Pick up your copy of Joy Division: Closer at WHSmith today

The discovery of Captain Kidd's 300-year-old ship in the Caribbean could provide final proof that the Scottish privateer did not deserve to be hanged as a pirate and his rotting body left on public view.
The wreck of the fabled Quedagh Merchant has been located in 10ft waters off Catalina Island in the Dominican Republic, only miles from where Kidd left it when he sailed to Boston to try to clear his name in 1699.
“It would confirm that he was telling the truth,” said Richard Zacks, author of The Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd. “He has the reputation as a terrible fearsome pirate, when he considered himself an honourable privateer.”
The discovery of the Quedagh Merchant, a prize long-sought by treasure-hunters, was announced this week by a team from Indiana University after a tip-off from the owner of a nearby resort.
The ship's treasure of gold, silver, jewels and bales of silk had already been removed before it was scuttled in a river and set adrift, but the wreck contains about 26 cannons that were stacked in the hold.
“It's untouched. Nobody has looted it. Only the environment has touched it,” said Charles Beeker, the scuba-diving archaeologist who led the university expedition.
William Kidd earned a reputation as one of history's most notorious pirates because of his sensational trial and hanging at Execution Dock in Wapping, East London, on May 23, 1701.
During the execution, the hangman's rope broke and Kidd was hanged a second time. As was customary, his body was left for three tides of the Thames before it was put on display in an iron cage at Tilbery Point as a warning to others.
However, recent research suggests that Kidd was wrongly convicted of piracy, and was in fact an authorised privateer. He was commissioned as a privateer in 1696 in a letter of marque signed by the king, with authority to seize ships belonging to the enemy French.
Sailing in the Indian Ocean in January 1698, he captured the 500-ton Quedagh Merchant, a French-registered Armenian ship carrying goods part-owned by a minister at the court of the Indian Grand Moghul, who complained to the East India Company that it was failing to protect his ships.
Kidd sailed the Quedagh Merchant to Madagascar, exchanging it for his leaky ship, the Adventure Galley.
After his men mutinied, Kidd sailed the Quedagh Merchant to the Caribbean, where he discovered he was a wanted man. He loaded 75lbs of gold, 150lbs of silver and 40 bales of silk on to a smaller ship and sailed to Boston to plead his case — and was promptly arrested.
Kidd left the Quedagh Merchant in the hands of a merchant called Henry Bolton, but the vessel was plundered and set ablaze and allowed to drift for 3 nautical miles to where it now lies below the waves.
After inspecting the wreck, Mr Beeker said said that it appeared to be a ship that was scuttled. Particularly significant are the barnacled cannons, which he believed were stacked in the hold when Kidd moved from the Adventure Galley to the Quedagh Merchant. “What you have is cannon stacked in the cargo hold in opposite directions,” he said. “This was not a wreck. There are no deployed cannons.”
There is also an empty area in the middle of the hold that might have contained 70 tons of sugar that was part of the ship's cargo.
“As an archaeologist, I cannot say conclusively that it's Captain Kidd's ship, but as a betting man, I am betting on the ship,” Mr Beeker said. “The age of it is right; the stacking of the cannons; the missing section where the sugar may have been; no deployed cannons. Everything is adding up right. It's his ship.”
He said that the wreck supported Kidd's protestations of innocence. “I think he left a perfectly good ship there waiting to bring it in and satisfy his investors, and he got it under the French flag. So why is he a pirate?,” he said.
Mr Zacks, the historian, said that three years ago he went his own expedition in search of the Quedagh Merchant. Following eyewitness descriptions of the ship's scuttling, he searched within 500 yards of where the vessel was found.
While helping the Indiana University team, he snorkelled down to the wreck of the ship and hugged a cannon. “After three-and-a-half years of research in libraries, I actually got to touch one of the cannons,” he said in near-disbelief.
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
2007
£30,000
2006
£14,337
2008
£39,937
Great car insurance deals online
c.£75,000
GlosFirstmeansbusiness
Gloucestershire
Competitive package
Npower
Midlands
£
£32,795 - £41,545
Universitry of Southampton
Southampton
Competitive Package
Npower
West Midlands
1 & 2 Bed apartments
From £249,995
Great Investment, River Views
Great Dubai Investment Opportunities
from £89,950
low-cost ownership homes in London
Multi–Centre 9 Nights
From only £925pp
View thousands of properties online with your Vacation Rental People
£POA
List your property with two leading travel websites
£POA
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Globrix Property Search - find property for sale and rent in the UK. Milkround Job Search - for graduate careers in the UK. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
As the Labour government likes to have enquiries into anything, so as to keep their cronies selected financially rewarded, I expect they will have a public enquiry, costing millions, to estabilsh whether or not Kidd was a pirate.
Or maybe an appeals court will review the evidence and find his conviction "unsafe".
Then Kidd may be given a free pardon in due course, and his next of kin given compensation.
P.Nobleza, Houston, USA