Cyprus mutiny | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Japanese watercolour from 1830 depicting a British-flagged ship believed to be the brig Cyprus | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Convict insurgents | Crew of Cyprus | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
William Swallow | Lieutenant Carew |
The Cyprus mutiny took place on 14 August 1829 in Recherche Bay off the British penal settlement of Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania, Australia). Convicts seized the brig Cyprus and sailed her to Canton, China, where they scuttled her and claimed to be castaways from another vessel. On the way, Cyprus visited Japan during the height of the period of severe Japanese restrictions on the entry of foreigners, the first ship from Australia to do so.
The mutineers were eventually captured. Two of them, George James Davis and William Watts, were hanged at Execution Dock, London on 16 December 1830, the last men hanged for piracy in Britain. Their leader, William Swallow, was never convicted of piracy because he convinced the British authorities that, as the only experienced sailor, he had been forced to remain onboard and coerced to navigate the ship. Swallow was instead sentenced to life on Van Diemen's Land for escaping, where he died four years later.
Swallow wrote an account of the voyage including the visit to Japan, but this part of the journey was generally dismissed as fantasy until 2017, when he was vindicated by an amateur historian's discovery that the account matched Japanese records of a "barbarian" ship flying a British flag whose origins had remained a mystery for 187 years.
On 6 August 1829, the brig Cyprus, a government-owned vessel used to transport goods, people, and convicts, set sail from Hobart Town for Macquarie Harbour Penal Station on a routine voyage carrying supplies and convicts under a guard commanded by Lieutenant Carew, a British Army officer. There were 62 people on board, including wives and children of some personnel, and 31 convicts.
On reaching Recherche Bay, isolated from the main settlement, the vessel was becalmed. Convicts allowed on deck attacked their guards and took control of the brig. The convicts marooned officers, soldiers, and convicts who did not join the mutiny in Recherche Bay, without supplies. They were saved by a convict called Popjoy who constructed a makeshift boat or coracle using only the three pocket-knives they had, and sailed to Partridge Island with Morgan, a free man, where they got help. [1] [2]
Nineteen convicts sailed away in Cyprus, having appointed one of their number, William Swallow, the only one with sailing experience, as sailing master. The mutineers first sailed to New Zealand, and then on to the Chatham Islands. There they plundered the schooner Samuel of the seal skins her crew had gathered. From the Islands, Cyprus sailed for Tahiti, but then changed destination to Tonga. The mutineers landed at Keppel's Island, where Ferguson, the leader, and six others decided to remain. Swallow then sailed to Japan. [5]
Swallow wrote an account of the voyage which included a visit to Japan before reaching Canton; this was generally dismissed as fantasy. However, in 2017 this account was compared with Japanese records of a visit by a British vessel off the town of Mugi, Tokushima on Shikoku in 1830, and matched in many points. [4]
Makita Hamaguchi, a local samurai went disguised as a fisherman to check the ship for weapons, wrote an account of the episode which included watercolour sketches of the ship and its crew. Another samurai chronicler called Hirota noted the crew offered gifts, including an object he later drew which has since been identified as a boomerang. The mutineers were desperately low on water, firewood, and supplies, but were attacked and sent away by the Japanese, in line with the isolationist policy of the time.
Warwick Hirst, former curator of manuscripts at the State Library of New South Wales, said that there were "too many coincidences for it not to be true"; Takashi Tokuno, chief curator at the archive of Tokushima Prefecture, Japan, said there is a "high probability" the ship in Japanese records was Cyprus.
George Augustus Robinson, the overseer of the Aboriginal Establishment on nearby Bruny Island, wrote in his diary and in a report to Lieutenant-Governor George Arthur that Cyprus's guards had taken an Aboriginal Tasmanian woman into custody and on board at Recherche Bay, and that the convicts abducted her when they piratically seized the brig. The woman was the second wife of Mangana, an Aboriginal chief and the father of Truganini by his first wife, who was raped and murdered.
Then as now, rape was considered a heinous crime and generally pirates codified against it in their articles, but still incidents were not uncommon. Therefore, rape cannot be ruled out as a possible motivation for the pirates taking Magana's second wife. However, the lack of sailors among the brig's new convict pirate crew, only four with experience instead of the brig's usual complement of 16 plus; their pending flight through the Roaring Forties, running the inevitable gauntlet of extratropical winter cyclones; and Aboriginal Tasmanian women's reputation for swift acquisition of the two fundamental crewing skills of climbing a mast and tying a knot – they were adept tree climbers and basket weavers – gave the pirates an existential reason to abduct her. Indeed, even one of those four experienced convict crew members reported having been pressed by them into joining their escape.
