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OW-012 Open-boat ordeal · South Pacific 1789

The Mutiny on the Bounty — Cast adrift, Bligh navigated 3,600 miles to safety

Lost
1 of 19 in the launch
Voyage
Tofua to Timor, 1789
Ended
Reached Kupang, 14 Jun 1789
Status
Survived

Summary

On 28 April 1789, in the South Pacific about 30 nautical miles south of the island of Tofua, mutineers aboard HMS Bounty led by acting-lieutenant Fletcher Christian seized the ship from her commander, Lieutenant William Bligh, and set him and eighteen loyal men adrift in the ship's 23-foot launch. The boat was dangerously overloaded, with only inches of freeboard, and carried little food, a small store of water, no chart of the seas ahead, and only a quadrant, a compass and Bligh's seamanship to navigate by. Over the following weeks the launch crossed roughly 3,600 nautical miles of open ocean to the Dutch settlement of Kupang on Timor, arriving on 14 June 1789. All but one of the nineteen survived the boat voyage itself — a feat of navigation and command still ranked among the greatest in maritime history.

The Bounty had sailed from England in late 1787 to carry breadfruit plants from Tahiti to the West Indies. After five months at Tahiti, where the crew settled into an easy island life, the return to shipboard discipline under a sharp-tongued commander curdled into rebellion within weeks of departure. The mutiny was not a battle but a sudden, near-bloodless seizure at dawn. Bligh and his men were given the launch, some provisions, and their lives, and cast loose to fend for themselves in a sea where the only friendly port lay thousands of miles to the west.

The single death came early and ashore. At Tofua, where the launch first put in to gather food and water, islanders attacked the landing party; the quartermaster John Norton was stoned to death on the beach as the others scrambled off. After that, Bligh resolved to risk no more hostile islands and ran straight for Timor, holding his starving men to a regime of weighed crumbs and measured water, sailing through storms and burning sun. The voyage is remembered as a triumph, but it was a triumph of grim discipline over near-certain death, and several of the survivors, worn out by the ordeal, died of illness soon after reaching the Dutch East Indies.

Timeline

23 Dec 1787
Departure from England
HMS Bounty, under Lieutenant William Bligh, finally cleared Spithead for Tahiti to collect breadfruit, after weeks held back by contrary winds.
26 Oct 1788
Arrival at Tahiti
The Bounty anchored in Matavai Bay; the crew spent about five months ashore collecting and nursing breadfruit plants.
4 Apr 1789
Sailing for home
The ship left Tahiti with its cargo of plants, bound westward for the West Indies by way of the Endeavour Strait.
28 Apr 1789
The mutiny
About 30 nautical miles south of Tofua, Fletcher Christian and his followers seized the ship and set Bligh and 18 men adrift in the 23-foot launch.
2 May 1789
Death at Tofua
The launch landed for supplies; islanders attacked, and quartermaster John Norton was stoned to death, the only death of the boat voyage.
early May 1789
The run for Timor
Bligh resolved to avoid all hostile islands and steer directly for the Dutch settlement at Kupang, rationing his men to a few ounces of bread and water a day.
May 1789
Storms and exposure
The overloaded launch endured weeks of gales, rain and burning heat with inches of freeboard, bailing constantly to stay afloat.
28 May 1789
The Great Barrier Reef
The boat found a passage through the reef and reached the Australian coast, where the men rested and gathered food before the final leg.
14 Jun 1789
Arrival at Kupang
The launch reached Kupang on Timor after about 3,600 nautical miles, the surviving 18 emaciated but alive.
late 1789
Deaths in the Indies
Several survivors, broken by the ordeal, died of fever and illness at Kupang and Batavia before reaching home.
1790
Pitcairn settled
Christian's mutineers, after returning to Tahiti, hid on remote Pitcairn Island, burned the Bounty, and were not found for years.
1792
The court-martial
Mutineers captured at Tahiti were tried in England; three were hanged, others pardoned or acquitted, while Bligh was cleared and his command vindicated.

The ship, the island, and the breaking of discipline

HMS Bounty was a small, converted merchant vessel given a single botanical task: to carry breadfruit seedlings from Tahiti to the British sugar colonies of the West Indies, where the cheap fruit was meant to feed enslaved laborers. Bligh, a gifted navigator who had sailed with Cook, commanded a crew of about forty-five with no marine guard and only one commissioned officer — himself. The long outward passage was hard, including a battering attempt to round Cape Horn that forced him to turn east instead, but the ship reached Tahiti intact in October 1788.

The five months at Tahiti were the undoing of the expedition's discipline. Waiting for the breadfruit to be ready for transport, the men lived ashore among the islanders, formed attachments, and slackened into a freedom no naval crew was meant to know. When the Bounty sailed in April 1789, the return to confinement, hard work and Bligh's habit of lacerating his officers with his tongue proved intolerable to some. Bligh was not the sadistic flogger of later legend — by the standards of the age his use of the lash was moderate — but his contempt and public abuse, aimed especially at Fletcher Christian, his protégé and now master's mate, drove Christian toward a breaking point within three weeks of leaving the island.

