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  1. Apr 28, 2020 · What happened: William Bligh is relieved of command of the Bounty in a bloodless coup and set adrift with 18 men who remained loyal to him What was the Bounty 's mission: Though armed, the Bounty was a merchant vessel; Bligh was sailing her to the West Indies from Tahiti (then Otaheite), where he had collected a cargo of breadfruit plants

  2. William Bligh was an officer in the Royal Navy and was the victim of a mutiny on his ship, the Bounty, in 1789. Bligh (1754–1817) had a reputation for having a volatile temper and often clashed with his fellow officers and crewmen. His crew mutinied against him during a return trip from Tahiti in 1789.

  3. William Bligh (9 September 1754–7 December 1817) was an English officer in the British Navy. He sailed with Captain James Cook on his third and final voyage in 1776. In 1787 Bligh was made captain of HMS Bounty and sailed to Tahiti to collect breadfruit trees .

  4. William Bligh, like the title character in Woody Allen’s 1983 movie Zelig, seemed to turn up everywhere history was being made in the latter decades of the 18th century. Whether it was at the murder of English explorer William Cook on a windswept Hawaiian beach in 1779 or during the most famous mutiny in naval history, aboard HMS Bounty off ...

  5. Feb 9, 2010 · Captain William Bligh and 18 of his loyal supporters were set adrift in a small, ... Bligh, who eventually would fall prey to a total of three mutinies in his career, was an oppressive commander ...

  6. After Bligh had three sailors flogged for desertion, the mood of the men grew openly resentful. On April 28, 1789, the crew mutinied, seized control of the ship, and put William Bligh and 19 men out to sea in a launch. After a harrowing 47-day trip, he and the surviving crew members made it to safety in Indonesia.

  7. May 4, 2023 · 1808: Rum Rebellion, in which Governor William Bligh is deposed by the New South Wales Corps. Twenty years to the day after the founding of New South Wales, the colony’s governor, William Bligh, was deposed by the New South Wales Corps. The so-called Rum Rebellion was the first and only time in Australian history that military force has been ...

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