When Acting Lieutenant Fletcher Christian led the mutiny on The Bounty in 1787, he opted to set Captain William Bligh and 18 others adrift in a lifeboat rather than shoot them. Bligh managed a stunning 6,000 kilometres trip west to Timor. He was subsequently made Governor of New South Wales, but in Sydney Town his abrasive style led to another mutiny: the Rum Rebellion of 1794.
After 16 crewmembers decamped in Tahiti, Christian and his Tahitian girlfriend Mauatua, with eight other mutineers and 18 more Tahitians, sailed east and secreted themselves on the remote but forested volcanic outcrop of Pitcairn Island. The mutineers, to help avoid discovery and inevitable hanging, burned The Bounty. After 19 years the Pitcairn colony was found by a passing American ship, but by then all…
