Captain William Bligh introduces Cook's strict discipline…
March 1788 CE
According to the expedition's historian Sam McKinney, Bligh enforces these rules "with a fanatical zeal, continually fuss[ing] and fum[ing] over the cleanliness of his ship and the food served to the crew."
He replaces the navy's traditional watch system of alternating four-hour spells on and off duty with a three-watch system, whereby each four-hour duty is followed by eight hours' rest.
For the crew's exercise and entertainment, he introduces regular music and dancing sessions.
Bligh's dispatches to Campbell and Banks indicate his satisfaction; he has no occasion to administer punishment because, he writes: "Both men and officers tractable and well disposed, & cheerfulness & content in the countenance of every one".
The only adverse feature of the voyage to date, according to Bligh, is the conduct of the surgeon Huggan, who is revealed as an indolent, unhygienic drunkard.
From the start of the voyage, Bligh had established warm relations with Christian, according him a status implying that he is Bligh's second-in-command rather than Fryer.
On March 2, Bligh formalizes the position by assigning Christian to the rank of Acting Lieutenant.
Fryer shows little outward sign of resentment at his junior's advancement, but his relations with Bligh significantly worsen from this point.
A week after the promotion on Fryer's insistence, Bligh orders the flogging of Matthew Quintal, who receives twelve lashes for "insolence and mutinous behaviour", thereby destroying Bligh's expressed hope of a voyage free from such punishment.