Fletcher Christian leads the mutiny against Captain Bligh on the 'HMS Bounty'.
Fletcher
Christian was born in Cumberland, England, on 25 September 1764. He
went to sea at the age of sixteen, and two years later he sailed aboard
HMS Cambridge where he met William Bligh for the first time. Bligh, born
on 9 September 1754, had also started his seagoing career at the age of
16, quickly rising through the officer ranks. Bligh and Christian were
very close during their early years together.
The 'HMS Bounty' sailed with a crew of 45 men from Spithead, England in
December 1787 under Captain William Bligh, bound for Tahiti. Their
mission was to collect breadfruit plants to be transplanted in the West
Indies as cheap food for the slaves. After collecting those plants,
Bounty was returning to England when, on the morning of 28 April 1789,
Fletcher Christian and part of the crew mutinied, taking over the ship,
and setting the Captain and 18 crew members adrift in the ship’s 23-foot
launch. Captain Bligh sailed nearly 6000km back to England, arriving
there on 14 March 1790, where he was initially court-martialed and
ultimately acquitted. The mutineers took HMS Bounty back to Tahiti, and
collected 6 Polynesian men and 12 women. They then continued on to
Pitcairn Island, arriving there on 15 January 1790. After burning the
ship they established a settlement and colony on Pitcairn Island that
still exists.
In 1808, Captain Mayhew Folger of the American sealing ship 'Topaz'
landed at Pitcairn Islands. By that stage, many of the mutineers had
succumbed to disease, suicide or been victims of murder. Of all the men,
both whites and Polynesians, only John Adams survived. Adams, by then a
changed man after his conversion to Christianity, went on to become the
respected leader on Pitcairn. He died on 5 March 1829, forty years
after the mutiny.
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