William Bligh
(1754-1817)

Died aged c. 63

Vice-Admiral William Bligh FRS (9 September 1754 – 7 December 1817) was an officer of the Royal Navy and a colonial administrator. The mutiny on the HMS Bounty occurred in 1789 when the ship was under his command; after being set adrift in Bounty's launch by the mutineers, Bligh and his loyal men all reached Timor alive, after a journey of 3,618 nautical miles (6,700 km; 4,160 mi). Bligh's logbooks documenting the mutiny were inscribed on the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World register on 26 February 2021. Seventeen years after the Bounty mutiny, on 13 August 1806, he was appointed Governor of New South Wales in Australia, with orders to clean up the corrupt rum trade of the New South Wales Corps. His actions directed against the trade resulted in the so-called Rum Rebellion, during which Bligh was placed under arrest on 26 January 1808 by the New South Wales Corps and deposed from his command, an act which the British Foreign Office later declared to be illegal. He died in London on 7 December 1817.

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Commemorated on 2 plaques

William Bligh 1754-1817 Commander of the "Bounty" lived here

100 Lambeth Road, Lambeth, SE1, London, United Kingdom where they lived

William Bligh 1754-1817 who transplanted breadfruit from Tahiti to the West Indies lived in a house on this site 1785-90

Reardon Street, London, United Kingdom where they lived