Ned Kelly: Australia's Most Famous Outlaw

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If you enjoy comedy, I strongly suggest listening to The Dollop’s live podcast on Ned Kelly. A funny take on it all

https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/the-dollop-with-dave-anthony-and-gareth-reynolds/id643055307?i=1000376709985

👍︎︎ 3 👤︎︎ u/ringbit214 📅︎︎ Aug 15 2020 🗫︎ replies
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there are probably few people covered here at biographics who are more divisive than ned kelly australia's most famous outlaw and bushranger he is primarily remembered for his final showdown with the police where ned and his men wore homemade armor to some people he is a folk hero a working class revolutionary who took a stand against british colonial authority to others he's simply a cold-blooded villain who has been undeservingly mythologized and morphed into a sort of robin hood of australia we'll let you hear his story and form your own opinion but there is one thing for certain for better or worse ned kelly has become one of australia's greatest cultural icons edward ned kelly was born in beaveridge victoria which back then was still a colony of the british crown his date of birth is unknown but it's generally believed to be either december 1854 or june 1855. his father was john kelly also known as red an irish criminal who was transported to australia in his early 20s for stealing pigs he served his time on van diemen's land better known today as tasmania and afterwards like many other convicts he chose to remain in australia and make a new life for himself instead of returning home red worked various odd jobs which included being a farm hand for the quinn family a group of irish immigrants who settled near melbourne then he met 18 year old ellen quinn and the two married in 1850. this was around the time that australia became gripped with gold fever and many men tried their luck at prospecting john kelly was among them and while he didn't exactly strike it rich he made enough for him and illinois to buy a farm of their own in a developing town called beverage they had eight children together with ned being the oldest son he was named after john's closest brother edward and according to family tradition he came into the world with the eureka rebellion a conflict between prospectors and colonial forces which occurred in late 1854. quite fittingly ned kelly would go on to develop an aversion to authority all his life particularly to the police the family hoped his beaveridge grew so with their fortunes but this didn't happen the main road to beaveridge was very treacherous and alternative routes that bypassed the town completely became the standard roads for travel the family farm did not flourish and the kellys lost money and john started drinking things got so bad that eventually they had to sell the farm and move to another town called avenell during the mid-1860s there ned kelly is still remembered by many as a hero even today particularly for an incident when he was just 10 years old and he saved the life of a younger boy who was drowning for this he was rewarded with a green sash made out of fine silk became one of ned's most treasured possessions and he even wore it under his clothes during his final confrontation with the police after first arriving in australia and serving his time john kelly tried hard to walk the straight and narrow and avoid any more legal troubles but temptation got the best of him in 1865 when his family was struggling for food a calf wandered onto his land even though it was branded as belonging to one philip morgan john killed and butchered it for meat he was caught and charged with cattle stealing and had to do six months of hard labor the work plus the drinking took their toll on john's health he died in december 1866 leaving the 12 year old ned as the new man of the family a few years later the kelly family had to move again this time to a stretch of uncultivated farmland outside the town of greta there they reunited with a lot of relatives as ellen's parents and sisters along with their own families had relocated to the area wherever they went the quinn's developed a reputation for not being the most law-abiding people in the world and often were accused of cattle and horse stealing ed began spending a lot of time with his uncles who undoubtedly influenced his developing behavior but the defining moment came in 1869 when the 14 year old kelly met harry power power real name henry johnson was a well-known bushranger originally bushrangers were escaped convicts who used the australian wilderness as a hideout but it later came to refer to all criminals who hid in the bush they were undoubtedly criminals who committed robberies and even murders but they still had their fair share of sympathizers ned kelly aside quite a few others became regarded as folk heroes who stood up to authority similar to the outlaws of the american west harry power was one such example and the kellys were his sympathizers ned in particular took an instant liking not only to power but to the lifestyle itself he became the bushranger's protege helping him steal horses and commit robberies unsurprisingly ned's first brush with the law occurred at this time when he stood accused of assaulting and robbing a chinese merchant ned was arrested when he was 15 but his sister and two family friends testified that it was in fact the merchant who instigated the assault as the latter had no witnesses