The Mutiny
On the afternoon of March 29, 1857, Lieutenant Baillie, the adjutant of the 34th Bengal Native Infantry stationed at Barrackpore, received word that several soldiers in his regiment were agitated. He was also told that one of them, Mangal Pandey, was wandering around near the regiment's guardhouse with a loaded rifle, inciting mutiny and threatening to shoot the first Englishman he saw. Later investigations revealed that, amidst the unrest among the soldiers and perhaps under the influence of bhang (marijuana), Pandey had taken his weapon and, upon seeing a detachment of British soldiers disembarking from a steamer near the cantonment, rushed towards the guardhouse.
Baillie immediately grabbed his weapon and ran towards the soldiers. Pandey stood behind a field gun in front of the 34th Regiment's guardhouse, aimed at Baillie, and fired. The bullet missed Baillie but struck his horse in the belly, causing both horse and rider to fall to the ground. Baillie dismounted, drew his pistol, and advanced towards Pandey, firing. He missed. Before Baillie could draw his sword, Pandey attacked him with his heavy Indian sword, and, along with his companion, struck Baillie on the shoulder and neck, knocking him to the ground. Another soldier, Sheikh Paltu, intervened and tried to restrain Pandey, who was reloading his rifle.
A British Sergeant-Major, Huson, arrived on the parade ground at the call of an Indian Naik (corporal). Huson ordered Jemadar Ishwar Prasad, the Indian officer in charge of the guard, to arrest Pandey. The Jemadar replied that his NCOs had gone for help and that he could not arrest Pandey alone. Huson then ordered Ishwar Prasad to stand in the guard line with his weapon. Meanwhile, a crowd arrived on the parade ground shouting, "Where is he? Where is he?" Huson said to Lieutenant Baag, "For your own safety, move to the right, sir. The soldiers will shoot you!" Just then, Pandey fired his gun.
Huson lunged at Pandey while grappling with Lieutenant Baag. As Pandey turned towards him, Huson fell to the ground, shot by Pandey's gun. Hearing the gunshot, other soldiers rushed out of the barracks; they all watched what happened. At this time, Sheikh Paltu, trying to protect the two Englishmen, pleaded with the other soldiers for help. When the soldiers started throwing stones and shoes at them, Sheikh Paltu asked the guards for help to arrest Pandey, but they threatened to shoot him if he didn't let the rebel go.
Some of the quarter-guard soldiers moved forward and attacked the two fallen officers. They then threatened Sheikh Paltu and ordered him to release Pandey, whom he was vainly trying to restrain. But Paltu refused to let go of Pandey until Baag and the Sergeant-Major were able to get to their feet. By now, Paltu himself had been wounded and had to let go. He retreated in one direction, while Baag and Huson retreated in the other, both of them struck by the butts of the soldiers' muskets.
General Hersee's Intervention
Meanwhile, the commanding officer of Barrackpore, Major General John Bennet Hersee, was informed of the incident. He immediately rushed to the guardhouse with his two officer sons. It was now midday, and soldiers of the 43rd Bengal Native Infantry Regiment, who were not on duty, had joined the crowd in the parade ground. Since not all of them were armed, Hersee feared a major mutiny might erupt. He therefore ordered the British soldiers to assemble at the Governor-General's residence.
Seeing the chaos in the armory of the 34th Bengal Native Infantry, Hersee approached the guard, drew his pistol, and ordered them to arrest Mangal Pandey and carry out their duty. The general warned that anyone who disobeyed would be shot. The guard moved forward, following Hersee towards Pandey. Pandey placed the barrel of his rifle against his chest and pulled the trigger with his foot. He fell to the ground, bloodied, his regimental jacket ablaze, but he was not seriously injured.
The situation was now under control of the British and Indian officers. "Frightened and trembling," Mangal Pandey was taken to the regimental hospital for treatment.
The Hanging
Pande recovered, and his trial took place in less than a week. When asked if he was intoxicated, he firmly stated that he had mutinied of his own volition and had not been instigated by anyone else. Three Sikh soldiers from the quarter guard testified that Jamadar Ishwar Prasad had ordered them not to arrest Pande, for which he was sentenced to death along with Pande.
Mangal Pande was hanged in front of all the Indian and British soldiers stationed at Barrackpore on April 8, 1857. The Delhi Gazette of April 18th published a detailed account of the execution, stating that Pande refused to give any information and that the event had a "very bad effect on the soldiers of the regiment present."
Jamadar Ishwar Prasad was hanged separately on April 21. Unlike the stoic Mangal Pande, the Jamadar expressed remorse for his actions and implored the assembled soldiers to obey their officers in the future.

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