Welcome to Criminalia, a production of Shonda Land Audio in partnership with I Heart Radio. Welcome to Criminalia, where it's pirate season. We'll be exploring the lives and motivations of some of the most notorious freebooters throughout history. I'm Maria Tremarqui and I'm Holly Fry. And Rachel Wall, who we're talking about in this episode, was probably born as Rachel
Schmidt too devoutedly Presbyterian parents sometime in seventeen sixteen. She is unique because she is credited with being New England's only quote lady pirate, or, as she's been mentioned in some of the research that came up, the dread pirate Rachel sort of marvelous. She was born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and she may also have been the first American born
woman to become a pirate. But she most certainly was the last woman to be hanged in Boston, although the specific crime that landed her fate was not actually piracy, and that becomes an interesting twist in her story. Yes, certainly so. We're the lucky when it comes to Rachel Wall's life history, or at least parts of her history, and that's because before the end of her life, she wrote a piece called Life, Last Words and Dying Confession
of Rachel Wall Right here, we want to emphasize two things. First, half of that headline is in all caps. And second, keep in mind that this confession was penned shortly before her execution. Will reference it throughout, But keep in mind it's it's not a journal, it's a document created at the end of her life when she knew her fate was sealed. Okay, before we get to the end of her life, though, let's talk about her younger years. Rachel was born into what she described in that document as
a good family. She called her parents quote good and reputable. Her father was a farmer, but we do know that he was definitely a man quote of a very serious and devout turn of mind, and always made it his constant practice to perform family prayers in his house every morning and evening, and was very careful to call his children and family together every Sabbath day evening to hear the holy scriptures and other pious books read to them.
And according to this written confession, which it's uh laid out as though she actually verbally gave it as a confession and someone else took it down just for clarity. But according to this confession, her parents gave her the moral foundation to lead a happy, crime free life. She said, quote, they gave me a good education and instructed me in the fundamental principles of the Christian religion, and taught me
the fear of God. And if I had followed the good advice, I should never have come to this untimely fate. Rachel had three brothers and two sisters who were living at the time she left home. At least again, according to this document, they do not appear to have similarly been drawn into a life of crime, but we really
don't hear about them. After Rachel left Carlisle, her family life wasn't enough to make Rachel happy, so she actually ended up leaving home at the age of sixteen and made her way to where she always said she was most comfortable and felt most at home, and that was the waterfront. We looked at maps. Depending on the waterfront you're talking about around Carlyle, that could be quite a walking journey, you know, as many as days. Several sources
say she went to the waterfront. Whichever one that means, we know she went there, and that's where she met a man named George Wall, who made his living as a fisherman and who also would change the course of her life. The pair soon married, and they began traveling around the United States together, first of Philadelphia briefly, and then a few months in New York City, and eventually
to Boston, where they settled. And in her confession, Rachel does make a point of clearing her parents name of any blame by stating that she did all of this without their consent. So it was not long after the Walls moved to Boston, however, that George left Rachel for time at sea. When the newlywed Rachel was questioned about her husband's whereabouts, she admitted she had no idea where he was. She would say, quote, he went off again and left me, and then would continue and where he
is now I know not. It is actually now thought by historians that George was probably a privateer during the American Revolution, and that's how and when he observed the life of a pirate and decided that that was the life for him. To support herself while he was away, Rachel turned to one of two possible professions, depending which piece of her folklore you hear, so it's possible, yet unlikely,
that she took a job as a barmaid. It is way more likely, especially because she's actually quoted talking about it in her confession, that she really took a job as domestic help in Boston's wealthy Beacon Hill neighborhood, and it was there that she was she said, quote very contented. George did eventually returned to his wife, and when he did, he began a campaign to get her to join the
business of piracy with him. During her final confession, Rachel was quoted about that, saying, as soon as he came back, he enticed me to leave my service and take to bad company from which I might date my ruin. So at this point we're going to take a break for a word from our sponsor, and when we return, we'll talk about how Rachel and George began their life of piracy.
