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He is remembered for mutiny, conflict, and command. But William Bligh's most explosive struggle came not on the Bounty, but in colonial Australia.
In 1808, Governor William Bligh was arrested by soldiers of the New South Wales Corps in what became known as the Rum Rebellion. The name has often made the event sound colourful, rough, and almost comic. In reality, it was something far more serious: Australia's first successful coup.
William Bligh: Power, Mutiny and Australia's First Coup tells the story of one of the most controversial figures in British and Australian history. It follows Bligh from his naval reputation and his connection to the mutiny on the Bounty into the fraught political world of early New South Wales, where trade, military influence, private ambition, and weak institutions created the conditions for open rebellion.
Bligh was no easy hero. He was proud, severe, abrasive, and often politically clumsy. Yet he was also the lawful governor, sent to impose discipline on a colony where the New South Wales Corps, John Macarthur, and other powerful interests had grown dangerously entrenched. His attempt to restore authority led not to order, but to confrontation.
This book examines the rum economy, the rise of the Corps, the ambitions of Macarthur, the weakness of colonial institutions, and the dramatic overthrow of Bligh. It argues that the Rum Rebellion was not merely a quarrel over personality or spirits. It was a struggle over who had the right to command New South Wales.
At more than 150,000 words, this is a major account of Bligh, the rebellion, and the fragile foundations of early Australian authority. It explores the event not as legend, but as a revealing political crisis in a colony shaped by ambition, force, law, exclusion, and imperial power.
Bligh's name is often linked with mutiny. But in Australia, the question was larger than one man's reputation. It was about power, resistance, and the first great rupture in colonial government.
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