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 3 of 6)
"The big trees were lost to the hurricanes," Andreas said. He had begun his duties in the wake of Allen (which hit in 1980) with the aid of two Peace Corps workers who had been assigned to him. "For the first year, we did nothing but drag and clear trees; we cut up or felled between two to three hundred." The debris gone, he had turned to reclaiming the garden. A ramshackle bungalow, dating from the first years of the garden's creation, had survived Allen, and on the grassy platform before it Andreas had laid the beds and fishpond, before moving down the slopes to more naturalistic plantings—the green stream of moss with its banks of polished bamboo, the azalea walk and avenue of ferns, the blue hill slope of agapanthus.
The origins of Cinchona Gardens lay in the abandonment of the garden at Bath, which had suffered from frequent severe floodings of the nearby Sulphur River, as well as its inconvenient distance from Kingston. Consequently, in 1862, the Jamaican colonial government established a new botanical garden at Castleton, some 20 miles north of Kingston, a decision that seems also to have inspired the afterthought of the Hill Gardens, as Cinchona was also known, which at nearly 5,000 feet is the highest in Jamaica. Originally, its generous allotment of 600 acres had been envisioned as a plantation of "Peruvian bark," or cinchona trees, from which the anti-malarial drug quinine is made. When the East Indian industry usurped the quinine market, plans for Cinchona shifted to the cultivation of temperate tropical plants; among other things, English planters had long harbored the hope of cultivating those necessities of life fondly associated with Home, such as the potato and the almighty cabbage, which, in this land of tropical abundance, were still found wanting.
"Up here, we have European weeds," said Andreas, and pointed out the clover, dandelions and daisies that spangled the grass around the ruined station house. "A lot of stones were imported for building, such as sandstone and Carrara marble; they were shipped covered with hay that was afterwards fed to horses. The seed in their manure did not germinate in the lowlands, but they do well up here in this European climate."
At the edge of the mountain, the clouds briefly dissolved to reveal the green, sunlit valley, combed with small farming plots; then the mist closed in again, effacing the sky entirely, and it began to rain. The old station house, shown in photographs in the 1920s and 1930s as a trim little bungalow, hulked ruinously and uselessly behind us, offering no shelter, and we tramped wetly through the garden, past the Japanese cedar conifers (Cryptomeria) and the Lost World avenue of ferns.
Out of the dripping mist loomed a piratical figure, black of beard and with a stumping gait, who, although his face remained inscrutable, in the country way, greeted Andreas warmly. Glen Parke had worked with Andreas during his superintendence in the 1980s. Living in the nearby village of Westphalia, he was still employed as a gardener by the Ministry of Agriculture. The clipped lawn and weeded beds were partly his work, carefully maintained far from admiring eyes. He and Andreas embarked upon a short tour of old friends, remarking on a tender cinchona sapling that stood where there should have been a tree. "Yah, we lose him," said Glen sadly, of the sapling's predecessor.
Each of Jamaica's four great gardens, although established along similar principles, has acquired its own distinctive aura. Hope Gardens, in the heart of Kingston, evokes postcard pictures from the 1950s of public parks, gracious and vaguely suburban and filled with familiar favorites—lantana and marigolds—as well as exotics. Bath has retained its Old World character; it is the easiest to conjure as it must have looked in Bligh's time. Cinchona of the clouds is otherworldly. And Castleton, the garden established to replace Bath, fleetingly evokes that golden age of Jamaican tourism, when visitors arrived in their own yachts—the era of Ian Fleming and Noel Coward, before commercial air travel unloaded ordinary mortals all over the island.
A showcase of terraced, tropical glamour, Castleton is dotted with ornamental ponds, wound through by artful, cobbled pathways that lead hither and yon beneath the canopies of its famous palms and its streamers of dangling orchids. Unlike Jamaica's other gardens, Castleton's star has never dimmed, perhaps because, straddling the direct road from Kingston to Ocho Rios, it has been accessible and in plain sight. Many Jamaicans recall family picnics taken beside its river, whose palest turquoise water delineates the garden's eastern boundary. Today, Castleton is a featured stop for tourists; on this day, the roadside parking lot was full, and local guides possessed of uncertain knowledge were conducting impromptu tours.
Across the river a cliff wall loomed, hung with its own flowering vines, lanced with its own straight-backed palms straining for light. Jamaica's own flora had been of great interest to Bligh's patron, Sir Joseph Banks, and Bligh's instructions directed that after disposing of his Tahitian cargo he was to take on board a consignment of Jamaican specimens, potted in readiness by the island's chief botanists.
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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