Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Pitcairn Island (Encore)
Episode Date: May 15, 2022On April 28, 1789, the crew of the HMS Bounty engaged in a mutiny against their despotic captain, William Bligh. After sending the captain out on a rowboat, the rest of the crew sailed to an uninhabit...ed island, sank the ship, and set up home. The descendants of those mutineers are still living on that island today. Their home has become one of the most unique and remote communities on Earth. Learn more about Pitcairn Island, its history, and how it continues to exist at the edge of the world, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://podfollow.com/everythingeverywhere/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
On April 28, 1789, the crew of the HMS bounty engaged in a mutiny against their despotic captain William Bly.
After sending the captain out on a rowboat, the rest of the crew sailed to an uninhabited island, sank the ship, and set up home.
The descendants of those mutineers are still living on that island today.
Their home has become one of the most unique and remote communities on Earth.
Learn more about Pitcairn Island, its history, and how it continues to exist at the edge of the world.
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may
have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
Of all the places in the world, Pitcairn Island might have the oddest to
history. As I mentioned in the introduction, it all started with a mutiny. The HMS bounty was a ship
of the Royal Navy. It had forking guns and was classified as a cutter, which was the smallest category of
warship in the Royal Navy's fleet. The bounty's mission was pretty peaceful and a simple one. They were
to collect breadfruit trees in Tahiti and bring them to their colonies in the Caribbean.
Breadfruit is very similar to jackfruit. It grows well in the tropics, and it can be a stable
food for the people who grow it. The captain of the ship was William Bly. He was a seasoned seafar
who had sailed with Captain Cook on his third voyage as his navigator.
On October 15, 1787, the bounty set sail from England with 17 officers and civilians and 29
crew members. They sailed around Cape Horn at the southern tip of South America and arrived in
Tahiti on October 26, 1788. The ship stayed there for five months, and for the most part,
the crew of the ship didn't have much to do while they were collecting breadfruit trees.
After a year on the bounty, the men enjoyed the company of many women on Tahiti and really
enjoyed themselves on this tropical island. They collected a thousand breadfruit trees and filled up
the main cargo hold of the ship. Captain Bly was anxious to get going, and needless to say, the crew
wasn't. On April 5, 1789, they set sail from Tahiti for the Caribbean. By all accounts, the crew
wasn't ready to mutiny at this point, although they were sad to leave. Bligh was very tough on his
crew. He accused one of his officers Fletcher Christian of stealing and punished the entire ship. Christian
considered escaping on a raft, but other crew
crew members convinced him to stay. The crew was so upset that they told Christian that if he made a move to
take control the ship, they would support him. On April 28th, he made his move and took over the ship
with the support of some of the crew. He sent off Bligh on about 20 crew members in a smaller ship who then
set out for a nearby island. The remaining sailors set off for Tahiti. 16 of the crew voted to stay in
Tahiti. A group of Tahitians came on board the ship, and they left in the night while they were still
on board. The total number of people who were on the ship at this point were nine mutineers
and 18 Tahitians, six men, 11 women, and a baby girl. They knew that once the word of the mutiny got
out, they would be hunted down by the British Navy. So they set out for an island called Pitcairn Island,
which had been cited back in 1767. They searched for it for months before eventually finding it
on January 15, 1790. It wasn't where it was located on the charts, which was one of the reasons
they selected it as a place to stop. It would be hard for anyone to find. They came ashore,
stripped what they could from the ship, and then set it on fire eight days later. It's unknown if it was
burned to prevent detection, or if it was a rogue operation done by one of the mutant years.
The wreck of the ship can still be seen beneath the water today. Either way, they were now stuck on an
island that no one else in the world knew the location of. For the first few years, it wasn't great for
the islanders. Several of the men died from disease or murder.
They lived by fishing and farming.
It was five years before they even saw another ship, and that one didn't stop.
In 1801, a second and third ship appeared, but again, neither of them stopped.
It wasn't until 1808, 18 years after they arrived, that another ship stopped on the island.
An American sealing ship called the Topaz stopped and stayed on the island for 10 hours.
The Topaz reported finding the island with the mutineers and provided better coordinates to the British Admiralty.
Without knowledge of the Topaz report, two British Navy ships, the HMS Britain and the HMS Tagas, arrived in 1814.
They came ashore and documented life on the island.
By that time, only one of the mutineers was still alive, a man by the name of John Adams, who was pardoned for his role in the mutiny.
Now that they were known to the rest of the world, more ships started to visit, although not a lot, as it was still one of the most remote settlements in the world.
