Sketches of the Caswell Mutiny, 1876. 'James Carrick; The Caswell; The Prisoner; Court House, Queenstown; Queenstown Peno seems to have persuaded the other foreigners to kill the English officers and take possession of the surviving Englishmen or Scotchmen were compelled for a time to submit to their three countrymen, James Carrick, John Dunne, and Peter Macgregor, determined to master the three Greeks, or to kill them, and bring the vessel safe to sail her to Queenstown - a two months' sail. He worked out his resolution


Sketches of the Caswell Mutiny, 1876. 'James Carrick; The Caswell; The Prisoner; Court House, Queenstown; Queenstown Peno seems to have persuaded the other foreigners to kill the English officers and take possession of the surviving Englishmen or Scotchmen were compelled for a time to submit to their three countrymen, James Carrick, John Dunne, and Peter Macgregor, determined to master the three Greeks, or to kill them, and bring the vessel safe to sail her to Queenstown - a two months' sail. He worked out his resolution with extraordinary courage and ability. He scarcely ever left the wheel; he worked like a hero, attending to the navigation of the ship, and watching and attending his prisoner [Christos Bambos]'. From "Illustrated London News", 1876.


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