Nicholas Brown (died 1726, first name also Nicolas) was an English pirate and guarda costa privateer who was active off the coast of Jamaica during the early 18th century.
[1][better source needed][a] Like several others, he soon returned to piracy, surrendering to the Spanish on Cuba before sailing in their service out of Trinidad.
[3] Governor Nicholas Laws of Jamaica wrote to Spanish magistrates in Trinidad in 1722 demanding “Satisfaction of you for so many notorious Robberies which your People have lately committed on the King's Subjects of this Island; particularly by those Traytors, Nicolas Brown and Christopher Winter, to whom you have given Protection.”[3] In 1723 he captured a British slave ship near Hispaniola with over 300 slaves aboard.
[4] He was finally caught and defeated in battle by pirate hunter and former schoolmate John Drudge in November 1726, dying of wounds sustained in the fight.
[5] Drudge had Brown's body decapitated and his head pickled in rum so he could collect the reward of £500 offered by the Jamaican government.