ned Low set out to sea to become a pirate. He was a very successful pirate who captured at least a hundred ships in his brief three-year career. He had a nasty reputation and was known to torture his victims before killing them including burning a French cook alive (“greasy fellow who would fry well”) and the slaughter of 53 Spanish captives. Intimidation was his calling card. He was inevitability hanged in Martinique in 1724.


Mademoiselle Greenwell


As part of the release of the second Pirates of the Caribbean film Dead Man’s Chest in January 2008, Disney held a “Become a Disney Pirate” contest. The winner was Jenifer Greenwell of St. Petersburg, Florida. As part of the prize package she would be flown to Imagineering’s headquarters in Glendale, dressed in full pirate regalia, and posed for artist Jim Crouch. Crouch also created the Johnny Depp (Captain Jack Sparrow) and Geoffrey Rush (Barbarossa) portraits in a style consistent with the original Marc Davis drawings. She would be transformed into "Mademoiselle Greenwell". The unveiling was on January 29 and included the artist and the prizewinner dressed as pirates joined by local marauders in a comedy filled show. The portrait was supposed to last until June but it struck around a bit longer. It is now gone.


A that's our Yo Ho tale of who's who in the Pirate's queue. Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. Did you enjoy that folks? Don't miss any of our updates, follow SAMLAND on Twitter @SamlandDisney


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“LOS ANGELES: INVENTED SPACES OR AUTHENTIC PLACES?”
Presented by the Los Angeles Region Planning History Group in cooperation with the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West Huntington Library and Gardens

Saturday, July 9, 2011 at the Huntington Library and Gardens
Coffee & Pastries: 9:30 a.m. Colloquium and Lunch: 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

The Los Angeles region has evolved as much from out-sized dreams and inventions as from traditional rules for establishing human settlements. Carey McWilliams called Los Angeles an “improbable” place not destined to succeed, but determined to do so. As Southern California developed, the visionaries who built this region knew it was less about location and more about destination. The enormous popularity of “invented” or themed destinations – Venice of America, Olvera Street, Disneyland, Third Street Promenade, CityWalk, The Grove and many others – has provided planners, designers and developers with inspiration and lessons on both success and failure. What is the difference between those places that have a “unifying vision” and those that celebrate a “messy vitality”? Where do “invented” places end and “authentic” places begin? In a land where set designers build houses, architects design movie sets, and many of our most cherished “public” spaces are privately owned and operated, anything is possible. A distinguished panel, moderated by author and planner Sam Gennawey, will address these questions.

  • David Sloane, Professor, USC School of Policy, Planning, and Development
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Comments

  1. ttintagel's Avatar
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    I like the recent additions to the queue in principle, but you would think that they could find an artist who could at least TRY to imitate Marc Davis's style. The Sparrow, Barbossa, and Greenwell portraits stick out like sore thumbs. It would be much more effective if you looked at the gallery and didn't realize they were recent additions unless you looked closely.
  2. SpcMtn77's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ttintagel
    I like the recent additions to the queue in principle, but you would think that they could find an artist who could at least TRY to imitate Marc Davis's style. The Sparrow, Barbossa, and Greenwell portraits stick out like sore thumbs. It would be much more effective if you looked at the gallery and didn't realize they were recent additions unless you looked closely.
    I think the newer additions to the pirate gallery look strange because they were based on actual realistic faces. The originals were much more like caricatures. They don't really blend well.
  3. indianajack's Avatar
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    Very interesting and informative article, thanks!
    I hadn't realized that Greenwell's portrait was removed. I'll have to make note of it next time I'm in the queue.
  4. jpg391's Avatar
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    Great article. I liked the stories that go with the pictures of the pirates weather real or not.
  5. Hank McCoy's Avatar
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    Another great read! Thanks for doing this.
  6. disney lady's Avatar
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    This was great as my niece was just asking about them and who thay were, etc.... I knew Anne Bonney and Mary Reid (Capt Jack and Barbossa) but the rest I was not sure
  7. DisWedWay's Avatar
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    Love the stories of the characters. Would be great on a folded handout Pirate Map like the Tom Sawyer Island map. Do they still have those? Still have my Sam Mckim TSI version. Often wonder why Marc didn't pull more characters from Disney's Classic Treasure Island. Should have asked him when we were doing Pirates for Walt Disney World. PD
  8. Princess Victoria's Avatar
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    I really enjoyed the article. Thanks for researching this and reporting your findings. I love reading this sort of thing that many of us likely wouldn't have known otherwise.