on his side police had no choice but to let ned kelly go he was later again arrested as an accomplice in several robberies committed by power but none of the victims could positively identify him led's association with harry power it ended in june 1870 when the latter was caught and arrested however his influence on his young protege was too much to overcome and ned kelly had already built a reputation as a local hoodlum a newspaper called the banala ensign wrote about their relationship saying that the effect of power's example has already been to draw one young fellow into the open vortex of crime and unless his career is speedily cut short young kelly will blossom into a declared enemy of society that is pretty much what happened from that point on ned kelly always stayed on the wrong side of the law just a few months after power's arrest ned was taken into custody for assaulting a hawker named jeremiah mccormack this time he was found guilty and sentenced to six months of hard labor he was released early but only enjoyed a few weeks of freedom before being incarcerated once more for horse theft this charge was later downgraded to feloniously receiving a horse but kelly still got three years in prison when he was released kelly went back to stealing livestock this time accompanied by his younger brother dan kelly a bit later they would go on to form the kelly gang whose other main members included steve hart and john byrne another defining moment in the life of ned kelly took place on april 15 1878 known as the fitzpatrick incident it is sometimes seen as the catalyst that irrevocably put ned and his brother on the path of no return as they became wanted fugitives unfortunately we cannot say with certainty what happened because we have two different versions of events that's of constable alexander fitzpatrick and that's of the kelly family and neither one is a particularly reliable source fitzpatrick traveled on that day to the kelly household to take dan into custody as there was an arrest warrant out on him for horse theft according to the constable he arrived at the house where he found dan kelly his mother ellen and two associates named william williamson and bill skillion he agreed to allow dan to finish dinner before taking him in but while he was waiting ned appeared and restrained him the bushranger shot fitzpatrick in the arm while ellen knocked him unconscious with a fire shovel they later let him go after retrieving the bullet from his hand using a knife the kelly version was a bit different they said fitzpatrick came to the house drunk and without a warrant ned wasn't there at the time and the constable made a pass at his sister kate kelly at that point dan and fitzpatrick started fighting and the constable pulled out his revolver right at that moment ned entered the home and helped his brother overpower the police officer who injured his arm in the scuffle it was not established conclusively that fitzpatrick's injury came from a gunshot the doctor who inspected him also noted that the constable smelled of alcohol although fitzpatrick claimed that he stopped for a drink on the way back to steady his nerves he wasn't the most trustworthy witness but the police accepted his evidence anyway and arrest warrants were issued ned and dan kelly went on the run while ellen williamson and skillian were charged and convicted of being accessories to attempted murder public reaction at the time was very negative to the trial particularly the sentencing of the elderly ellen kelly to hard labor even the victoria police weren't happy with fitzpatrick's actions as the commissioner decried them as generally bad and discreditable to the force however they did generate plenty of sympathy for the kelly brothers [Music] in hiding ned and dan were joined by joe byrne and steve hart and the group hoped to raise enough money to appeal ellen kelly's sentence like we said a lot of locals were on their side so they were tipped off in late october when the police discovered their whereabouts and dispatched an armed party to their location to take them down the police group consisted of four men sergeant kennedy and constables lonegan mcintyre and scanlon on october 25 1878 they arrived and camped at stringybark creek however none of them were experienced bushmen like ned kelly knowing that they were out there somewhere he found their horse tracks and followed them to their camp where kelly and his gang took them by surprise what happened next is again a controversial and uncertain matter as accounts differ and some argue that the story has been embellished over the decades to portray kelly in a more positive manner basically it all hinges on whether or not the kelly gang gunned down the officers in cold blood when they entered the camp only two policemen were there lonergan and mcintyre mcintyre was quickly disarmed and surrendered peacefully while lonergan was shot and killed by ned kelly allegedly he tried to run but he and ned had bad blood so it's also possible that kelly intended to kill him regardless when scandal and kennedy returned to the camp they found mcintyre sitting on a log and the kelly gang waiting in ambush a shootout ensued where scanlan was shot dead and kennedy was mortally injured crawling a few hundred feet before dying during the chaos mcintyre managed to jump on a horse and make a run for it he reached civilization and informed everyone that the kelly gang had just murdered three police officers whether or not the officers would