Jemmy Button

Orundellico, known as "Jemmy Button", (c. 1815 1864) was a native Fuegian of the Yaghan (or Yamana) tribe from islands around Tierra del Fuego, in modern Chile and Argentina. He was brought to England by Captain FitzRoy on the HMS Beagle and became a celebrity for a period. In 1830, Captain Robert FitzRoy, at the command of the first expedition of the famous Beagle, took a group of hostages from the Fuegian indigenous people after one of his boats was stolen. He decided to take four of the young Fuegian hostages all the way to England "to become useful as interpreters, and be the means of establishing a friendly disposition towards Englishmen on the part of their countrymen." He seems to have shown great concern for the four, feeding them before his own officers and crew and intending them to be educated and Christianised so that they could improve the conditions of their kin. The names given to the Fuegians by the crew were: York Minster, Jemmy Button, Fuegia Basket and Boat Memory. Their original names were, respectively: el'leparu, o'run-del'lico and yok'cushly. Boat Memory died of smallpox shortly after his arrival to England, and so his name is lost. Jemmy Button was 'paid for' with a mother of pearl button, hence his name. It is not clear whether his family willingly accepted the sale or he was simply abducted. Bruce Chatwin, in his 1977 book In Patagonia, described his imagined version of the scene:
"A tall person in costume beckoned him and he leapt aboard. The pink man handed the uncle a disk that shimmered like the moon and the canoe spread a white wing and flew down the channel towards the source of pearl buttons."
The Beagle arrived in Plymouth in mid-October 1830. The newspapers soon started publishing details of the exotic visitors and they became celebrities. In London, they met King William IV. Fuegia Basket, only a young girl, got a bonnet from Queen Adelaide herself. One year later, the Beagle returned the three surviving Fuegians home, still captained by FitzRoy and at great expense to himself. He took with him a young naturalist, Charles Darwin. After initial difficulty recalling his language and customs, Jemmy was soon out of his European clothes and habits. A few months after his arrival, he was seen emaciated, naked save for a loincloth and long-haired. Darwin was appalled at Jemmy's resistance to returning to England, and preferred to relate that to the presence of his "young and nice looking wife", Lassaweea. It appears, however, that he and the others had taught their families some English and he was happy and healthier, given the disease and diet to which he had been exposed away from home. Some twenty years later a group of Christian missionaries, the Patagonian Missionary Society, arrived to find Jemmy still had a remarkable grasp of English. Some time later in 1859, the group was massacred at Wulaia Bay by the Fuegians, supposedly led by Jemmy and his family.

See also

Further reading

  • Savage - the Life and Times of Jeremy Button by Nick Hazlewood ISBN 0340739118

External links

Button, Jemmy Button, Jemmy Button, Jemmy

 

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