Notes
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The Plough Boy Journals

The Journals and Associated Documents

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19th Century American Whaling

Bonin Islands

Pitcairn's Island

Dictionaries & Glossaries

Ashley's Glossary of
Whaling Terms

Dana's Dictionary of
Sea Terms

THE CALCUTTA JOURNAL.

OR

Political, Commercial, and Literary Gazette.


Vol. IV]                        TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1819.                        [No. 133.

Published Daily, with the exception of Mondays, – and accompanied with occasional Engravings, illustrative of Antiquities, Science, and the Arts, – at a Subscription price of Eight Rupees per Month, and Half a Rupee for each Plate issued.

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DESCENDANTS OF THE BOUNTY'S CREW, ON
PITCAIRN'S ISLAND.


      Captain Henderson, of the Ship Hercules, who had communication with the Descendants of the Crew of the Ship Bounty, on Pitcairn's Island, in his late voyage to South America, being about to return to that country, and intending to call again at Pitcairn's Island. has stated that a few Iron Tools for mechanical labours, and some of the ordinary Implements of Agriculture, would be of important service to those people; and has offered to take charge of any articles that may be confided to him for that purpose.

      Any philanthropic Gentlemen who may be disposed to aid this benevolent work by their contributions are respectfully informed that any sums for that purpose will be received by Mr. Mathew Smith, Clive Street, who will undertake the task of expending it in the best manner, and of purchasing with it such Tools and Agricultural Implements as Captain Henderson may deem most likely to be of service to those Islanders, for whose benefit they are intended.

      As it will be as desirable to furnish the means of improving the minds of these Islanders as to provide them with the materials for ameliorating their condition generally, it is suggested that donations of elementary books in English would be exceedingly useful and acceptable for this purpose; and if sent to Mr. Smith's, as above, will be delivered to Captain Henderson, and confided to his care and judgement for distribution.


Narrative.


      The Advertisement which we have taken from its usual place, to affix at the head of our Journal of to-day, has already been before the Public, without having attracted perhaps that notice which the benevolent and important object it is intended to effect really deserves.

      We ate satisfied, however, that nothing more is necessary to interest the best feelings of every British bosom, in behalf of the Islanders of Pitcairn, than a simple recital of their history; and we have been fortunate enough to obtain from one of the Numbers of the Naval Chronicle, all the leading facts known concerning them, and present these to our readers as the best claims upon their bounty.

      We may add, that from the same authority we learn that the recital of their story excited the most lively interest in England when it was first made known, and that there as well as here the first suggestion which arose out of it, was the propriety of furnishing them with implements of husbandry and of useful handicrafts, animals for breeding, seeds for cultivation, elementary books for reading, paper, &c. for writing, and in short, those articles most obviously suited to their peculiar wants, and most likely to contribute to their comfort, to improve their minds, and to add to their present and future happiness.

      The following are the leading particulars detailed of this singular, and at present highly interesting little colony: –

      It is well known that in the year 1782[sic], his Majesty's armed ship the Bounty, while employed in conveying the bread-fruit tree from Otaheite to the West Indies, was run away with by her men, and the captain and some of his officers put on board a boat, which, after a passage of 1200 leagues, providentially arrived at a Dutch settlement on the island of Timor. The mutineers, 25 in number, were supposed, from some expressions which escaped them, to have made sail towards Otaheite. As soon as this circumstance was made known to the Admiralty, Captain Edwards was ordered to proceed in the Pandora to that island, and endeavour to discover and bring to England the Bounty, with such of the crew as he might be able to secure. On his arrival, March 1791, at Matavai-bay, in Otaheite, four of the mutineers came voluntarily on board the Pandora to surrender themselves; and from information given by them, ten others (the whole number alive upon the island) were in the course of a few days taken; and, with the exception of four, who perished in the wreck of the Pandora, near Endeavour Straight, conveyed to England for trial before a court-martial, which adjudged six of them to suffer death, and acquitted the other four.