So romantic, welcome back to Criminalia, all right, Coming up, we're going to talk about everything from Blackbeard to Rachel's trial. As it turns out, some of the most notorious pirates, such as black Beard, Samuel Bellamy, and Captain Kidd were all known to travel in the waters off of Boston's sure, So it's believed that they came north to New England to trade their goods with merchants in Connecticut, New York, and you guessed it, Boston too. Not the only pirates
in the area, obviously, and definitely not as famous. Rachel and George also sailed off the coast of New England, and legend says they stole a ship named the Essex to begin this journey together. It said they robbed as many as twelve ships and plundered and killed twenty four sailors. Their lowres suggests they made as much as six thousand
dollars doing this, perhaps more, perhaps less. We haven't done this in a little bit, so hold on and remember, translating dollars to dollars over nearly two hundred fifty years is super sketchy. Don't quote these as real numbers, but
here we go. The purchasing power of that six thousand dollars would be maybe about roughly equivalent to a hundred and thirty thousand dollars in one and the amount they took in may have actually been as highest twelve thousand, which bear with us again, is somewhere possibly around the equivalent in purchasing power to more than two hundred seventy thousand dollars today, although there isn't any proof beyond her
pre execution confession. According to the legends surrounding the Walls, they attacked vessels around the aisles of the shoals just off the coast of New Hampshire. In her confession, Rachel went into pretty good detail about how she and George worked as a team. They primarily worked after storms had hit, and they made use of the unique situation of having a woman on board to lorian victims. Through deception. Rachel would stand on the deck or the mast of the
ship and pretend to be the lady in distress. She would scream for help until nearby sailors came to her rescue, and that's when George and his crew would plunder their ships and murder their crew. In two though, tragedy struck when George and most of his crew drowned at sea during a storm. Worm Rachel, as well as a number of the crew, were rescued from the shipwreck, and it is at that point that she gave up piracy and returned to Boston. Back in Boston, Rachel turned her work
from piracy back to domestic help. She did, though, keep her hand in the game a bit by committing petty crimes. It said she could never shake her love of the sea or her love of looting. In fact, she's known to have sneaked aboard ships docked in Boston Harbor. She described one of these outings on Long Wharf in Boston, saying, quote, sometime in the spring of seventy seven, not being able to ascertain the exact time, I happened to go on board a ship lying at the Long Morph in Boston.
The captain's name I cannot recollect, but think he was a Frenchman. On my entering the cabin, the door of which not being fastened, and finding the captain and mate asleep in their beds, I hunted about for plunder and discovered under the captain's head a black silk hank or chief containing upwards of thirty pounds in gold crowns and small change, on which I immediately seized the booty and
decamped therewith as quick as possible. I like that she was stealthy enough to steal money from under a man's head. Under his head, so I actually found two versions of this little story, and they had all the same basic information in them, and I think the last like maybe one or two sentences were even exactly the same. It was missing a few things, like in the spring of sevent seven. Um, it was missing lying at the long wharf, and it was missing that he was a Frenchman. So
it was pretty much the same. But I thought that this one had some Besides, I liked that she said she seized the booty. This was not the truncated version of her quote, which I thought was pretty good. It was nice to be able to see two versions. Um. So, moving on back to her confession, racial states in that confession quote in short, the many small crimes I have
committed are too numerous to mention in is sheet. But in addition to the theft we just mentioned, she also recounts two other specific crimes, which she said she included quote as a solemn warning to the living of my sex, at least especially to those whom they were immediately concerned. Yeah. One of those is this account of stealing from yet
another ship's captain, which goes quote At another time. I think it was about the year seventy eight, I broke into a sloop on board of which I was acquainted. Lying at Dones Wharf in this town, and finding the captain and every hand on board asleep in the cabin and steerage, I looked round to see what I could help myself to when I aspied a silver watch hanging over the captain's head, which I pocketed. I also took a pair of silver buckles out of the captain's shoes.
