The "Expulsion of Pirates" theme references the early eighteenth-century crackdown centered on Nassau, then one of the Caribbean's most notorious pirate havens. Woodes Rogers arrived as Royal Governor in 1718 with a royal pardon in one hand and a hanging order in the other — ten men were executed that September, effectively ending New Providence's decade as a freeport for the likes of Blackbeard and Charles Vane.
Rogers's own motto, *Expulsis Piratis Restituta Commercia* ("Pirates expelled, commerce restored"), later became the Bahamian national motto.
The "Expulsion of Pirates" theme references the early eighteenth-century crackdown centered on Nassau, then one of the Caribbean's most notorious pirate havens. Woodes Rogers arrived as Royal Governor in 1718 with a royal pardon in one hand and a hanging order in the other — ten men were executed that September, effectively ending New Providence's decade as a freeport for the likes of Blackbeard and Charles Vane.
Rogers's own motto, *Expulsis Piratis Restituta Commercia* ("Pirates expelled, commerce restored"), later became the Bahamian national motto.