      From the accounts given by these men, as well as from some documents that were preserved, it appeared, that as soon as Lieutenant Bligh had been driven from the ship, the 25 mutineers proceeded with her to Toobouai, where they proposed to settle; but the place being found to hold out little encouragement, they returned to Otaheite, and having there laid in a large supply of stock, they once more took their departure for Toobouai, carrying with them eight men, nine women, and seven boys, natives of Otaheite.

      They commenced on their second arrival the building of a fort; but by divisions among themselves, and quarrels with the natives, the design was abandoned. Christian, the leader, also very soon discovered that his authority over his accomplices was at an end; he therefore proposed that they should return to Otaheite; that as many as chose it should be put on shore at that island, and that the rest should proceed in the ship to any other place they might think proper. Accordingly they once more put to sea, and reached Matavai, 20th Sept. 1789.

      Here 16 of the 25 desired to be landed, 14 of whom, as already mentioned, were taken on board the Pandora; of the other two, as reported by Coleman (the first who surrendered himself to Captain Edwards), one had been made a Chief, killed his companion, and was shortly afterwards murdered himself by the natives.

      Christian, with the remaining eight of the mutineers, having taken on board several of the natives of Otaheite, the greater part women, put to sea 21st Sept. 1789; in the morn-

163 CALCUTTA JOURNAL. 164

ing the ship was discovered from Point Venus, steering in a north-westerly direction; and here terminate the accounts given by the mutineers who were either taken or surrendered themselves at Matavai-bay. They stated, however, that Christian, on the night of his departure, was heard to declare, that he should seek for some uninhabited island, and, having established his party, break up the ship; but all endeavours of Captain Edwards to gain intelligence either of the ship or her crew, at any of the numerous islands visited by the Pandora, failed.

      From this period, no information respecting Christian or his companions reached England for 20 years; when, about the beginning of 1809, Sir Sidney Smith, then commander-in-chief on the Brazil station, transmitted to the Admiralty a paper, which he had received from Lieutenant Fitzmaurice, purporting to be an "Extract from the log-book of Captain Folger, of the American ship Topaz," and dated "Valparaiso, 10th October, 1808."

      About the commencement of the year 1813, Rear-admiral Hotham, when cruising off New London, received a letter, addressed to the Lords of the Admiralty, of which the following is a copy, together with the azimuth compass, to which it refers: –

Nantucket, March 1, 1813.     
"My Lords,

      "The remarkable circumstance which took place on my last voyage to the Pacific Ocean, will, I trust, plead my apology for addressing your Lordships at this time. In February, 1818[sic], I touched at Pitcairn's Island, in lat. 25° 2' S. lon. 130° W. from Greenwich*. My principal object was, to procure seal-skins for the China market; and, from the account given of the island in Captain Carteret's voyage, I supposed it was uninhabited; but, on approaching the shore in my boat, I was met by three young men in a double canoe, with a present, consisting of some fruit and a hog. They spoke to me in the English language, and informed me that they were born on the island, and their father was an Englishman, who had sailed with Captain Bligh.

      "After discoursing with them a short time, I landed with them, and found an Englishman, of the name of Alexander Smith, who informed me that he was one of the Bounty's crew, and that after putting Captain Bligh in the boat, with half the ship's company, they returned to Otaheite, where part of their crew chose to tarry; but Mr. Christian, with eight others, including himself, preferred going to a more remote place; and, after making a short stay at Otaheite, where they took wives and six men servants, they proceeded to Pitcairn's island, where they destroyed the ship, after taking every thing out of her which they thought would be useful to them. About six years after they landed at this place, their servants attacked and killed all the English, excepting the informant, and he was severely wounded. The same night, the Otaheitean widows arose and murdered all their countrymen, leaving Smith with the widows and children, where he had resided ever since without being resisted.

      "I remained but a short time on this island, and on leaving it, Smith presented to me a time-piece, and an azimuth compass, which he told me belonged to the Bounty. The time-keeper was taken from me by the governor of the island of Juan Fernandez, after I had it in my possession about six weeks. The compass I put in repair on board my ship, and made use of it on my homeward passage, since which a new card has been put to it by an instrument-maker in Boston. I now forward it to your Lordships, thinking there will be a kind of satisfaction in receiving it, merely from the extraordinary circumstances attending it.

