Ken, thanks for the information - hopefully no one fell overboard! I have looked for him on FindMyPast without success. He's very elusive and my big problem is not knowing what unit he was in which is why I was hopeful there might be a manifest of units or soldiers on the Jumna. He was the subject of another thread where I posted what information I have, but the short answer is that he wrote a letter home dated "Suakin, February 21st" while on a small transport vessel out of Suakin (presumably to Trinkitat) in which he states the Jumna was diverted at Aden. Here is an excerpt from the letter:
"When we arrived at Aden we were sent on here at once to check a follower of the Mahdi's. We reached here on the 19th and with the 60th Rifles and with the 2nd Brigade Royal Irish Fusiliers are on our way now to relieve Tokir which is besieged. We sailed at noon today and shall arrive about 5pm.
We expect to be in action tomorrow, the sooner the better and then I hope they will send us home. We were served out with arms and accoutrements yesterday. I suppose you have seen in the paper that the Jumna was ordered here."
I also know that he came home to England after the action at Tokir and then emigrated to South America sometime before 1900 so had presumably left the army before them but don't know under what circumstances. He was born June, 1856 so would have been 27 at the time. I am fairly sure he was not in the 10th Hussars which was the other unit on the Jumna (he also served in the 2nd Afghan war but is not in the Afghan medal rolls for the 10th according to Garen) and his reference to the 60th KRR and the 2/RIF suggests he was not in either of those units. Your information that the Y&L also came from Aden is new to me, so they would be consistent with the information in the letter. Were the Y&L in Afghanistan?
Tom