I likewise made free with a parcel of small change for pocket money to make myself marry among my evil companions, and made my escape without being discovered. And here's why Rachel's confession should be taken with a grain of salt. So in it, she confessed she attempted to break her husband out of jail by using what is now pretty
much one of the oldest tricks in the book. By this time, Rachel's confession seems to have been more a work of fiction or at least an exaggeration, But we're going to talk about it anyway because it's really an interesting part of her legend. So here's the problem. Her husband George in this story was in jail, but we know he died in a shipwreck in Sight two. So what's real, and what's not real is a little bit blended here. Right. It's also possible just that she has
a bad grasp of calendar dates. I was just going to say that she earlier mentioned in her confession she couldn't remember the year of something that happened, and you know, maybe that's true. Right, So it may be true, it may not be true. We're going to tell it. It's part of legend. It's a pretty good one. So this, this possibly fictional part of her confession states that Rachel had tools to escape baked into a loaf of bread
and had that bread sent to George. She wrote, quote, sometime about the year seventeen eighty five, my husband being confined in the jail in this place for these I had a mind to try an expedient to extricate him from his imprisonment, which was to have a brick loaf baked in which I contrived to enclose a number of tools such as a saw, file, et cetera, in order to assist him to make his escape, which was handed to him by the jailer in person, who little suspected
such a trick was playing with him. However, it liked to have had the desired effect the crafty contriver intended for by means of this stratagem. The poor culprit Wall had busily employed himself with the implements that his kind helpmate had in this curious manner conveyed to him, and had nearly affected his design before it was discovered. So before he could dig his way out, they were onto him.
The part that I really like about what she put in the brick loaf of baked bread was the saw just they saw that I imagine is very small because it goes in a loaf of bread um, And I just think to myself, Wow, I'd take a long time. Rachel's life changed again on the evening of March eighteen seventy nine. According to her confession, she was walking home from work and we quote without design to injure any person. She was she continued, quote surprised when the crime was
laid to her charge. And here's what happened. Seventeen year old Margaret Bender, who had also been walking on that road, accused Rachel of stealing a bonnet, shoes and buckles, and possibly a few shillings to violently off her body. There's also an odd and highly unlikely version of this story that suggests that she and that she is Rachel, tried to ripped out Margaret's tongue. That sounds a little like the exaggeration of gossip going around, but we don't know
for sure. Yeah, the report of the crime that was published in the papers about two weeks later definitely leaned toward Margaret's version of the story. That was reported as follows. As a woman was walking alone, she was met by another woman who seized hold of her and stopped her mouth with her handkerchief and tore from her head her bonnet and cushion, after which she flung her down, took her shoes and buckles, and then fled. She was soon
after overtaken and committed to jail. Rachel did run from the police, but she was quickly arrested and jailed for highway robbery, which is robbery that's committed you could guess on or near a public road. It was during this time that Rachel came clean about her life of piracy and all it entailed. But the one thing she always
maintained was her innocence in regard to that bonnet. Of all the acts of piracy, Rachel had been involved with her arrest record was actually just for things like petty theft. This arrest was for highway robbery, which meant that she could be executed if found guilty. She pleaded innocent, and we quote as to the crime of robbery, I am entirely innocent. To the truth of this declaration, I appealed
to that God before whom I must shortly appear. She was tried by a jury and only men could serve on juries at this time before the Supreme Judicial Court in Massachusetts in August of seventy nine, and Rachel was found guilty. Not to take anything away from Rachel's life, we would be remiss if we didn't mention how famous
those who participated in her trial would become. For example, Rachel's life was happening at exactly the same time that George Washington, a founding father of the United States, was leading troops to victory in the American Revolution. But his is not the only name that you will recognize from this time period and specifically from Rachel's trial. Right, So, the presiding judge was William Cushing, who went on to become one of the first U. S Supreme Court justices.