have lived if they surrendered we cannot say but from that point on the kelly gang were officially declared outlaws by the governor of victoria under the recently passed felons apprehension act they basically had no more rights they could be shot on site even if they were captured alive [Music] the kelly gang were active for approximately two years but they spent most of that time in hiding in the australian bush relying on friendlies to provide them with food and lodging the police knew this and since they could not capture the kelly gang they decided to crack down hard on their sympathizers fortunately for the authorities the aforementioned felons apprehension act also allowed them to punish those who offered any aid shelter or sustenance to outlaws so they were pretty much free to imprison anyone they felt were on the side of ned kelly in one particularly egregious example in january 1879 one captain standish rounded up 23 men who were believed to be either friends or sympathizers of the outlaws and imprisoned them for months without charge if anything such abuses of power only serve to portray ned kelly in a more positive light as more and more people began to see him as a man fighting against injustice the bushranger helped enhance this reputation by writing the so-called geralderi letter a 56-page 8300 word manifesto where he decried the abuses of the police whom he described as a parcel of big ugly fat-necked wombat-headed big-bellied magpie-legged narrow-hipped spore-footed sons of irish bailiffs or english landlords which is better known as the officers of justice or victorian police who some call honest gentlemen in the letter kelly argued that he was forced into becoming an outlaw by circumstances outside of his control he still blamed constable fitzpatrick as the one who started all of this and called for justice not only for him but for all the poor families of australia who were subjugated by the tyrannism of the english yoke during their time on the run the kelly gang did have moments when they behaved more like traditional outlaws as they robbed two banks the first one in the town of europe took place on december 10 1878 shortly after the shootout at stringyback creek the gang needed money and supplies to go into hiding first they held up the nearby train station at faithful's creeks so they could rest the horses dress up in respectable clothing and cut the telegraph lines everyone who came to investigate was taken hostage and placed inside a storeroom bern stayed behind with the hostages while the other three went to euroa bank and cleaned it out they then took the bank manager robert scott and his family back to the storeroom so they couldn't raise the alarm and then they rode away leaving everyone safe and uninjured there are additional details to this story such as the gang giving the hostages a horse-trick riding show before leaving or scott being so friendly with his robbers that they drank whiskey together after they emptied his safe but it is hard to tell at this point if such things actually happened or they are just more examples of colorful events added to boost the legend of ned kelly the second bank robbery occurred a few months later on february 10 1879 in geraldery the plan was similar although this one was more ambitious in its execution the night before the gang descended upon the local police barracks where they took the only two officers inside as hostages the next day they dressed up in police uniforms and managed to rob the bank without any violence they also burnt a lot of mortgage documents and took their horses to the local blacksmith to get re-shoed putting the work on the police tab this is also when kelly left behind his famous geraldery letter although it wouldn't be published in its entirety until 1930. [Applause] [Music] following the two robberies authorities stepped up their efforts to hunt down the kelly gang even more with contributions from banks they increased the reward for their capture to 2000 pounds per head for a total of about 8 000 pounds which is about 1.5 million australian dollars in modern currency they also brought in a native police unit from queensland which contained aboriginal troopers who were more adept at tracking people in the bush ultimately they were able to find the outlaws but it has been speculated that their efforts were hampered at every turn by the victoria police who didn't want to get upstaged by the queenslanders they were already deeply unpopular with the people of victoria those who sympathized with ned kelly considered them to be corrupt and abusive those who didn't still regarded them as incompetent for being unable to capture the gang the last thing they needed was for the queenslanders to do their job for them in the end it was the money that gave them the advantage the kelly gang may have been popular with the people but it was inevitable that someone would ultimately choose funds over friendship that someone was aaron sherrot a friend of the gang members who was particularly close to joe burn he became an informant for the police although some believed he was actually trying to act as a double agent even the authorities suspected this but they found a way of making him useful regardless of his true loyalties the police made sure that word spread around that sherrod was working with them they were hoping to entice the kelly gang out of hiding using sherrod more as bait than as an informant this actually worked the gang felt betrayed by sherrod and byrne in