It is odd that only Robinson and none of Cyprus's passengers, crew or guards reported Mangana's wife's abduction. However, Arthur held sway over everyone on board. Someone sent letters to the Hobart Town Courier about the seizure but were not published. The narrative of the abduction seems to have been caught up in Arthur's secretly orchestrated diminution of Aboriginal Tasmanians. An important element of this clandestine policy was the obfuscation of in-custody deaths, murders and abuses of Aboriginal Tasmanian women and children. This was politically important to Arthur because William Wilberforce and other British abolitionists had backed Arthur's posting to Van Diemen's Land as Lieutenant-Governor after he helped their cause in an 1823 debate in the House of Commons. In the debate, they had cited reports that Arthur had written in 1816 championing redress for female slaves in British Honduras. If Arthur had reported the deaths, murders and abuses of Aboriginal Tasmanian women and children properly, it would have led to enhanced oversight of his administration or his recall.
While the convict pirates were moored off Mugi Cove, in modern-day Tokushima Prefecture, Awa Domain spies documented the brig and reported to Hayami Zenzaemon, the Shogunate's Feudal Overseer and Yamauchi Chūdayū and Mima Katsuzō, the two samurai Field Commanders. An ink sketch by one of the spies shows a convict revealing a memorial portraiture tattoo of a woman with short-cropped hair: a style characteristic of and unique to Aboriginal Tasmanian women. The tattoo was revealed at first contact, the reveal was immediately followed by a circling glass toast and salute, and its wearer is portrayed with an expression of suppressed grief. These circumstances suggest that the bereavement was recent and had something to do with the pirates being there. The location of the tattoo suggests strong emotional attachment, the subject's gender is stated in two manuscripts and her attire resembles that of the pirates. One of the pirates is reported as having become extremely agitated and abusive when they were told to leave immediately.
Arthur's orchestrated diminution created conditions that promoted the spread of infectious disease among the (initially overseen and then interned) Aboriginal Tasmanians, while repeatedly failing to provide the level of medical attention and/or supplies that were the norm on convict transports, in prisons and barracks at the time. Near-synchronous disease and deaths were common among family members. Syphilis, despite being faster-acting among Aboriginal Tasmanians -- due to their not having previously acquired any natural immunity -- was the slowest of the pathogens, taking months rather than days to kill, thereby resulting in deaths of weeks rather than hours apart. Mangana died of syphilis on 31 January 1830. The samurai spies had documented the memorial portraiture tattoo, its wearer's expression of suppressed grief, the toast, the salute, and an awful odour about the ship two weeks earlier on 16 January 1830. [6]
From Japan Cyprus sailed to the Ladrones. There four more of the mutineers left the ship. Swallow sailed on to Canton. Eventually, the mutineers scuttled Cyprus near Canton and claimed that they were castaways from another vessel. Swallow and three others worked their passage back to Britain aboard the East Indiaman Charles Grant. However, a man the mutineers had left in Canton confessed and by chance his account reached Britain a week before Swallow and his last three companions arrived there.
The mutineers were tried in London and two of them, George James Davis and William Watts, were hanged in that city at Execution Dock on 16 December 1830, the last men hanged for piracy in Britain. Swallow, and two others, were returned to Hobart, where another one named James Camm was hanged. Swallow died at the penal colony of Port Arthur.
The mutiny is the subject of the Australian folk song "Cyprus Brig". [7] Simon Barnard's book Gaolbird: The True Story of William Swallow, Convict and Pirate, is a fictionalised account of the mutiny in which the mutineers are depicted as birds. [8]
Van Diemen's Land was the colonial name of the island of Tasmania used by the British during the European exploration and colonisation of Australia in the 19th century. The island, inhabited by Aborigines, was first encountered by the Dutch ship captained by Abel Tasman in 1642, working under the sponsorship of Anthony van Diemen, the Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies. The British retained the name when they established a settlement in 1803 before it became a separate colony in 1825. Its penal colonies became notorious destinations for the transportation of convicts due to the harsh environment, isolation and reputation for being inescapable.
Mugi is a town located in Kaifu District, Tokushima Prefecture, Japan. As of 30 June 2022, the town had an estimated population of 3,734 in 1971 households and a population density of 66 persons per km2. The total area of the town is 56.62 square kilometres (21.86 sq mi).
The history of Tasmania begins at the end of the Last Glacial Period when it is believed that the island was joined to the Australian mainland. Little is known of the human history of the island until the British colonisation of Tasmania in the 19th century.
Sir George Arthur, 1st Baronet was a British colonial administrator who was Lieutenant Governor of British Honduras from 1814 to 1822 and of Van Diemen's Land from 1824 to 1836. The campaign against Aboriginal Tasmanians, known as the Black War, occurred during this term of office. He later served as Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada from 1838 to 1841, and Governor of Bombay from 1842 to 1846.
The Spithead and Nore mutinies were two major mutinies by sailors of the Royal Navy in 1797. They were the first in an increasing series of outbreaks of maritime radicalism in the Atlantic World. Despite their temporal proximity, the mutinies differed in character. The Spithead mutiny was a simple, peaceful, successful strike action to address economic grievances, while the Nore mutiny was a more radical action, articulating political ideals as well, which failed.
