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The
Journal
Pitcairn Island
January 18, 2000
Mutiny on the Bounty Almost Revisited
Actually, I could see the sea was rough the moment I looked out
the porthole on the morning of January 18, 2000. I'd read the book,
"Mutiny on the Bounty."
Heard the Lectures.
Seen the Movies.
Studied the map of the island.
And as almost every high school student in the country, knew the
famous story.
I'd learned that in January 1789, Fletcher Christian and
twenty-four men led a mutiny against Captain William Bligh, on
his ship the HMS Bounty. After putting Bligh and 18 of his crew
on a small boat into the Pacific Ocean, Christian and his
mutineers sailed the Bounty off into history.
The story of what happened to the
Bounty's Captain Bligh and his crew is an amazing tale of
incredible seamanship and courage. Along with Captain
James Cook, Bligh can surely be called one of the greatest
navigators in naval history. In a small 20-foot boat, he
managed to travel from island to island across the Pacific,
until, miraculously, 42 days later, on June 14, 1789 they sailed
into the Dutch port of Timor in the East Indies over3,400 miles
away.
They had overcome mighty storms
that almost capsized them, native attacks in which
18 of his men were killed, lack of fresh water and food that
caused them to eat only raw birds--if they were lucky enough to
trap one or two. Eventually, Bligh and 11 of his men
successfully returned to England-and continued the hunt for
Fletcher Christian and the mutineers.
Ironically, Christian never made
it back to England, but several of his men ultimately were
captured, stood trial, were convicted of treason and died.
But that's getting ahead of the
story.
Christian and his men, meanwhile,
took the Bounty to Tahiti, but fled just ahead of a British
warship sent to hunt them down. After months of ordeals at
sea in their search for a safe resting place, encounters with
fierce cannibalistic natives, desperate flight from hostile
island after island, Fletcher and his mutineers arrived at
their destination, Pitcairn Island, a remote uninhabited island
that sits alone between Peru and New Zealand, 1,243 miles south
of Tahiti.
This was they planned to begin a
new life. Sinking the Bounty to void discovery, in 1790
eight of the original mutineers, six Tahitian men, twelve
Tahitian women and one child who had sailed from Tahiti with
them made their permanent home on Pitcairn Island.
Tragically, almost immediately the men began to fight among
themselves over alcohol and the women, and eventually a series
of murders and suicides left only two mutineers alive, along
with the Tahitian women and child.
Today, most of the
inhabitants of this smallest British protectorate are
descendants of those original settlers.
This was the story
told in the famous book and even more famous movies,
"Mutiny on the Bounty," early on starring Marlon
Brando and later, Clark Gable, and this was the tiny island the
Ocean Explorer hoped to explore on January 18, 2000.
A high volcanic island, Pitcairn
is only 4.5 square miles in size, and has no natural harbor or
coral reef, and breakers roll right up to its rocky shore.
We had been told many times that it might not be possible to
land passengers on the island, but if the seas were tranquil, an
attempt would be made to land by tender or zodiac. Even if
successful, the landing would be simply a beginning to a very
tough ascent: in order to reach the tiny settlement on top
of the island, the only recourse is to climb 450 feet up a steep
slope called the "path of difficulty."
From the slides we
had seen in Theresa's lecture, climbing that hill
should more likely be called torture road.
But we were all ready to give it
our best try! We truly wished to actually step foot on the
island where its 60 inhabitants, most of whom are direct
descendants of Fletcher Christian, live and nearly half the
people bear the surname Christian.
The moment of truth came at 10
a.m., January 18. First, I have to admit that I had
already made a bet at dinner the night before that we would not
land. I won a dollar! That will teach me that I
can't make a living as a gambler, even if I win.
Previously, another ship that had
just attempted to land at Pitcairn had had three zodiacs
capsize. The Ocean Explorer debacle at Easter Island just
a day before also may have influenced our captain's decision,
but the high choppy seas and overcast sky that morning
undoubtedly were also major factors in his decision to abort any
landings. We were told the seas were too rough for a
tender or zodiac to land.
However, if we could not come
to them, the Christian family contingent was determined that our
trip should not be in vain! They would come to us.
They loaded their own longboat
with home made baskets, carvings, tee shirts, honey, post cards,
stamps and booklets and sailed out in their longboat to board
our ship. With their leader, Tom Christian, a direct great,
great, great grandson of Fletcher Christian himself at the helm,
all but six of the islanders came aboard our ship.
Tom gave an elegant presentation
about his family history and the history of how, why, when and
who got to the island over 200 years ago and who remained.
He told of the plight of the contemporary families, how
difficult it was to stock the island with food, difficult to pay
for electricity, difficult to keep a doctor and nurse, difficult
to educate the children, and in general very difficult for the
islanders to survive there much longer without change taking
place. Selling goods to tourists was part of their
survival package.
Their plan is eventually to built
a short airstrip where the cricket
field now stands, and hopefully create a more efficient
way of living,
especially for the young who now go to New Zealand for an
education and seldom come back to live.
Christian, who spoke with an unusual
accent that combined British with Polynesian dialect, was a tall
handsome man, over six feet tall. His curly brown hair and
piercing blue eyes showed distinct similarities to the original
Christian we had seen in old drawings of the mutineers.
The many other islanders who came aboard our ship also had
recognizable characteristics and similarities to the appearances
of their ancestors we had seen in slide shows of Pitcairn over
the past several days. The friendly female police chief-the only
police on the island-- sold wooden carvings; the jolly woman
postmaster sold postcards and stamps cheerfully until they
ran out. Others set up tables and encouraged our
passengers to help them collect dollars that purchased
distinctive handmade baskets, tiny sailing ship models of the
Bounty, and tee shirts identifying Pitcairn Island. And several
of the children were delighted to play among the passengers.
The island dwellers
made no bones about it; in order to survive, they needed funds
from such trade. The circumstances were like the British
coming to Tahiti two hundred years ago and bringing another
culture, but one that they welcomed. They were delighted
at the sales that day.
At the end of the
day, they loaded their longboat with the few remaining unsold
goods, along with a bonanza of free gifts from the ship--many
pillows, a number of mattresses, burlap sacks of potatoes and
onions-and a goodly stash of ice cream from the ship's stores.
The latter was a rare and welcome commodity on an island that
has major staples and provisions delivered only three times a
year!
And so we sailed away from
Pitcairn Island at sunset. We were more than a little
disappointed at not making a shore landing but a good deal wiser
about the simple quiet way of life of the many friendly
relatives of Fletcher Christian -and more knowledgeable of how
difficult and complex it is to keep alive a culture that has
survived over 200 years.
Now it's on to
Tahiti.
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