Joseph Faro | |
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Piratical career |
Joseph Faro (occasionally Farrell or Faroe) was a pirate from Newport active during the Golden Age of Piracy, primarily in the Indian Ocean. He is best known for sailing alongside Thomas Tew to join Henry Every’s pirate fleet which captured and looted the fabulously rich Mughal ship Gunsway.
In 1694 a number of Newport pirate vessels prepared to set sail with Tew, among them Joseph Bankes’ barque Portsmouth Adventure. Bankes (or Banks) transferred his commission to Joseph Faro, who captained the 90-ton 6-gun Portsmouth Adventure with a crew of 60. Among his crew was future pirate captain Dirk Chivers.
After nearly a year in transit, in 1695 Tew, Faro, and three other captains (William Mayes, Richard Want, and Thomas Wake) joined up with Every and his ship Fancy and waited for the Mughal’s treasure-laden convoy. Most of the convoy escaped, but the Gunsway and her escort Fateh Mohammed were straggling behind and after a protracted fight was overtaken and brutally looted by Every and his crew. Tew had been killed during the battle while Want and Wake’s slower ships were left behind. Only Faro and Mayes arrived in time to help Every, but Every denied Faro and his crew a full share of the vast riches, claiming they had never joined in the fighting.
Afterward, Faro took the Portsmouth Adventure into the Persian Gulf, and then back to Madagascar, where Faro’s ship was wrecked on Mayotte. Every rescued Faro and some of his crew en route to the Bahamas; some of Faro’s crew joined Every, and a few even made it back to Newport, while Chivers and others remained behind. Faro later captained the sloop Sea Flower which had transported Every back to Ireland.