Mayhew Folger.

      Nearly about the same time, a further account of these interesting people was received from Vice-admiral Dixon, in a letter addressed to him by Sir Thomas Staines, of his Majesty's ship Briton, of which the following is a copy: –

Briton, Valparaiso, Oct. 18, 1814.     

Sir,

      "I have the honour to inform you, that on my passage from the Marquesas islands to this port, on the morning of 17th September, I fell in with an island where none is laid down in the Admiralty, or other charts, according to several chronometers of the Briton and Tagus. I therefore hove-to until day-light, and then closed to ascertain whether it was inhabited, which I soon discovered it to be, and to my great astonishment, found that every individual on the island (40 in number) spoke very good English. They proved to be the descendants of the deluded crew of the Bounty, which, from Otaheite, proceeded to the abovementioned island, where the ship was burnt.

      Christian appeared to have been the leader and the sole cause of the mutiny in that ship. A venerable old man, named John Adams, is the only surviving Englishman of those who last quitted Otaheite in her, and whose exemplary conduct and fatherly care of the whole little colony, could not but command admiration. The pious manner in which all those born in this island have been reared, the correct sense of religion which has been instilled into their young minds by this old man, has given him the pre-eminence over the whole of them, to whom they look up as the father of the whole and one family.

      A son of Christian was the first-born on the island, now about 25 years of age (named Thursday-October-Christian); the elder Christian fell a sacrifice to the jealousy of an Otaheitean man, within three or four years after their arrival on the island. They were accompanied thither by six Otaheitean men, and twelve women; the former were all swept away by desperate contentions between them and the Englishmen, and five of the latter have died at different periods, leaving at present only one man and several women of the original settlers.

      "The island must undoubtedly be that called Pitcairn's, although erroneously laid down in the charts. We had the meridian sun close to it, which gave us 25° 4' S. lat. and 130° 25' W. long. by chronometers of the Briton and Tagus.

      It is abundant in yams, plantains, hogs, goats, and fowls, but affords no shelter for a ship or vessel of any description; neither could a ship water there without great difficulty.

      I cannot refrain from offering my opinion, that it is well worthy the attention of our laudable religious societies, particularly that for propagating the Christian Religion, the whole of the inhabitants speaking the Otaheitean tongue as well as English.

      During the whole of the time they have been on the island, only one vessel has ever communicated with them, which took place about six years since, by an American ship called the Topaz, of Boston, Mayhew Folger, master.

      The island is completely iron-bound with rocky shores, and landing in boats at all times difficult, although safe to approach within a short distance in a ship.

T. Staines.

      We have been favoured with some further particulars of this singular society, which, we doubt not, will interest our readers as much as they have ourselves. As the real position of the island was ascertained to be so far distant from that in which it is usually laid down in the charts, and as the captains of the Briton and Tagus seem to have still considered it as uninhabited, they were not a little surprised, on approaching its shores, to behold plantations regularly laid out, and huts or houses more neatly constructed than those on the Marquesas islands. When about two miles from the shore, some natives


      * In the Charts, where it is called La Incarnaçion or Pitcairn's island, it is laid down in about the same latitude, but in longitude 115°[sic]] 0' W. of Greenwich.

165 JULY 13, 1819. 166

were observed bringing down their canoes on their shoulders, dashing through a heavy surf, and paddling off to the ships; but their astonishment was unbounded, on hearing one of them, on approaching the ship, call out in the English language, "Won't you heave us a rope, now?"

      "The first man who got on board the Briton soon proved who they were. His name, he said, was Thursday-October-Christian, the first-born on the island. He was then about 25 years of age, and is described as being a fine young man, about six feet high, his hair deep black, his countenance open and interesting, of a brownish cast, but free from that mixture of a reddish tint, which prevails on the Pacific Islands; his only dress was a piece of cloth round his loins, and a straw hat, ornamented with the black feathers of the domestic fowl. – "With a great share of good humour," says Captain Pipon, "we were glad to trace in his benevolent countenance all the features of an honest English face; and I must confess, I could not survey this interesting person without feelings of tenderness and compassion." His companion was named George Young, a fine youth, about 18.

