Captain Bligh's Cursed Breadfruit
The biographer of William Bligh—he of the infamous mutiny on the Bounty—tracks him to Jamaica, still home to the versatile plant
- By Caroline Alexander
- Photographs by George Butler
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Under the towering shade of the oldest trees, a young couple strolled reading the labels of each. Two little boys stood looking intently into a Chinese soapberry, incriminating slingshots in their hands. "Not while I'm here, OK?" Andreas growled, and the boys shrugged and wandered off. Three enormous women entered the garden and, spreading blankets on the grass, arrayed themselves massively along the earth. Andreas and I picnicked under the shade of a cannonball tree, the high rustling of the garden's glinting fronds and foliage masking most other sounds. Birds, buffeted but triumphant, rode the wind. On the ground, unmolested and untroubled, a rooster strode among the shadows in conscious magnificence, his comb, backlit by the lowering sun, glowing red. "A survey was taken at Kew some years ago," said Andreas; "only 16 percent of the people who visited were there to see the plants." We looked around. "They came for the garden."
My interest in the botanical gardens of Jamaica arose mainly from their little-known role in the saga of Bligh and the mutiny on the Bounty, which I had researched for a book. There was also a personal incentive. I had briefly lived in Jamaica as a child, and one of my earliest true memories is of the parklike Hope Royal Botanical Gardens, in Kingston. In my memory, I see a tunnel of climbing vines with trumpety orange flowers; there had been a bandstand and beds of flowers you could touch. But I had not traveled inland, nor had I seen—and until my Bounty studies, even heard of—Jamaica's other historic gardens.
All of Jamaica, it has been said, is a botanical garden. Inland, the mountain clefts and gullies, often coursed by streams, are tangled with greenery, the trees woolly and blurred with epiphytes, ferns, orchids and the night-scented, night-blooming cereus. An island with a total area of less than 4,000 square miles, Jamaica has 579 species of ferns alone, a higher density, it is believed, than anywhere else in the world. Epiphytes dangle from telephone wires; the forests are hung with flowering vines; often on this trip I thought of how Bligh and the men of the Providence must have been reminded here of the lush blue-green landscape of Tahiti.
But the emphasis on a botanical garden in particular is significant. Existing for study, experimentation and display, a botanical garden is encyclopedic, learnedly diverse, replete with exotic specimens. It is a stunning fact that in the natural garden of Jamaica, the majority of the island's defining plants were imported and disseminated by botanical ventures like those conducted by William Bligh. Few of Jamaica's important economic plants—cassava, pineapple, cedar, mahogany and pimento—are native, and most of the island's defining flora is exotic. In the 16th century, the Spanish brought in sugar cane, bananas and plantains, limes, oranges, ginger, coffee and a variety of European vegetables. The British, driving out the Spanish in 1655, were responsible for the mango, which by 1793, as Bligh noted, grew "luxuriantly, and...are plentifull all over the Island." Similarly, the glossy, red, pear-shaped ackee, poisonous if eaten unripe, and today the national food of Jamaica, came from West Africa, brought either by European slaver or African slave.
For it was not, of course, only Jamaica's flora that was imported. When Columbus first reached Jamaica in 1494, the island had been inhabited by the Taino, a northern Caribbean people. The first Africans arrived shortly thereafter, in 1513, as servants, herdsmen and cowboys, as well as slaves to the Spanish. Under British rule, slaves were imported in ever-increasing numbers to do the brutal work in the cane fields of the great sugar estates. Most, including the Comorantee, Mandingo, Ashanti and Yoruba, came from West Africa, but thousands of bondsmen, slaves in all but name, came from Ireland, where Oliver Cromwell was intent on the extermination of the Irish people; some speculate that the characteristic lilt in Jamaican speech comes from the Irish, not the English. Today, Jamaica's population of just under three million is descended from its many transplanted peoples—West African slaves; Irish, Scottish and Welsh bondsmen and servants; British soldiers; Chinese, Indian and Lebanese merchants; and English landowners. The native Taino, who virtually disappeared as a people within 30 years of the arrival of the Spanish, are today encountered only in relics of their language, in words such as "hammock" and "canoe," and the island's name—Hamaika, the "land of wood and water."
Jamaica has also attracted a striking number of accidental transplants, random wanderers, who, like the buoyant fruit of the Barringtonia, drifted ashore and took root. Such a transplant was Andreas Oberli, who came to Jamaica in 1978 and eventually stayed on. "This was after Allen and before Gilbert," he said, locating events in the Jamaican way, by their relationship to landmark hurricanes.
