[The Eventful History Of The Mutiny And Piratical Seizure by Sir John Barrow]@TWC D-Link book
The Eventful History Of The Mutiny And Piratical Seizure

CHAPTER VIII
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Interesting as this discovery was considered to be, it does not appear that any steps were taken in consequence of this authenticated information, the government being at that time probably too much engaged in the events of the war; nor was anything further heard of this interesting little society, until the latter part of 1814, when a letter was transmitted by Rear Admiral Hotham, then cruising off the coast of America, from Mr.Folger himself, to the same effect as the preceding extract from his log, but dated March, 1813.
In the first-mentioned year (1814) we had two frigates cruising in the Pacific,--the _Briton_, commanded by Sir Thomas Staines, and the _Tagus_, by Captain Pipon.

The following letter from the former of these officers was received at the Admiralty early in the year 1815.
_Briton, Valparaiso, 18th Oct., 1814._ 'I have the honour to inform you that on my passage from the Marquesas islands to this port, on the morning of the 17th September, I fell in with an island where none is laid down in the Admiralty or other charts, according to the several chronometers of the _Briton_ and _Tagus_.

I therefore hove to, until daylight, and then closed to ascertain whether it was inhabited, which I soon discovered it to be, and, to my great astonishment, found that every individual on the island (forty in number), spoke very good English.

They proved to be the descendants of the deluded crew of the _Bounty_, who, from Otaheite, proceeded to the above-mentioned island, where the ship was burnt.
'Christian appeared to have been the leader and sole cause of the mutiny in that ship.

A venerable old man, named John Adams, is the only surviving Englishman of those who last quitted Otaheite in her, and whose exemplary conduct, and fatherly care of the whole of the little colony, could not but command admiration.


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