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16 - The Influence of 1797 upon the Nereide Mutiny of 1809

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Jonathan Neale
Affiliation:
Bath Spa University
Ann Veronica Coats
Affiliation:
University of Portsmouth
Philip MacDougall
Affiliation:
University of Kent
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Summary

In 1808 the small naval sloop Otter was part of the Indian Ocean fleet, charged with defending the waters between Bombay and the Cape of Good Hope from the French on Isle de France (Mauritius) and Madagascar. As Knight and Wilcox highlight, the East Indies station was the most remote Royal Naval location throughout the 1793–1815 wars: ‘The sheer distance from home [a minimum of four months' sailing from England] made co-ordination from England impossible and gave the commander-in-chief on the station considerably greater independence than admirals on stations nearer to home.’ On 17 August the ship's company of the Otter wrote to Vice Admiral Albermarle Bertie in Cape Town:

Honured Sir,

Your honor being the only person we can apply to this side of the Board of Admiralty, to redress our grievances, humbly implore your protection; ever since Captain Davis left the ship our treatment is cruel & severe, especially the last cruise [we] were out, getting continually starting, and flogging, altho' we were superior in any kind to the Nereide, or Charwell, or in short we were not beat by any ship in the Navy since the Otter has been in Commission.

‘Starting’ was a naval word for the customary informal beatings to force men to work, to ‘start’ them working. Otter often sailed in company with Nereide and Cherwell, and her new captain was concerned that his men perform well and his ship sail as fast as the others.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Naval Mutinies of 1797
Unity and Perseverance
, pp. 264 - 279
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2011

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