Friday, March 6, 2026
If you support the work of Guyana Graphic click here to : DONATE
HomeA bullet hole left by pirates, in Bartica (Guyana)

A bullet hole left by pirates, in Bartica (Guyana)

Four hundred years ago, the river Essequibo was regularly raided by pirates, mostly English and French freebooters, plundering the Dutch. Occasionally, they return.

Four hundred years ago, the river Essequibo was regularly raided by pirates, mostly English and French freebooters, plundering the Dutch. Occasionally, they return.

When I was last in Bartica, a gold mining town, I visited the wharf. It was a large barn of a place, full of reflections and smelling of brine. The only person around was an old Indian guard, in a uniform of crumpled claret. He was standing on the wooden stelling, staring into the water. It was here, six months earlier, that about 20 water-thieves had clambered ashore; masked, camouflaged and clattering with guns. First, they rounded up the stevedores, and then they forced them onto the decking, and shot them where they lay.

‘Just here,’ said the Indian, ‘Five men dead.’ 

The divots in the timber were still ragged and fresh.

‘But what did the killers want?’

The guard shrugged. ‘They just goes robbing round the town …’

I followed the bullet-holes (see photo) out through the wharf into the streets beyond. After shredding the police post, the pirates had stolen a truck, and ridden around blasting at will. For over an hour, Bartica was forced underground, whilst the raiders toured above.

But were they really just robbers? No-one seemed to know. One man told me they were after those that ran this town, the big-shots like ‘Mango man’ and ‘Vulture’. But they never found them, and nor was very much stolen. In the end, eleven people died, and their killers vanished into nothing. Perhaps it was all a warning, or just a blast from the past.

Related Articles

Cheddi Jagan International Airport

Contact Information for Cheddi Jagan International Airport

Address: Timehri, Guyana

Call: +592 261 2281

Call: +592 699 9074

Call: +592 600 7022

Email: cjiac@cjairport-gy.com https://cjairport-gy.com/contact-us/

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Debra K. Lawrence on Hotels you’ll never forget
Leith Yearwood on Snake Cut
Georgina Lambert-Calvert on What has happened to some of our young folks
Caribbean C Live on John Gimlette’s Voyages
Rev. Adunnola Waterman-French on GAC 2012 Reunion – A perfect Take-off
Georgina Lambert-Calvert on Guyana Emancipation (Freedom) Day History
Althea Garraway on Tapir
Open chat
Hello
Can we help you?