The island of English-speaking people of British-Taheatian descent became a formal person.
part of the British Empire in 1838. They were also one of the very first territories in the world,
which gave women the right to vote. The next big chapter in the history of the island occurred in
1856. All 193 people who lived on the island left. They just packed up and left for Norfolk Island,
which is located northeast of Australia. Norfolk Island had been a British penal colony, but it was
given to the residents of Pitcairn because their population was starting to outstrip the size of the island,
which was only two square miles.
Norfolk was bigger and much easier to supply.
However, just a year and a half later, 18 of the islanders returned to Pitcairn, and five years
later, another 27 returned.
That means there are not one, but two places on earth where the population has descendants
from the mutineers of the HMS bounty.
With people returning to Pitcairn, the population on the island soon began to rise again.
Fewer whaling ships visited in the late 19th century as the industry died out, with the last ship
visiting in 1888. Ship visits became few and far between, often years apart. In 1886, a member of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church arrived on the island and managed to convert most of the population,
and it remains the largest denomination on the island today. In 1937, the island reached a peak
population of 233 people. Since then, the population has been steadily declining. Island life was
unappealing for many people, and they left to live in New Zealand or Australia.
Today, there are only 47 people who live on Pitcairn Island, and many of those are not actually
on the island at any given time.
There are only a total of 746 people of Pitcairn ancestry spread between Pitcairn, Norfolk, Australia, and New
Zealand.
Along with several nearby uninhabited islands, it forms the British overseas territory
of Pitcairn, Henderson, Dulce, and Oneo Islands.
The island has the smallest population of any territory on Earth.
Pitcairn is visited by a single supply ship.
ship, the MV Silver Supporter. It takes 14 days to reach Pitcairn from New Zealand and over a month
round trip. There are also a small number of smaller expedition class cruise ships that stop each year as well.
These ships may or may not bring passengers onto the island depending on the size of the ship
and the condition of the sea. There is no real dock or pier on the island. The only way to get
supplies or people from a ship is via longboats which are run by the islanders. The island also has
very few children. Only two children were born on the island in the last quarter century.
There is a primary school, but older kids are sent to New Zealand for their education.
The economy on the island isn't very developed. Outside of a bit of tourism, most people are
engaged in subsistence agriculture. Honey is one of the few items which is exported from the island,
and it is supposedly of high quality, and is the favorite of the queen. There is no hospital on
the island. In the event of a medical emergency, it would require a 335 mile or 540,
40-kilometer trip and an open boat to the island of Mangariva in French Polynesia.
From there, you would then have to take a 975-mile or 1,500-kilometer flight to Tahiti.
Believe it or not, despite being near the Tropic of Capricorn, most of the island is run on diesel
generators and not solar or wind power.
One of the big concerns is that the population of the island might disappear.
The average age is getting older, and it's estimated there will only be three people of working age on the island
by the year 2045. They're trying to get people to migrate to the island, but so far,
zero people have done it. The requirements they make you jump through to migrate seem pretty
high for an island in the middle of nowhere that's facing extinction. The island has its own
top-level domain of dot p.n. There's a cafe and bar in the island in addition to a general store,
and there's a newspaper that's published monthly online. Internet is available, but by all
account, it is incredibly slow and expensive. I have to end this episode on a rather depressing
note, but I can't really ignore it because it's the largest single news story to come off the
island in the last century. Beginning in 1999, there was a massive sexual abuse scandal that
rocked the island. Police uncovered repeated abuse of girls under the age of 14 for several
years. The abuse was found to be incredibly widespread. In 2004, six men on the island and another
six men currently living in New Zealand were convicted on multiple accounts of rape,
sexual assault, and indecency. It was almost a third of the male population on the island.
The island was so remote and the community so close-knit that the behavior was accepted or ignored
on the island for decades. The case caused a huge problem for the island because the six men
actually comprised a large percentage of the workforce, and most of the men who handled the long
boats that transferred cargo and passengers to ships. People were concerned that the entire island
might actually come to an end.
A special prison was built on the island for the men who were found guilty.
They would reside there, but then be released when they needed to move cargo or passengers when a boat arrived.
This was done so the whole community wasn't punished by the imprisonment of the men.
As for the future of Pitcairn, no one really knows.
It's a very difficult place to live in a place that's very difficult to reach.
Most people who were born there have left, and the remaining population is aging quickly.
Unless they can bring in a fresh population, and you really don't.
don't need that many. Pitcairn as a viable community might not be long for this world.
The associate producers of Everything Everywhere Daily are Peter Bennett and Thor Thompson.
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