The prosecutor was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. Her court appointed lawyer, Christopher Gore, not only helped ratify the Constitution, he also became the first U. S Attorney from Massachusetts. During trial, he requested, and we quote, that sentence of death might be given against the said Rachel Wall,
the prisoner at the bar, and her death warrant. And this one, I thought was really kind of the most interesting, carried what may be considered the most famous signature in US history, and that's John Hancock, who was the first governor of Massachusetts at the time. I wonder if it was massive and overtook the document. I wondered the same thing. Honestly, I need a page for my last name. We are going to take a break here and have a word from our sponsor, and when we come back, we're going
to talk about Rachel's conviction of highway robbery. Again, not Pyras sing. Welcome back to Criminal Lea. Let's talk about how Rachel requested to be hanged like a pirate. So here's one thing about Rachel. She never denied that she was a criminal. She never denied that she had been
arrested for petty theft, for larceny. She did, while technically no longer a pirate, loot a few important people that included Perez Morton, who was a revolutionary patriot, a friend of John Adams, and a man who would become a powerful lawyer and future Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives. But this accusation of highway robbery stuck, and she pleaded
not guilty. She always said she didn't do it, so if hanging would be her execution, which it was, she believed and requested that she be hanged as a pirate. She went on to argue that she shouldn't be executed or sentenced for this crime of highway robbery. She maintained her innocence, saying, quote witnesses who swore against me are certainly mistaken, she said, but she continued, as a dying person,
I freely forgive them. She quote hoped her awful and untimely fate will be a solemn warning and caution to everyone, but more particularly to the youth, especially those of my own sex. There were three hangings on the day that Rachel was executed, including William Smith and William Dunigan. All three had been convicted and sentenced to death for highway robbery. Rachel was the final execution of the day and was
hanged at the Great Elm in Boston Commons. It's reported that there were thousands of bystanders on hand for the event, and it was reported that quote everyone present was ready for the morning's gruesome excitement. When Rachel's time came, she jumped out off the edge to her death without help. You made me wondering, as Rachel did. Was hanging really the punishment for allegedly stealing a bonnet? Yes? Actually, well it could be, so we'll do a really quick overview
of that. The Massachusetts Bay Colony Charter had previously been revoked by the King of England, and that meant that Massachusetts was totally free to establish its own laws based on court judgments and jury opinions. Additionally, by the end of the eighteenth century, the ruling class in Massachusetts believed there was a massive and unprecedented crime wave just occurring around them all the time, and their solution was to
be swift and merciless. They may have actually been exaggerating that crime problem, but their solution just the same was capital punishment, and this law could mean hanging for the theft of a bonnet. It could also, unfortunately permit the execution of any woman with a baby born outside of marriage to be hanged, while the man involved was almost
always exempt from punishment. The time and place is interesting here. Okay, we don't intend to gloss over the importance of the American Revolution, of course, but for the context of what we're talking about today, that's the setting for Rachel's story in Boston. So we're gonna talk just a little nip about the Revolution. Battles were fought from Quebec all the
way down to the Carolina's. Basically everyone along the Eastern seaboard was recovering from battle, either through participating or it just being part of their world. In Massachusetts, many residents have become stressed and distressed about any sort of lawlessness or crime. There was a lot going on in Massachusetts at the time, and in particular in Boston and the
surrounding area. The Siege of Boston, which began the American Revolutionary War, the Battle of Bunker Hill, the battles of Lexington and Conquered you know, these battles and all of these had just completely exhausted the population. To contextualize where Rachel's story and her execution fit in the larger area.
By this time, in Massachusetts, juris had hanged a hundred and twenty seven women over two hundred years, and that included famously women accused of being witches in the Salem witch Trials, which happened between six and six Though not all of the more than two hundred alleged witches were executed, that brief period marks a notable concentration of the total number of women who had been put to death for
crimes in the colony and in the state. The number of women hanged in Massachusetts after the witch trials and before Rachel Wall came along, dwindled for about a century. Rachel was not only the last woman hanged in Massachusetts, she also became a unique outlier, and that she had not been accused of being a witch and was one of the last that could claim that to be hanged there that is true. She died on Thursday October eight, sevent eighty nine, when she was twenty nine years old.