HMS Pandora was a 24-gun Porcupine-class sixth-rate post ship of the Royal Navy launched in May 1779. The vessel is best known for its role in hunting down the Bounty mutineers in 1790, which remains one of the best-known stories in the history of seafaring. Pandora was partially successful by capturing 14 of the mutineers, but wrecked on the Great Barrier Reef on the return voyage in 1791. HMS Pandora is considered to be one of the most significant shipwrecks in the Southern Hemisphere.
Jørgen Jørgensen was a Danish adventurer during the Age of Revolution. During the action of 2 March 1808, his ship was captured by the British. In 1809 he sailed to Iceland, declared the country independent from Denmark–Norway and pronounced himself its ruler. He intended to found a new republic, following the examples of the United States and the French First Republic. He was also a prolific writer of letters, papers, pamphlets and newspaper articles covering a wide variety of subjects, and for a period was an associate of the famous botanists Joseph Banks and William Jackson Hooker. He left over a hundred written autographs and drawings, most of which are collected in the British Library. Marcus Clarke referred to Jørgensen as "a singularly accomplished fortune wooer—one of the most interesting human comets recorded in history".
Recherche Bay is an oceanic embayment, part of which is listed on the National Heritage Register, located on the extreme south-eastern corner of Tasmania, Australia. It was a landing place of the d’Entrecasteaux expedition to find missing explorer La Pérouse. It is named in honour of the Recherche, one of the expedition's ships. The Nuenonne name for the bay is Leillateah.
Between 1788 and 1868 the British penal system transported about 162,000 convicts from Great Britain and Ireland to various penal colonies in Australia.
Lady Denison was launched in 1847 at Port Arthur, Tasmania. She went missing in 1850 while sailing between Port Adelaide and Hobart, Tasmania. At the time there were strong allegations that convicts being carried on board murdered the other passengers and crew and headed for San Francisco, but all contemporary evidence supports the assertion that she sank off the far north-western tip of Tasmania.
Charles Gibbs was the pseudonym of an American pirate, born James D. Jeffers. Jeffers was one of the last active pirates in the Caribbean during the early 19th century, and was among the last persons to be executed for piracy by the United States.
Charlotte Badger was a former convict who was on board the Venus during a mutiny in Tasmania in 1806. Taken to New Zealand, she was rescued by Captain Turnbull of the Indispensable, and eventually she returned to Sydney. In the intervening centuries, a number of writers have contributed to the fiction that she took an active role in the mutiny and she became known – erroneously – as Australia's first female pirate.
William Buelow Gould was a painter born in the United Kingdom and later working in Van Diemen's Land. He was transported to Australia as a convict in 1827, after which he would become one of the most important early artists in the colony, despite never really separating himself from his life of crime.
Norfolk Island convict mutinies were a series of armed uprisings by convicts on the penal colony of Norfolk Island, Australia. All were unsuccessful.
Lady Shore was a merchantman launched at Calcutta in 1794. In 1797, she commenced a voyage as a convict ship to Australia until a mutiny cut the voyage short.
The Frederick escape was an 1834 incident in which the brig Frederick was hijacked by ten Australian convicts and used to abscond to Chile, where they lived freely for two years. Four of the convicts were later recaptured and returned to Australia, where they escaped the death sentence for piracy through a legal technicality.
Cyprus was a brig launched at Sunderland in 1816. The colonial government in Van Diemen's Land purchased her in 1826. In 1829 as she was transporting convicts from Hobart Town to Macquarie Harbour Penal Station, some of the convicts seized Cyprus. They sailed her via Japan to Canton, where they scuttled her.
Tiger was launched in America in 1813 and apparently captured on her maiden voyage. Captain Lewellyn purchased her in prize and initially she sailed between England and the Mediterranean. Under new ownership in the early-1820s, she started trading with New South Wales and India under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She is last listed in 1833.
Calder was a brig launched in 1821 at Calcutta. A new owner in 1822 sailed her to Australia and she then traded in the Pacific until in 1825 she sailed to Chile and was wrecked at Valparaiso. There a new owner salvaged her and returned her to sailing under the name Indefatigable. On Indefatigable's first voyage the Chilean members of her crew mutinied, killing her captain. The mutineers sailed to Guam where the authorities took Indefatigable in prize. She was later lost in a typhoon in the China Sea.
The Badger escape occurred in July 1833 when twelve convicts in the British penal colony of Van Diemen's Land used the government schooner Badger to escape to Macau, China. Most of the convicts involved were experienced seafarers who had been appointed to man the vessel soon after their transportation. For this, the colonial press accused the government of extreme negligence, and also called for the removal of lieutenant-governor George Arthur. In The History of Tasmania (1852), John West wrote that, of all the escapes from Van Diemen's Land, "never was the government more culpable, or the prisoners less so, than in the instance of the Badger".