particular wanted him dead on june 6 1880 he and dan kelly traveled to woolshed creek where sherritt lived there were four police officers inside the sheriff home that night so the gang needed a way of separating their target from the group they kidnapped a neighbor and brought him to the front door of the sheriff house while they land hiding they made him call out for sherrod who recognized his neighbor's voice and answered the door without hesitation at that point burn popped out of the shadows and shot him through the head this was the first part of their plan as the kelly gang were set on enacting their most ambitious and most violent ploy yet they knew that the police inside sherrod's home would send word of what had happened to melbourne who in turn would send reinforcements by special train the rail would pass through a city called banala where undoubtedly more officers would join the hunt and then through a town called glen rowan while dan and byrne dealt with sherrod ned and steve hart traveled to glen rowan their intention was to run the train off the track kill any survivors and then go on to banala which left without a police force would have been easy pickings to that end ned and hart kidnapped two railway workers and forced them at gunpoint to damage the track over a steep ravine afterwards they went inside the town took the locals hostage and packed them inside the glenron inn waiting for the train to arrive from manila this was all building up to one bloody confrontation but the kelly gang had one last memorable ace up their sleeves one so unusual that the police didn't even believe it when they heard reports from the locals over the course of the previous months the gang members had constructed homemade armor for themselves out of pieces of metal plow moldboards they weighed almost 100 pounds each and their iconic look which was plastered over every newspaper in australia undoubtedly was instrumental in creating the legend of ned kelly his armor today has a place of honor at the state library of victoria those of dan and hart are on display at the victoria police museum while burns is in private hands but back to the night in question the kelly gang had over 60 hostages at the glenroe and inn they passed the time with music dancing games and drinking everybody was seemingly having a good time even perhaps too much of a good time as he became convinced that he was surrounded by sympathizers ned let his guard down and allowed the local schoolmaster a man named thomas curnow to return home and go to sleep kernel was not only a sympathizer but he had overheard the gang's plan of derailing the train he went home grabbed a candle and a red handkerchief and went to the railway to find the spot where the tracks had been damaged after locating it he managed to signal the engine driver in time for him to stop the train derailing the entire police force was alive and well and headed for the glenron inn they surrounded the hotel and the shooting started the kelly gang quickly saw that their plan had failed but had no intention of surrendering they put on their armor and fired back most of the hostages made it out safely the women and children were released at the beginning and most of the rest managed to sneak out the back during the chaos two bystanders both men were caught in the gunfire and died after sustaining a few minor injuries the outlaws retreated further inside the hotel except for ned kelly who ran into the bush intending to circle around and flank the police joe byrne was the first to die a bullet hit him in the thigh and severed his femoral artery causing him to bleed out then came the most spectacular moment of the shootout as ned kelly emerged out of the dark mist clad in armor and guns blazing the site made the police think that they were fighting the devil himself and it took them minutes to finally understand what was happening eventually they realized that ned's legs were completely unprotected so they aimed for those kelly took several shots before finally collapsing and surrendering he was captured alive but dan kelly and steve hart were still shooting from inside the hotel by this point all the hostages had been evacuated the police had an artillery cannon coming in from melbourne and they intended to blow the entire hotel to smithereens however this took too long so instead they burned it to the ground later they found the charred bodies of kellyanne hart inside who apparently died of suicide by poison and so the kali gang came to a bloody fiery end only ned kelly lived following the glenron siege but unsurprisingly he was tried for his crimes found guilty and sentenced to death he still had tons of supporters who campaigned for a reprieve but their pleas went unheeded ned kelly was hanged on november 11 1880 at the melbourne jail according to some reports his last words were such is life so i really hope you found that video interesting if you did please do hit that thumbs up button below don't forget to subscribe and thank you for watching
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Views: 322,033
Rating: 4.931447 out of 5
Keywords: biographics, biography, biographies, people, famous people, simon whistler, Ned Kelly, Ned Kelly facts, Ned Kelly life story, Ned Kelly story, Ned Kelly Australian bushranger, Ned Kelly bio, Ned Kelly biography
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Length: 19min 8sec (1148 seconds)
Published: Fri Aug 14 2020
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