Word of her death was announced through various newspapers. In the plight of her life was memorialized as a woodcut illustration of her corpse dangling from the gallows while she lost her life for theft, at least on paper, we wonder if it sort of seems like she was really being tried for her life of piracy. Maybe maybe not. It's hard to determine the politics at hand and her trial.
We do know that in her final hours, Rachel went to her death asking for mercy on her soul, completing her confession with we quote and now into the hands of Almighty God, I commit my soul relying on his mercy through the merits and mediation of my redeemer, and die an unworthy member of the Presbyterian Church in the twenty nine year of my age. Alright, so Holly, I'm gonna come and meet you in the groggery, and I hope the grogory has a lot of nutmeg. Today the
gregory is actually nutmeg free. I'm sorry to disappoint you. You ran out, That's okay, but there is a little bit of autumnal fun going on. Well that's really what I want in thinking about this story and what might be a good way to honor Rachel. I wanted to kind of recognize that she was living in New England at a time when ciders and hard ciders were very popular.
But it's also I wanted to do a little extra autumnal twist, so because she did die in October, and because we're we're at that time of year ourselves, and because I always have autumn flavored things in my house year round anyway. So this is a cocktail called the Hanged Woman, and it is very simple and to my palette, dangerously delicious. You're gonna start with a champagne coupe or a flute, your preference. I prefer a coupe for this.
A splash of pumpkin syrup. If you want to measure it, I would say about a half an ounce, but I just kind of pour in a splash, and then it is three ounce of hard cider, and then you top it with three ounces of champagne. And you want a sweeter champagne. You don't want to really dry one for this. This is so stinking delicious. I don't even know what to do with myself, and I want to guzzle it, and that is not good to me. It would be
like a perfect little celebration toast drink um. I love a champagne cocktail anyway, but this one is shockingly good. I am not a hard cider drinker by nature. Cider is just not my jam boy. I like it in this iteration. Now, the thing that's nice about this is that it's really easy to do a one to one alcohol free version. So you just do a non alcoholic
cider and a bit of ginger ale. I would actually do like a sugar free or a low sugar ginger ale there um, so you don't get too cloying lee sweet, and keep the pumpkin syrup because that's that's easy, and then like sip away because it's real delicious. I mean, the non alcoho holly version would be great for like a kid's party, even if you wanted to like serve them something that felt fancy, you know. I mean, I remember when I was a kid, I always did the
like pretend cocktails. I think a lot of kids do. But you know, ideally you don't want to start your children drinking so um. Again, this is one that I'm going to make in large quantities for parties, but in both the mock tail version and the cocktail version, because yeah, I love the ones that you bring to the show that are clearly some of your favorites. You came on this morning and you were like, I love this drink, so like I knew that it was going to be
a good one. I do. I love it and it's we we have gotten in the habit of talking about my husband's reactions to drink, since he is not a drinker. He's a good litmus test. Yes, and he quite liked this one, So that's a shocking and delightful endorsement as a good sign. Did he drink both both versions? No, he only he only tried the cocktail version. Excellent, So I mean, I'm sure the mocktail version would be equally
delicious for him because it was equally delicious for me. Um. Yeah, Like I said, I'm gonna make a ton of these this fall because it's perfect. So hopefully you find a reason to celebrate and raise a glass, whether it is champagne and hard cider based or otherwise. We hope that this automo is treating you well. I want to thank everybody for once again spending time with us today, and we will meet you right back here with another pirate
next week. Criminalia is a production of Shonda Land Audio in partnership with I Heart Radio for more podcasts from Shonda land Audio. Please visit the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
