THE
PROMISE OF PITCAIRN’S ISLAND
Fletcher
Christian and John Adams and the other 6 Bounty Mutineers, together with their
8 Tahitian wives and 10 Tahitian men, left Tahiti on the pirated H.M.A.V.
Bounty vessel bound for a place unknown. Christian stumbled on to the idea for
Pitcairn’s Island after thoroughly reading over the available British naval
maps he had access to on the Bounty. He chose Pitcairn’s Island as their
destination, though none of the crew had ever been there, because the island
was evidently one of the remotest places on Earth and was not properly
identified on the naval maps by sufficient designation of its longitude
(although its latitude was identified as about 25 degrees W). Within days of
leaving Tahiti; supplied with a dozen or so pigs and chickens, as well as
dozens of breadfruit trees and banana trees and sweet potatoe plants and
assorted flower and vegetable seeds; the ship was directed by Christian to sail
along a latitude line of 25 degrees W in the hope of discovering the mysterious
Pitcairn’s Island. The British members of Christian’s crew, those that came
over from the Bounty mutiny, with the exception of John Adams and Ned Young,
were unruly and aggressive and difficult to supervise. These 5 crew members
became disillusioned and impatient with Christian almost immediately after the
ship had departed on its last voyage. They (among the 5 particularly McCoy and
Quintal) threatened Christian’s authority and he took it upon himself to
oversee the ship’s passage at gunpoint to complete the trip to Pitcairn. Later
on the island, these disgruntled and angry British sailors would spread their
animosity towards the 10 Tahitian men. The Pitcairn crew was misguided from the
start by not thinking to pair up each Tahitian man with their own spouse from
the time they prepared to leave the Tahitian Islands. Intense jealousy over the
marriages of the British sailors to their Tahitian women (and the poor
treatment of the Tahitian men by the Bounty mutineers) eventually erupted on
the island and several killings took place within the first few years on
Pitcairn’s Island. Christian was one of the first to be killed. The 8 Bounty
mutineers and all 10 Tahitian men were reduced to just Adams and Young within 3-5 years on the island. But despite
the violent nature of those first few years on Pitcairn’s Island (1787-1793),
the 8 island marriages between 8 British sailors and their respective 8
Tahitian spouses produced over 20 children in the first generation on the
island. From these 20 children of
presumably mixed British-Tahitian descent in the first generation of the
island, the island eventually blossomed to a population of over 300 people
within 60 or so years (about 1850). In the successive generation, overseen by
Adams, the lone surviving British sailor after Young passed on from illness in
about 1800, there was apparently less violence. There is no question that the members
of the Pitcairn crew had the potential to create an island paradise on Pitcairn
when they landed in about 1787. The island was 2 square miles in size, with
about a 1 mile length and a 2 mile breadth, just enough room to accommodate the
Bounty crew and their counterparts. The island was heavily wooded with enough
trees to build sufficient and sturdy housing for everyone. And the island was
incredibly remote, far away from any British naval routes or from any other
naval expeditions, as it were, in the Eastern part of the South Pacific. The
succeeding generations of British-Tahitian descent were riddled with crimes of
sexual violence committed by the men against the women and other problems
connected with malaise. Also the pigs that were brought to the island initially
in 1787 reproduced quite successfully and were overrunning the island within 5
to 10 years. To their credit Adams and Young turned to Christian faith and the
Holy Bible after the intensely violent early period on the island. Adams went
through Christian’s belongings after Christian was killed and recovered
Christian’s Holy Bible. Adams used the bible to guide the initial 20 or so
progeny, and he was called the “father” to these children. In 1814 an American
whaling vessel came across Pitcairn and discovered the strange population of 20
British-Tahitian children together with several Tahitian women and John Adams.
The American vessel reported the discovery to British authorities and the
British investigated and later granted Adams clemency for the mutiny incident.
Adams lived on to the mid 19th century and died in his 60’s of old
age. The Pitcairn crew thus had the potential to achieve a paradise on their
island, but human frailties and poor oversight caused the disintegration of the
social order on their island paradise within the first generation and this
disharmony carried forth into the subsequent generations.
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