Jemmy Button
Orundellico (c. 1815–1864), known in English as Jemmy Button, was a Yaghan man from the islands near Tierra del Fuego who was acquired by Captain Robert FitzRoy of HMS Beagle in January 1830 near Wulaia Bay, in exchange for a large mother-of-pearl button, from which he derived his adopted name.[1][2] At approximately 14 years old, he was one of four Yaghan individuals taken to England as hostages to facilitate future surveys and with the aim of educating them in Western customs and Christianity before returning them to promote "civilization" among their people.[1][3] In England, Orundellico received rudimentary education, learned some English, was baptized, and adapted temporarily to European dress and manners, impressing observers including Charles Darwin, who traveled with him during the Beagle's second voyage back to South America in 1831–1833 and described him as merry, quick to learn, and vain about his appearance.[4][5] Upon repatriation to Tierra del Fuego in 1833, however, he rapidly discarded European clothing and language, reverting to traditional Yaghan practices, marrying a fellow repatriated Yaghan woman known as Fuegia Basket, and showing little inclination to proselytize Christianity or Western ways to his tribe.[1][5] Orundellico's case exemplified the challenges and ultimate failure of early 19th-century British efforts to impose cultural transformation on indigenous peoples, as he prioritized kinship and survival in his harsh native environment over adopted habits; he lived into the 1860s, fathering children and participating in intertribal conflicts, including the 1859 massacre of Anglican missionaries at Wulaia Bay, where his knowledge of Europeans may have aided the attackers.[1][6]