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  1. Captain Peter Heywood (6 June 1772 – 10 February 1831) was a British Royal Navy officer who was on board HMS Bounty during the mutiny of 28 April 1789. He was later captured in Tahiti, tried and condemned to death as a mutineer, but subsequently pardoned.

  2. Another of the young gentlemen recommended to Bligh was 15-year-old Peter Heywood, also from a Manx family and a distant relation of Christian's. Heywood had left school at age 14 to spend a year on HMS Powerful, a harbour-bound training vessel at Plymouth.

  3. Peter Heywood was a Bounty midshipman whose implication in the mutiny was strong enough to get him condemned to death at his court-martial, but whose influence (his uncle was a commodore), wealth (he inherited a large fortune during the court-martial itself), and ardent professions of loyalty to Bligh led to his pardon.

  4. Jun 14, 2019 · Of the two men who received the king’s pardon, midshipman Peter Heywood benefited greatly from his influential family connections. Fletcher Christian’s family was also influential.

  5. Peter Heywood, who was just seventeen at the time of the mutiny, and Joseph Coleman and George Stewart, after announcing that they were formerly of the Bounty, were arrested and placed in chains. Coleman informed Captain Edwards of events after the mutiny.

  6. Peter Heywood 1773-1831. Born on 6 June 1773 at the Nunnery, near Douglas on the Isle of Man, he was the fourth son of eleven children of Peter Heywood, the deemster of the Isle of Man, and of his wife Elizabeth Spedding.

  7. Both are linked with Peter Heywood, a youthful midshipman when the mutiny occurred, though, despite being tried with the other mutineers, he eventually rose to the dignity of a post captain in the Royal Navy.