      If the astonishment of the captains was great on hearing their first salutation in English, their surprise and interest were not a little increased on Sir Thomas Staines taking the youths below, and setting before them something to eat; when one of them rose up, and placing his hands together in a posture of devotion, distinctly repeated, and in a pleasing tone and manner – "For what we are going to receive, the Lord make us truly thankful." They expressed great surprise on seeing a cow on board the Briton, and were in doubt whether she was a great goat or a horned sow.

      The two captains of his Majesty's ships accompanied these young men on shore. With some difficulty, and a good wetting, and with the assistance of their conductors, they accomplished a landing through the surf, and were soon after met by John Adams, a man between 50 and 60, who conducted them to his house. His wife accompanied him, a very old lady, blind with age. He was at first alarmed, lest the visit was to apprehend him. But on being told that they were perfectly ignorant of his existence, he was relieved from his anxiety. Being once assured that this visit was of a peaceable nature, it is impossible to describe the joy these poor people manifested, on seeing those whom they were pleased to consider as their countrymen. Yams, cocoa-nuts, and other fruits, with fine fresh eggs, were laid before them; and the old man would have killed and dressed a hog for his visitors, but time would not allow them to partake of his intended feast.

      This interesting new colony, it seemed, now consisted of about 46 persons, mostly grown up young people, besides a number of infants. The young men, all born on the island, were very athletic, and of the finest forms – their countenances open and pleasing, indicating much benevolence and goodness of heart; but the young women were objects of particular admiration, tall, robust, and beautifully formed, their faces beaming with smiles and unruffled good humour, but wearing a degree of modesty and bashfulness that would do honour to the most virtuous nation on earth; their teeth, like ivory, were regular and beautiful, without a single exception; and all of them, both male and female, had the most marked English features.

      The clothing of the young females consisted of a piece of linen reaching from the waist to the knees, and generally a sort of mantle thrown loosely over the shoulders, and hanging as low as the ancles; but this covering appeared to be intended chiefly as a protection against the sun and the weather, as it was frequently laid aside – and then the upper part of the body was entirely exposed, and it is not possible to conceive more beautiful forms than they exhibited. They sometimes wreath caps or bonnets for the head, in the most tasteful manner, to protect the face from the rays of the sun; and though, as Captain Pipon observes, they have only had the instruction of the Otaheitean mothers, "our dress-makers in London would be delighed[sic] with the simplicity, and yet elegant taste, of these untaught females."

      "Their native modesty, assisted by a proper sense of religion and morality, instilled into their youthful minds by John Adams, has hitherto preserved these interesting people perfectly chaste, and free from all kinds of debauchery. Adams assured the visitors, that since Christian's death there had not been a single instance of any young woman proving unchaste, nor any attempt at seduction on the part of the men. They all labour while young in the cultivation of the ground; and when possessed of a sufficient quantity of cleared land and of stock to maintain a family, they are allowed to marry, but always with the consent of Adams, who unites them by a sort of marriage-ceremony of his own.

      The greatest harmony prevails in this little society; their only quarrels, and these rarely happened, being, according to their own expression, "quarrels of the mouth;" they are honest in their dealings, which consist of bartering different articles for mutual accommodation. Their habitations are extremely neat. The little village of Pitcairn forms a pretty square, the houses at the upper end of which are occupied by the patriarch, John Adams, and his family, consisting of his old blind wife, and three daughters, from 15 to 18 years of age, and a boy of 11; a daughter of his wife by a former husband, and a son-in-law. On the opposite side is the dwelling of Thursday-October-Christian; and in the centre is a smooth verdant lawn, on which the poultry are let loose, fenced in so as to prevent the intrusion of the domestic quadrupeds.