We were again navigating traffic out of Kingston, headed for another historic garden. Kingston's setting, between its magnificent natural harbor (the largest in the Caribbean) and the Blue Mountain foothills, should make it one of the most striking cities in the world; but even in this season of violent bougainvillea bloom, the traffic and sprawl overwhelm, and most visitors look wistfully to the hills, where we were headed. Now, on the narrow road that winds along the Hope River valley, we found ourselves navigating pedestrians, veering cars and goats. "Never in Jamaica has a car hit a goat," Andreas declared defiantly, as goats and their kids skipped and grazed along the precipitous roadsides. Shortly before the paved road ran out, he stopped again to point to the ridgeline above us, darkly profiled against the clouded white sky. A tree with a tufted crown, like a bottlebrush, could just, with guidance, be discerned. "Cinchona," he said.
Half an hour later, our four-wheel drive jeep lurched into the garden. Here, at the top of the island, the white sky settled determinedly upon us. Sometimes in sharp, dark silhouette, sometimes misted indistinctly, towering trees breasted the pressing clouds that trickled in white drifts and threads from where they boiled out of the valley. Andreas looked about him, pleased; things were in not-bad order. The grass was clipped and green with cloud dew; the raised brick beds, filled with old favorites—begonias, geraniums, masses of daylilies—were all well tended. The beds he had built himself, between 1982 and 1986, when he had been superintendent of the garden.
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Related topics: Boats 18th Century Jamaica
Additional Sources
The Voyage of the Plant Nursery, H.M.S. Providence, 1791-1793 by Dulcie Powell, The Institute of Jamaica, 1973
The Botanic Garden, Liguanea by Dulcie Powell, The Institute of Jamaica, 1972









Comments (11)
I have long been a fan of the Smithsonian, since I visited many years ago in Washington.Its one of the great Museums of the World.And its magazine is one of the best.
Capt Bligh, was a very much mis-understood figure.He was less of a discipolinarian than most.In an era of very harsh discipline.Yet he suffered a mutiny.His open lifeboat journey from the Eastern Pacific to East Java is one of the great boat journeys of the world.Up there with Sir Earnest Shackleton's.He was not a bad Gopvernor of N.S.Wales, then a pretty corrupt evolving Australian State.
I enjoyed the article very much.Thank you.Great pictures of the gardens in Jamaica.And the breadfruit plants themselves.Good work Tks J.Brunton.
Posted by Capt J.Brunton. on December 20,2010 | 10:14 AM
My family own this house, it is absolutely stunning, It has a variety of trees growing on the land, at the back you will find some realy nice banan trees, the last time i was there would have been 2000.
Posted by Stephen Bennie on December 30,2009 | 07:56 PM
My family own this house
Posted by Stephen Bennie on December 30,2009 | 07:51 PM
Excellent article by Caroline Alexander,photos by George Butler. I am a member of the Southwest Florida Shipmodelers Guild and a Bounty/Bligh buff. Interested in obtaining a print of the painting/litho of Bligh and crew being set adrift from the Bounty. Thank you. Jim McCarthy,Naples,FL
Posted by JAMES D. McCARTHY on December 2,2009 | 07:52 AM
As a Jamaican I often lament that our own Jamaican people cannot appreciate the value of what we have. To archive the historically significant events of our nation we have depended on foreigners. Unfortunately, ours is not an intellectual culture and who knows what more there is to find about ourselves. Thanks so much for this wonderful article.
Posted by Stefan Hemmings on October 28,2009 | 05:21 PM
This is such an interesting summary of the history of Bligh's involvement with Bath, and the other botanical gardens around Jamaica. On my next trip I will certainly make the effort to visit Bath. Roast breadfruit with pickled red herring is a favourite breakfast dish of mine. Long live the breadfruit!
Will send this to my English friends, Maggie and Geoff, in Bath, UK who are interested in horticulture.
Posted by Madge Serra on October 15,2009 | 10:29 AM
My email address is naf-hope@cwjamaica.com
Andreas Oberli, Jamaica
Posted by Andreas Oberli on September 9,2009 | 12:06 AM
sweet. this article was full o' SWEETNASS! lol
Posted by Zeak on September 7,2009 | 04:20 PM
Cool Beans
Posted by Wade on September 4,2009 | 10:44 AM
I enjoyed reading Ms Alexander's travel article in your Sep.2009 issue.
Sharing such wonderful history conributed more to my continuing education.
Sorry to see the Campell House in such ruin. Is the Jamaican government not interested in a restoration? Maybe a grant to a great benefactor?? Seems such a loss. Could be another Rosehall (smaller scale).
The history alone, new great gardens etc., would bring the school children and tourists. Great place for a venue!
Sorry long winded
Kind regards
Peggy
Posted by Peggy knecht on August 30,2009 | 08:04 PM
Would like to know how to email Andreas Oberli.
Thank you,
Pam Doolittle
Posted by Pam Doolittle on August 26,2009 | 03:28 PM