I thought that this was an interesting article. It reviews a book,
discusses the shame of the colonial legacy, and indicates how Darwin
and evolution were an intricate part of it. Check out the original BBC
article for pictures or to add your comments to the story.
The 'hostages' that sailed with Darwin
By Jonathan Duffy
BBC News Magazine
It sounds like the plot to a
particularly misguided TV makeover show, but when a British sea captain
brought four South American Indians back to Britain, and enrolled them
in school, his plan was to help spread civilisation across a "dark
continent".
By the time he got round to writing his first novel, the comedy
credentials of Harry Thompson, who died last week, were beyond question.
With TV shows such as Have I Got News for You, Harry Enfield and Chums
and Never Mind the Buzzcocks in his back pocket, Thompson had more than
earned his light entertainment stripes.
So the subject of his historical novel, This Thing of Darkness, came as
a surprise. The book, which was considered for this year's Booker
Prize, deals with the voyages of the Beagle - the ship which carried
Charles Darwin on his voyage of discovery.
But Thompson's tale also helped reawaken interest in a remarkable,
though largely forgotten, episode in Britain's colonial history.
When the Beagle set sail from Plymouth for the south Atlantic in 1831,
with Darwin in the charge of Captain Robert Fitzroy, it was also taking
three young Patagonian Indians home after a bizarre social experiment.
Retribution
His charges - two of them still children - had spent the previous 15
months living on the outskirts of London, where they had been the
subjects of what, viewed through modern eyes, seems like an astonishing
act of imperialism.
The trip back to the southern hemisphere was also a return journey for
Fitzroy, who had originally been sent there, in charge of the Beagle,
to survey this remote part of the globe for the British government.
On that initial journey Fitzroy had taken four local "savages" from the
southernmost tip of the continent, known as Tierra del Fuego, as
retribution for the stealing of one of his whaling boats.
As hostile as the captain's conduct may seem, his motives were largely
19th Century benevolence: Fitzroy planned to ferry his four captives
back to Britain and school them in the ways of Christianity and
gentility. He then planned to return them to their homeland in the
belief they would spread their newly instilled values through this
"dark continent".
The four were an incongruous bunch, spanning in age range from nine to
26, with an equally motley collection of names given them by Fitzroy.
* Fuegia Basket, the youngest and the only female, was named after "Basket Island";
* Jemmy Button, aged about 14, took his name from the pearl button he was exchanged for;
* Boat Memory, who was about 20; and
* York Minster, who was named after a hill that had been likened in shape to the ancient city's cathedral.
The experiment started badly. Boat Memory died of smallpox shortly
after the Beagle docked in Plymouth. Fitzroy took the other three to
London and enrolled them in the first Church of England primary school,
located in Walthamstow, today a suburb but then a village to the north
east of the capital.
Peter Nichols, author of Evolution's Captain, which examines the
relationship between Fitzroy and Darwin, struggles to imagine the scene.
"York Minster would have been a hulking guy. They would have been
dressed up in uniform and made to sing songs about Jesus," says Mr
Nichols.
Nevertheless, the two youngest seemed to settle in well. Records held
by the Vestry House Museum, which sits close to the spot where the
school was, reveal they made friends easily.
With Fitzroy as their escort, they were also proving a hit on the
London social scene, and even enjoyed an audience with King William IV
and Queen Adelaide.
Such treatment doesn't bear scrutiny through modern eyes, says Mr Nichols.
"People then looked at them and thought isn't it great to see them
dressed up in English clothes, saying 'please' and 'thank you ma'am'."
Yet records showed that Jemmy Button lapped up the attention, and was
"enthralled" by his clothes. "He was said to never be able to pass a
mirror without stopping to gaze in it."
"What they really thought... what was going on inside their heads... who knows?"
Fearing humiliation
But things were starting to go awry as York Minster, who was ill at
ease among his new-found "friends", became sexually interested in young
Fuegia Basket. Although the official records don't note it, says Mr
Nichols, it can be deduced from other writings at the time.
"It was really hushed up. Fitzroy, having taken these people around
London and explained his scheme knew it wouldn't have looked good."
Devastated and fearing he would be utterly humiliated the captain
swiftly removed his charges from school and made hasty plans to take
them back to the south Atlantic.
But a complex and intelligent man, Fitzroy panicked at the thought of
spending months on his own at sea, with only the ship hands and his
three Patagonians. So he put the word out he was looking for a
travelling companion, preferably a naturalist.
Up stepped Charles Darwin, then a trainee pastor, and, like most others
at the time, a firm believer in the biblical account of the Creation.
The repatriation of the Patagonians was every bit as disappointing as
the experiment to Fitzroy. They had been packed off with a haul of
presents from British well-wishers - wine glasses, tea trays, butter
dishes - all of which were useless in their home environment.
Robbed
They were robbed by other natives and York Minster, having married
Fuegia Basket on their return, subsequently robbed his old travelling
companion Jemmy Button.
When Fitzroy returned a year later to catch up, having traipsed around
the south Atlantic with Darwin, he found Jemmy Button had simply gone
back to his old way of life.
"Fitzroy had to face the fact his experiment had been a total disaster
because they had reverted to savaging; their civilisation had been a
gloss. It plunged him into a deep depression," says Mr Nichols.
Reports that filtered back to Britain many years later would have
depressed him even further. Fuegia Basket had become a prostitute
"turning tricks on the beach" for British sailors and Jemmy Button
stood trial for hijacking a ship of British missionaries, who were all
slaughtered.
Yet, as Mr Nichols points out, without the experiment Darwin might
never have set out on what turned out to be the momentous voyage
through which he forged his theory of natural selection.
At the time Alfred Russel Wallace was pursuing a similar line of
inquiry. Were it not for the folly of the well-meaning but ultimately
misguided Captain Fitzroy, says Mr Nichols, we might today be talking
about Wallacism rather than Darwinism.