The seizure and the launch

At dawn on 28 April, Christian and a handful of armed men entered Bligh's cabin, bound him, and brought him on deck in his nightshirt. The mutiny spread quickly; much of the crew was passive, and the seizure was accomplished almost without bloodshed. Christian's faction took the ship. Bligh and those who stood with him, or whom the boat could hold, were ordered into the Bounty's 23-foot launch — nineteen men crammed into a craft built for about ten, leaving only seven inches of freeboard between them and the sea. They were given a quadrant and compass, some salt pork, bread and water, a few cutlasses, and cast off.

What they were not given was any real prospect of survival. The nearest European outpost was the Dutch settlement at Kupang on Timor, more than 3,000 nautical miles to the west across seas studded with reefs and peopled by islanders who had no reason to be friendly. The boat had no chart for most of that distance and no weapons to speak of for defense. By every ordinary expectation the men in the launch were already dead; the mutineers, in not killing them outright, had simply chosen a slower and more deniable end. That the launch reached Timor at all is the reason the episode is remembered as seamanship rather than murder.

The voyage that should not have succeeded

The launch first ran for Tofua, the nearest land, to gather food and water before the long passage. There the only death of the boat voyage occurred: islanders, sensing the men's weakness, attacked the beach party, and quartermaster John Norton was stoned to death as the others fought their way back to the boat. The lesson was brutal and clear, and Bligh drew it absolutely. He would land at no more inhabited islands. He would drive straight for Timor and rely on rationing and navigation alone.

The regime he imposed was merciless because it had to be. Each man received a few weighed ounces of bread and a measured ration of water a day, supplemented by the rare seabird or fish, eaten raw and shared by the macabre democracy of "who shall have this?" with a man turned away so he could not see the portions. The launch crossed weeks of open Pacific in storms that kept the men bailing for their lives and in calms that scorched them, never more than inches above the waves. Bligh navigated by dead reckoning, his quadrant, and a memory of these waters, keeping a meticulous log and a fierce hold on order. After about three and a half thousand miles, the launch threaded the Great Barrier Reef, touched the Australian coast to recover, and finally reached Kupang on 14 June 1789. The eighteen who stepped ashore were skeletal but alive. The triumph was real, and it was also costly: several of the survivors, their strength spent, died of fever at Kupang and at Batavia before they could be carried home to England.

The Five Factors

01
Discipline eroded by a long idyll
Five months of island freedom at Tahiti dissolved the crew's tolerance for naval confinement, so that the return to discipline felt like oppression. Long periods of relaxed control make the reimposition of rigor dangerous; the harder the contrast, the greater the risk of revolt.
02
Command by humiliation
Bligh's competence was not in question, but his habit of publicly demeaning his officers, Christian above all, corroded loyalty until it snapped. Authority that relies on contempt rather than respect can hold a crew in calm and lose it under strain; the manner of command matters as much as its substance.
03
A craft loaded past its margin
Nineteen men in a boat meant for ten, with seven inches of freeboard, began the voyage already beyond the limits of the hull. Operating a vessel grossly over its safe capacity removes all reserve against weather; survival then depends on conditions never once exceeding the razor-thin margin.
04
Rationing as the instrument of survival
Bligh's refusal to let hunger dictate consumption — weighing crumbs, measuring water, enforcing fairness — is what stretched meager stores across thousands of miles. Disciplined rationing, imposed early and held without exception, is often the single decisive factor in long survival ordeals.
05
The decision to refuse the tempting shore
After Norton's death at Tofua, Bligh chose the longer, harder, certain-seeming path of open ocean over the nearer comfort and lethal risk of inhabited islands. Declining the seductive shortcut in favor of the route you can control is frequently what separates the survivors from the lost.

Aftermath

Of the nineteen men set adrift, eighteen survived the boat voyage; only Norton, killed at Tofua, died at sea. Several more succumbed to illness in the Dutch East Indies, worn past recovery, before the remnant reached England in 1790. Bligh was court-martialled for the loss of his ship, as the law required, and honourably acquitted; the voyage of the launch was already being recognised as an extraordinary feat, and his career continued. He later completed the breadfruit mission on a second voyage.

The mutineers scattered. Christian and a small band, with Tahitian men and women, hid on remote Pitcairn Island, burned the Bounty to avoid detection, and descended into violence among themselves; their tiny community was not discovered for years, and their descendants live on Pitcairn still. Others who had stayed at Tahiti were hunted down by HMS Pandora, which itself wrecked on the Great Barrier Reef during the return, drowning several prisoners. At the 1792 court-martial three mutineers were hanged. The story passed swiftly into legend, and the legend long flattened Bligh into a tyrant and Christian into a romantic hero. The documented record is more exact: a brilliant, abrasive navigator lost his ship to a mutiny his own conduct helped provoke, and then saved the lives of almost every man cast out with him by a passage of seamanship that has rarely been equalled.

Lessons

  1. Reimpose discipline gradually after a long relaxation; the sharper the contrast, the greater the danger of revolt.
  2. Lead by respect, not humiliation; technical competence does not buy loyalty if the manner of command destroys it.
  3. Never load a vessel or a plan past its safe margin and expect conditions to stay perfect; reserve capacity is what survives the storm.
  4. Impose rationing early and enforce it without exception; in a long ordeal, disciplined supply often matters more than the size of the supply.
  5. Refuse the tempting shortcut when its risk is uncontrolled; the longer route you can govern beats the nearer one you cannot.

References