      All that was done was obviously undertaken on a settled plan, unlike to any thing to be met with on the other islands. In their houses, too, they had a good deal of decent furniture, consisting of beds laid upon bedsteads, with neat covering; they had also tables, and large chests to contain their valuables and clothing, which is made from the bark of a certain tree prepared chiefly by the elder Otaheitean females. Adams's house consisted of two rooms, and the windows had shutters to close at night. The younger part of the females are, as before stated, employed with their brothers, under the direction of their common father, Adams, in the culture of the ground, which produced cocoa-nuts, bananas, bread-fruit tree, yams, sweet potatoes, and turnips. They have also plenty of hogs, and goats. The woods abound with a species of wild hog, and the coasts of the island with several kinds of good fish.

      Their agricultural implements are made by themselves, from the iron supplied by the Bounty, which, with great labour, they beat out into spades, hatchets, &c. This was not all. The good old man kept a regular journal, in which was entered the nature and quantity of work performed by each family, what each had received, and what was due on account: – There was, it seems, besides private property, a sort of general stock, out of which articles were issued on account of the several members of the community; and for mutual accommodation, exchanges of one kind of provision for another were very frequent, as salt for fresh provisions, vegetables and fruit for poultry, fish, &c.; also, when the stores of one family were low, or wholly expended, a fresh supply was raised from another, or out of the general stock, to be repaid when circumstances were more favourable; all of which were carefully noted down in Adams's journal.

      But what was most gratifying of all to the visitors, was the simple and unaffected manner in which they returned thanks to the Almighty for the many blessings they enjoyed. They never failed to say grace before and after meals, to pray every morning at sun-rise, and they frequently repeated the Lord's Prayer and the Creed. "It was truly pleasing," says Captain

167 CALCUTTA JOURNAL. 168

Pipon, "to see these poor people so well disposed to listen so attentively to moral instruction, to believe in the attributes of God, and to place their reliance on Divine goodness." The day on which the two captains landed was Saturday, 17th Sept.; but by John Adams's account it was Sunday the 18th, and they were keeping the Sabbath by making it a day of rest and of prayer. – This was occasioned by the Bounty having proceeded thither by the eastern route, and our frigates having gone to the westward; and the Topaz found them right according to his own reckoning, she having also approached the island from the eastward. Every ship from Europe proceeding to Pitcairn's island round the Cape of Good Hope, will find them a day later – as those who approach them round Cape Horn, a day in advance; as was the case with Captain Folger, and Captains Sir T. Staines and Pipon.

      The visit of the Topaz is, of course, a notable circumstance, marked down in Adams's journal. The first ship descried off the island was on 27th December, 1795; but as she did not approach the land, they could not make out to what nation she belonged. A second appeared some time after, but did not attempt to communicate with them. A third came sufficiently near to see the natives and their habitations, but did not attempt to send a boat on shore; which is the less surprising, considering the uniform ruggedness of the coast, the total want of shelter, and the almost constant and violent breaking of the sea against the cliffs. The good old man was anxious to know what was going on in the old world, and they had the means of gratifying his curiosity, by supplying him with some magazines and modern publications. His library consisted of the books that belonged to Admiral Bligh, but the visitors had not time to inspect them.

      They inquired particularly after Fletcher Christian. This ill-fated young man, it seems, was never happy after the rash and inconsiderate step which he had taken; he became sullen and morose, and practised the very same kind of conduct towards his companions in guilt, which he and they so loudly complained of in their late commander. Disappointed in his expectations at Otaheite, and the Friendly Islands, and most probably dreading a discovery, this deluded youth committed himself and his remaining confederates to the mere chance of being cast upon some desert island; and chance threw them on that of Pitcairn. Finding no anchorage near it, he ran the ship upon the rocks, cleared her of the live stock and other articles which they had been supplied with at Otaheite, when he set her on fire, that no trace of inhabitants might be visible, and all hope of escape cut off from himself and his wretched followers. He soon, however, disgusted both his own countrymen and the Otaheiteans, by his oppressive and tyrannical conduct; they divided into parties, and disputes, affrays, and murders, were the consequence. His Otaheitean wife died within a twelvemonth from their landing, after which he carried off one that belonged to an Otaheitean man, who watched for an opportunity of taking revenge, and shot him dead while digging in his own field. Thus terminated the miserable existence of this deluded young man, who was neither deficient in talent, energy, nor connexions, and who might have risen in the service, and become an ornament to his profession.

