The Captain Called It Mutiny
Frederic Van De Water
Lu par Mark Harrington
On December 1, 1842, three crew members of the U.S. Navy brig Somers were hanged for mutiny. The alleged leader was eighteen-year-old Philip Spencer, son of President Tyler's Secretary of War. The author, a distant relative of one of the crew members suspected in the incident, attempts to uncover the facts of this controversial moment in United States naval history. - Summary by Mark Harrington
Chapitres
| Foreword and Chapter 1. Revelation | 23:54 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 2. Principal Characters | 45:10 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 3. Prelude | 27:22 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 4. Enough Hope | 21:57 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 5. Cry Havoc | 18:46 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 6. Saturday, November 26 | 32:42 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 7. Sunday, November 27 | 25:11 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 8. Monday, November 28 | 21:03 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 9. Tuesday, November 29 | 22:22 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 10. Wednesday, November 30 | 33:06 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 11. Black Thursday | 26:03 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 12. Catharsis | 36:53 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 13. Rising Wind | 32:17 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 14. Ablution | 34:05 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 15. Restoration | 21:48 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 16. Aftermath | 26:37 | Lu par Mark Harrington |
| Chapter 17. Autopsy | 19:49 | Lu par Mark Harrington |