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Richard Parker
Mutiny Leader of the Nore
Fleet,
1767-1797
Well
educated and a persuasive orator, Richard Parker was not your normal
sailor in Britain's Royal Navy.
He came from a
well-off background, the son of a grain merchant and baker, and had
gone to grammar school in Exeter.
He was good
looking, swarthy and was described as having flashing black eyes.
For some reason
Parker rejected his family business and went to sea as a midshipman
where his naval career, even before the Nore Mutiny, was chequered with
a history of insubordination, a willingness to stand up for good food
and better conditions.
He even
challenged one of his captains, Edward Riou of HMS Bulldog, to
a duel.
Parker married
Ann McHardy, a Scottish farmer's daughter, in 1791 but this union
failed to temper his outspoken ways.
He was demoted
and transferred from his ship until discharged from the service because
of persistent rheumatism.
After a time as
a teacher, Parker ended up in debtor's prison and in 1797 he accepted
an offered 30 pounds to rejoin a Royal Navy desperately short of
experienced seamen.
His ship was the
Sandwich and a little over a month
later on 12 May the mutiny at The Nore began.
Parker was
chosen by the other delegates to be President of the Fleet because he
was a gentleman and was smart enough to match clever words with
well-educated officers.
Despite his
intelligence Parker's position was difficult in the extreme and he
walked a taut wire between radical fellow delegates and the
intransigence of the Admiralty.
King George III
demanded Parliament pass draconian laws against mutiny so that anyone
trying to "seduce soldiers or sailors from their duty" would receive
the death penalty.
Although accused
of being a traitor, Parker always said he would fight his country's
enemies.
But public
opinion was against the mutineers with their families being threatened
with transportation to Australia. Parker attracted a 500-pound reward
for his capture.
Parker's
attitude was that he wanted to settled the matter with pardons for the
mutineers. He went to leave the Sandwich with an offer of
submission, but radicals blocked his path.
With rations cut
off and internal bickering rising among the mutineers the so-called
Floating Republic was about to disintegrate.
One by one ships
slipped their cables and sailed away - at risk of being fired on - from
the rest of the mutiny fleet.
The Government
and Admiralty could now smell blood and there would be no concessions
to the mutineers. All ships had to surrender unconditionally and then
the sailors would have to wait for a decision on a King's Pardon.
An order went
out to then obey officers' orders and the mutiny was effectively over.
The hunt then
began for the delegates of the fleet - at least one of whom William
Wallis of HMS Standard shot himself rather than be tried and
hanged.
Parker tried to
leave the Sandwich only to find his way blocked by the crew who
feared retribution if he was allowed to escape. He held a vote on
the Sandwich to see if his men wanted to continue on or surrender. The
vast majority of men called to raise the white flag.
He was then
given a cabin to stay in while the Sandwich sailed for
Gravesend where delegates were identified and arrested by militia
troops.
Upon arrival he
was placed in leg shackles and the next day was taken ashore through a
hostile crowd who booed him. Parker is reported as having said "Don't
hoot me. It is not my fault. I will clear myself."
Parker was taken
to Maidstone prison where he was charged with treason and piracy.
The former
president of the fleet told his interrogators he had been ignored when
he had called for moderation during the mutiny and that he had hoped to
"prevent wild men from doing worse injury to the country".
At the express
orders of Prime Minister William Pitt, Parker was to face trial before
13 naval captains or higher ranks - including Captain Edward Riou
the man he had
challenged to a duel years before.
He also had to
do so without the aid of legal counsel.
His wife,
however, did her best by her husband and sent a petition to Queen
Charlotte asking for clemency.
On 22 June,
Parker's trial began aboard HMS Neptune under the presidency of
Vice-Admiral Thomas Pasley.
Contemporary
reports say Parker walked in with a "respectful, but unintimidated air."
After two days
of indifferent evidence, the prosecution closed its case against Parker
and called for him to begin his defence. He was denied court
transcripts of the proceedings so far, but was given an extra two days
to prepare.
Parker's defence
was spirited and would have shown to a fair-minded jury that he was
neither a revolutionary, nor one of the radical mutineers.
It lasted until
the early afternoon - 1.30pm to be precise - and then the captains left
to consider their verdicts. By 4pm they had returned and Parker was
sentenced to be hanged.
He read a
statement to the court: "My Lords, I shall submit to your sentence with
all due submission, being confident from the clearness of my conscience
that God who knows the hearts of people will favourably receive me.
"I most
sincerely hope that my death may atone to the country and that all the
rest of the fleet may be pardoned and restored to their former
situations. I am convinced they will return to their duty with
steadiness and alacrity."
On 30 June the
yellow flag of execution flew from the gallows ship Sandwich.
Parker was
dressed all in black and after a breakfast with marines he walked to
the quarterdeck where he prayed with a priest. Afterwards he asked for
a glass of white wine and with it said: "I drink first to the salvation
of my soul and next to the forgiveness of my enemies."
He then shook
hands with Sandwich's Captain Mosse and then was led towards
the forcastle followed by his former comrades who would be those soon
hauling him by the neck up into the rigging.
That was the
scene his wife saw when she came near the Sandwich in a
rowboat. It was her third attempt to see her husband and it so shocked
her she fainted.
After another
short prayer Parker asked for permission to speak and shouted out: "I
acknowledge the justice of the sentence under which I suffer. I hope my
death may be deemed a sufficient atonement and save the lives of
others."
A personal enemy
placed the noose badly around his neck - and Parker asked for another
to do it properly. This time it was done so that his death would be
quick and he would not suffer terribly as his body was hauled high.
Parker resisted
the hood being put over his head and asked that the moment for it be
deferred. He turned to his former comrades and smiled at them saying
"Goodbye to you."
Requesting a
white handkerhief with which to signal for the execution to begin,
Parker then mounted the steps leading to where he would die.
The hood was
pulled down and before he dropped his white cloth Parker jumped off the
platform towards the sea. The rope was still to be untied for the
hauling gang and so when it reached its limit it jagged taut and broke
the prisoner's neck.
A signal gun
sounded and the shocked hauling gang belatedly raised the body to the
yardarm. After an hour it was brought down and quickly buried near
Sheerness fort.
Later that day
Ann Parker and three women dug him up and smuggled the body in a dung
cart to London where she hoped for a Christian burial. The authorities,
however, tracked her down and left Parker's body on public display in a
tavern for a week.
Eventually a
magistrate allowed her the body, but officials seized it and hid it in
a workhouse, before it was taken to St Mary Matfelon's burial vault.
Ann Parker did
get to see her husband again when church workers felt pity for her and
opened Richard Parker's coffin one last time.
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