Jean Hamlin was a French pirate active in the Caribbean and off the coast of Africa. He was often associated with St. Thomas' pirate-friendly Governor Adolph Esmit.
History
Hamlin began his career in 1682, sailing from Jamaica in a small sloop loaded with 120 men, with which he took the frigate La Trompeuse, which itself had changed hands between a number of pirates. He quickly looted eighteen Jamaican ships, causing Jamaica's Governor Thomas Lynch to send two ships after him. The first missed him; the second, HMS Guernsey, found Hamlin but was outpaced by the freshly careenedTrompeuse, which "sailed three feet to his one." Lynch recruited retired pirate turned pirate-hunter John Coxon to bring in Hamlin; Coxon was unsuccessful, so Lynch tried hiring buccaneer Jan "Yankey" Willems, who refused even to look for Hamlin. With so much pressure on his operations, Hamlin left his hideout at Île-à-Vache and sailed to St. Thomas where he was sheltered by Danish Governor Adolph Esmit. Early in 1683 he began attacking English ships near Hispaniola, returning to St. Thomas where Esmit helped him sell off his plunder. He sailed for Sierra Leone off the African coast in May, capturing seventeen Dutch and English vessels. Some of his crew split off under a Captain Morgan, taking a prize ship with them; Hamlin returned to St. Thomas. Hamlin had reportedly been very cruel to the crews of captured ships, leading Nevis' Governor William Stapleton to call him "John Hamlin, the arch murderer and torturer." The English found him there in late 1683 and HMS Francis attacked. They were fired on not only by the 32-gun Trompeuse but by the Danish fort, which infuriated the English. Finally the English captured and burned Trompeuse, which exploded and set fire to another vessel left in the harbor. Hamlin escaped and Esmit protected him at Charlotte Amalie yet again. Hamlin formed a new crew late in 1684 for his ship La Nouvelle Trompeuse, which had been fitted out in New England. Esmit was removed from his post by exasperated Danish officials in October 1684, so Hamlin left for his old refuge at Île-à-Vache, and then to Brazil. There are few records of his subsequent activities, though almost fifty of his former crew signed aboard the ships of buccaneer Jacob Evertson and privateer Jan Willems, who had previously refused to hunt down Hamlin. After Willems and Evertson died in early 1688, their remaining crew sailed with Captain Peterson. The original Trompeuse which burned at St. Thomas was reportedly found by divers in 1990 but its authenticity is disputed. Legends persist that Hamlin's loot – "treasure room was full of silver … over 24,000 pounds there" – is still aboard.