The fortunate adversities of William Bligh

Author(s)

    • Schreiber, Roy E.

Bibliographic Information

The fortunate adversities of William Bligh

Roy E. Schreiber

(American university studies, Series IX, History ; vol. 108)

P. Lang, c1991

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [219]-227) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

William Bligh is best remembered for the 1789 mutiny on the Bounty. He lived to repeat the experience. In 1797 mutineers took over his ship, Director. A little more than ten years later, when he was the governor of the British colony in Australia, the New South Wales Corps rebelled and kept Bligh locked in Government House for over a year. Yet when the man died in 1817 at age 63, he was William Bligh, esquire, Fellow of the Royal Society and Vice-Admiral of the White in the British Navy. How was it possible for someone who was in serious difficulty so often to rise as far as he did? If ever there was a person who learned to profit from adversity, it was William Bligh.

Table of Contents

Contents: The study of William Bligh looks at his career as a Pacific explorer, Naval captain during the Napoleonic Wars and governor of the prison colony of New South Wales, Australia.

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