    The only thing I noticed that is amiss is the release date of POTC2, as it came out in Summer 2006 rather than Janurary 2008.
  9. kdriggs23's Avatar
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    I agree with earlier posts, the style of the newer paintings isn't a whole lot like the original Marc Davis ones. Great little history lesson!
  10. NSObject's Avatar
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    The first time I saw the Greenwell portrait I it looked so out of place that I thought either someone won a contest or some imaginer won it as an award. It is interesting to know that it was indeed a contest. I did notice it was gone when I last visited, but I don’t know if it was simply painted over or replaced by another portrait.
  11. Mousecat's Avatar
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    Thanks everybody.

    I could not agree more about the change in style of the paintings. And that extends to the figures within the attraction. All of the figures are caricatures with the exception of Jack Sparrow and Barbosa.

    Sam
    SamLand's Disney Adventures
  12. Aaebert67's Avatar
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    Love this post! Thank you for putting it up. The details really add to the atmosphere of the ride. Great examples of the details you don't even notice at D-land.
  13. ChEars!'s Avatar
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    Thank you so much for this interesting information. I haven't noticed most of the drawings. Are people standing in front of them in line? I'll look more closely next week.
  14. ChEars!'s Avatar
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    and about different artists, goodness it would offend a true artist to tell them to mimic another. I'm looking forward to viewing the unique artistic differences.
  15. pineapplewhipaddict's Avatar
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    I'm sorry, but where did you get your information about Anne Bonny and Mary Read? I have studied their history in-depth and learned a slightly different version of their backstories:

    Anne had a very controlling father and wanted her to marry a well-to-do gentleman, but she fell head-over-heels for Calico Jack. As far as I know, they never officially got married, but she ran away with him on his ship. While she posed as a man onboard, she slept with most of the crew (so most of the men knew).

    Mary's mother was left without a husband after his untimely death - however, she was pregnant with Mary. In order to get any money to take care of herself and Mary, Mary's mother lied to the grandmother and told her that Mary was a boy (Mary went by the name of Mark instead). When Mary hit puberty, her mother disowned her and left her to fend for herself. The military part, as far as I know, is correct. She and her husband opened a business for a short period of time but he became sick and passed away. Abandoned again, Mary had no choice but to go back to pretending she was a man and turned to piracy to survive. And yes, Anne tried to seduce Mary later - Mary revealed that she was a woman, and they became good friends. Mary later fell for a man who was a part of the crew (but put there by force). He got into an argument with a far more experienced pirate and was challenged to a duel. Mary, fearing for his life, got to the location of the fight early and fought and killed the experienced pirate (rumor has it that before the final blow she exposed her female assets to him - and then sliced his head off). Her crush arrived at the scene, and she told him she was a woman...they became lovers.

    Eventually, both Anne and Mary became pregnant (at least, this is what they claimed in court - it seems that Mary definitely was, but with Anne it was questionable). The crew were about to drop them off on land so that they could deliver safely, but the ship was found and they were all captured. The rest of the crew was hanged, while Anne and Mary, who "plead [their] bellies" were left in a jail cell instead since the courts did not want to kill unborn babies. Mary unfortunately became very sick and died in jail, while Anne mysteriously got out (some think that her father bailed her out) and she lived out the rest of her life quietly.

    Perhaps you wanted to give the readers a shorter and more PCed version but I find their lives fascinating and the stuff of pure drama...