      John Adams declared, as it was natural enough he should do, his abhorrence of the crime in which he was implicated, and said that he was sick at the time in his hammock: – this, we understand, is not true, though he was not particularly active in the mutiny: – he expressed the utmost willingness to surrender himself, and be taken to England; indeed, he rather seemed to have an inclination to revisit his native country; but the young men and women flocked round him, and with tears and entreaties begged that their father and protector might not be taken from them, for without him they must all perish. It would have been an act of the greatest inhumanity to remove him from the island; and it is hardly necessary to add, that Sir Thomas Staines lent a willing ear to their entreaties, thinking, no doubt, (as we feel strongly disposed to think), that, if he were even among the most guilty, his care and success in instilling religious and moral principles into the minds of this young and interesting society, have, in a great degree, redeemed his former crimes.

      This island is about six miles long by three broad, covered with wood, and the soil, of course, very rich, situated under the parallel of 25° S. latitude; and in the midst of such a wide expanse of ocean, the climate must be fine, and admirably adapted for the reception of all the vegetable productions of every part of the habitable globe. Small, therefore, as Pitcairn's island may appear, there can be little doubt that it is capable of supporting many inhabitants, and the present stock being of so good a description, we trust they will not be neglected. In the course of time the Patriarch must go hence; and we think it will be exceedingly desirable, that the British nation should provide for such an event, by sending out, not an ignorant and idle missionary, but some zealous and intelligent instructor, together with a few persons capable of teaching the useful trades or professions. On Pitcairn's island there are better materials to work upon than missionaries have yet been so fortunate as to meet with, and the best results may reasonably be expected. – Something we are bound to do for these blameless and interesting people. The articles recommended by Captain Pipon appear to be highly proper – working tools, implements of agriculture, seeds for cultivation, a proper selection of books, and materials for writing.

      These blameless and interesting people have, we think, the largest claims on our liberality; and the public spirited and benevolent exertions of Captain Henderson and Mr. Smith, to procure for them such articles as they needed, cannot be too highly praised. We understand that the sum of 3,000 rupees has been already laid out in supplies for them, under Captain Henderson's direction; tho' from the circumstances of their case not having been perhaps sufficiently laid before the Public, the subscriptions actually received do not amount to more than 1,000 rupees; but we are satisfied that this fact needs only to he made known, in order to be remedied, and as the ship dropped down the river from Calcutta yesterday, no time should be lost in conveying to Mr. Smith whatever the spontaneous benevolence of those whose eye this may reach, may feel disposed to contribute on their behalf. A selection of elementary books for teaching the English language has been made, to which has been added about twenty volumes of the most easy and useful works, with bibles and prayer books, and an excellent copy of the Circle of the Mechanical Arts describing in plain language every trade and handicraft known, with engravings to help the explanation of what would be difficult to understand, and a supply of stationary and materials for writing.

      Among other articles, an excellent boat, of which they were particularly in want, has been furnished; and a number of useful tools and implements to enable them to do much for themselves. Some livestock will be taken to them to promote a breed of useful animals, and we hear that Dr. Wallich has furnished an ample and choice selection of all the seeds that are most suited to the climate and to the wants of the inhabitants.

      We shall not presume to offer any common place eulogies on the exercise of charity towards our fellow creatures; but we cannot refrain from saying that if there be any case, in which the performance of that heaven-descended virtue be likely to produce greater benefits or yield more delight to both the givers and receivers of it, than another; this case of the descendants of our countrymen on Pitcairn's Island, to which we have this day drawn the attention of the Public, is decidedly one of that description.

NOTES:

      As acknowledged in the second paragraph under "Narrative" above, this article was reprinted from that published in the Naval Chronicle, Vol. 35, January 1816, pp.17-25, under the title "Mutineers of the Bounty".

SOURCE:

      This transcription was made from the following publication:

"Descendants of the Bounty's Crew, on Pitcairn's Island", The Calcutta Journal or Political, Commercial, and Literary Gazette. Vol. IV, No. 133 (July 13, 1819), cols. 161-162 to 167-168.