Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Captain Bligh's amazing voyage




1789 After 41 days at sea, Captain William Bligh (1754 - 1817) and 18* loyal crewmen arrived at the island of Timor after drifting 5,600 km following the mutiny on Bligh's ship HMS Bounty, when they were put to sea in a small boat with provisions sufficient to reach the most accessible ports, a sextant and a pocket watch, but no charts or compass.

Bligh’s seamanship and leadership qualities had kept all the men alive although beset by near starvation and extreme thirst. The only casualty was one crewman killed by hostile natives.

In 1792 Bligh returned to Tahiti, collected the breadfruit seedlings, which was his original purpose before the mutiny, and successfully brought them to the West Indies. He became governor of New South Wales in 1805. There he suffered another mutiny, this time the Rum Rebellion, and was imprisoned from 1808 to 1810.

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