1826 rebellion
The first convict rebellion took place in September 1826. It was led by "Black" John Goff. He arranged for two convict decoys to make an escape attempt; they were followed by several soldiers. While this happened, fifty convicts seized and bound their overseers, robbed the stores for provisions and put three boats to sea. One soldier was killed, bayoneted to death, while others were wounded. The convicts sailed toYou... have detailed to the Court a long complaint of the hardships you have undergone, of your love of liberty, and of the degree of violence which you thought yourself justified in using to obtain it. By your own statement your whole life has been one career of crime... It is within the recollection of this Court, how near you were, at no distant period, to have been consigned to the grave, and happy would it have been for you had your career then terminated without the additional crime of the blood of a fellow creature being added to the list... With respect to the general harsh treatment of which you complain on Norfolk Island, what are men sent there for? It is within the knowledge of the Court that they are never sent except for crimes of the deepest dye; and is it then to be supposed that they are sent there to be indulged, to be fed with the fruits of the earth and that they are not to work in chains? No, the object in sending men there is not only as a punishment for their past crimes, but to serve as a terror to others; and so far from it being a reproach, as you have stated it, it is a wise project of the Government in instituting that settlement for the punishment of the twice and thrice convicted felon, as a place of terror to evil doers, and in order to repress the mass of crime with which the Colony unhappily abounds.
Capture of ''Wellington''
On 21 December 1826, the ship ''Wellington'' was seized by the 66 convicts it was taking toRe-capture
''Wellington'' then sailed to the1827 uprising
There was an attempted uprising in 1827 with an attempt made on the life of new commandant Thomas Wright by Patrick Clynch. Clynch was later captured and then shot. Wright was later arrested for ordering Clynch's murder and put on trial. He was acquitted.1830 escape
In 1830 there was a successful escape of eleven convicts from the island on a newly constructed whaleboat. They went to Phillip Island, where they robbed a visiting botanist, Mr. Cunningham of provisions. Lt Borough took charge of a boat and took off after the felons but was forced to turn back as darkness began to fall and the rough seas. The convicts that took to sea and were never heard of again – it is presumed they all drowned.1834 rebellion
There was another serious insurrection on Norfolk Island in January 1834. Over a hundred convicts rose up against the guards, aiming to take charge of a boat and sail to freedom. On the morning 15 January 1834 about 30 men, following a pre-arranged plan by pretending sickness, fell out of various of the Camp and Longridge gangs and went to the hospital. They entered the hospital and secured those there by locking them in a room, and then proceeded to break off their irons. From the hospital the mutineers waited for the gaol-gang to be turned out for work under an armed guard. As this occurred the insurrectionists rushed from the hospital behind the gaol and attacked the rear rank of the guard. After a short struggle during which two or three muskets were wrested from the soldiers, six of the mutineers were killed or wounded and the guard “succeeded in dispersing and finally in securing them”. * Robert Douglas - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Henry Drummond - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * James Bell - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Joseph Butler - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Robert Glennie - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Walter Burke - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Joseph Snell - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * William McCulloch - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Michael Andrews - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * William Groves - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Thomas Freshwater - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Henry Knowles - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny * Robert Ryan - 23 September 1834 - Hanged for mutiny1842 rebellion
On the morning of 21 June 1842, a convict work party aboard the ''Governor Phillip'' at Cascade were let out to start unloading the launch of the brig, as they had to make way for a ship that had arrived from Sydney. After seeing that only a serjeant and two soldiers were on deck, the convicts overpowered them and held the ''Governor Phillip'' for roughly half an hour before the soldiers trapped below deck were able to retake the brig. Five mutineers and one soldier were killed in the affray, and another two soldiers were severely wounded. Three of the soldiers that were initially confined below deck were also scolded badly when the convicts poured boiling hot water through gaps in a hatch that they had bolted shut. At trial, one of the convicts was released for saving a soldier who had been thrown over aboard. Five other convicts were put to death, one of whom received a reprieve and was instead transported for life. The other four convicts were hanged in November 1840. ''1846 rebellion
There was a final rebellion of convicts in 1846. It was led by William "Jackey Jackey" Westwood, a bushranger who had recently been sent to Norfolk Island. He was known as the "Gentleman Bushranger".See also
*References
{{Convicts in Australia Rebellions in Australia Mutinies History of Norfolk Island Convictism of Norfolk Island 1826 in Oceania 1827 in Oceania 1830 in Oceania 1834 in Oceania