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{{Short description|Australian bushranger (1854–1880)}}
{{otheruses}}
{{pp|small=yes}}
{{Infobox Criminal
{{About|the Australian bushranger}}
| subject_name = Edward "Ned" Kelly
{{Use Australian English|date=January 2013}}
| image_name = Ned kelly day before execution photograph.jpg
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2023}}
| image_size =
{{Infobox criminal
| image_caption = Ned Kelly the day before his execution.
| name = Ned Kelly
| date_of_birth = {{Birth date|df=yes|1855|6|3}}
| image_name = Ned Kelly in 1880.png
| place_of_birth = [[Beveridge, Victoria]]
| image_size =
| date_of_death = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1880|11|11|1855|6|3}}
| image_alt =
| place_of_death = [[Melbourne]]
| image_caption = Kelly on 10 November 1880, {{awrap|the day before his execution}}
| alias = Ned Kelly
| conviction =
| birth_name = Edward Kelly
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1854|12||df=y}}{{efn|name=dob}}
| penalty =
| status = [[Execution by hanging|Executed by hanging]]
| birth_place = [[Beveridge, Victoria|Beveridge]], [[Colony of Victoria]], Australia
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1880|11|11|1854|12||df=y}}
| occupation =
| death_place = [[Melbourne]], Colony of Victoria, Australia
| spouse =
| parents =
| alias =
| children =
| occupation = [[Bushranger]]
| conviction_penalty =
| conviction_status =
| spouse =
| children =
| parents = {{ubl|{{#ifexist: John "Red" Kelly|[[John "Red" Kelly]] (1820–1866)}}|{{#if:{{is redirect|Ellen Kelly}}||[[Ellen Kelly]] (née Quinn) (1832–1923)}}}}
| conviction = {{cslist|Murder|assault|theft|armed robbery}}
| relatives = {{ubl|[[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] (brother)|[[Kate Kelly (sister of Ned Kelly)|Kate Kelly]] (sister)}}
| death_cause = [[Execution by hanging]]
}}
}}
'''Edward "Ned" Kelly''' (3 June 1855 – 11 November 1880) was an Australian [[bushranger]], and, to some, a [[folk hero]] for his defiance of the [[Colony|colonial]] authorities. Kelly was born in [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] to an Irish [[Convictism in Australia|convict]] father, and as a young man he clashed with the police. Following an incident at his home in 1878, police parties searched for him in the bush. After he murdered three policemen, the colony proclaimed Kelly and his gang wanted [[outlaw]]s. A final violent confrontation with police took place at [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]]. Kelly, dressed in home-made plate metal armour and helmet, was captured and sent to jail. He was hanged for murder at [[Old Melbourne Gaol]] in 1880. His daring and notoriety made him an [[Cultural icon|iconic]] figure in Australian history, folk lore, literature, art and film.


'''Edward Kelly''' (December 1854{{efn|name=dob}}{{snd}}11 November 1880) was an Australian [[bushranger]], outlaw, gang leader and convicted police-murderer. One of the last bushrangers, he is known for wearing [[armour of the Kelly gang|a suit of bulletproof armour]] during his final shootout with the police.
On 9 March 2008, it was claimed that Kelly's burial site had been found by Australian scientists.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7285907.stm 'Ned Kelly's burial site' found]</ref>
Kelly was born and raised in rural [[Colony of Victoria|Victoria]], the third of eight children to Irish parents. His father, a [[Convicts in Australia|transported convict]], died in 1866, leaving Kelly, then aged 12, as the eldest male of the household. The Kellys were a poor [[selection (Australian history)|selector]] family who saw themselves as downtrodden by the [[squattocracy]] and as victims of persecution by the [[Victoria Police]]. While a teenager, Kelly was arrested for associating with bushranger [[Harry Power]] and served two prison terms for a variety of offences, the longest stretch being from 1871 to 1874. He later joined the "[[Greta, Victoria|Greta]] Mob", a group of [[Australian bush|bush]] [[larrikin]]s known for stock theft. A violent confrontation with a policeman occurred at the Kelly family's home in 1878, and Kelly was indicted for his attempted murder. Fleeing to the bush, Kelly vowed to avenge his mother, who was imprisoned for her role in the incident. After he, his brother [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan]], and associates [[Joe Byrne]] and [[Steve Hart]] shot dead three policemen, the government of Victoria proclaimed them outlaws.


Kelly and his gang, with the help of a network of sympathisers, evaded the police for two years. The gang's crime spree included raids on [[Euroa]] and [[Jerilderie]], and the killing of [[Aaron Sherritt]], a sympathiser turned police informer. In [[Jerilderie Letter|a manifesto letter]], Kelly—denouncing the police, the Victorian government and the British Empire—set down his own account of the events leading up to his outlawry. Demanding justice for his family and the rural poor, he threatened dire consequences against those who defied him. In 1880, the gang tried to derail and ambush a police train as a prelude to attacking [[Benalla]], but the police, tipped off, confronted them at [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]]. In the ensuing 12-hour siege and gunfight, the outlaws wore armour fashioned from [[plough#Parts|plough mouldboards]]. Kelly, the only survivor, was severely wounded by police fire and captured. Despite thousands of supporters rallying and petitioning for his reprieve, Kelly was tried, convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging, which was carried out at the [[Old Melbourne Gaol|Melbourne Gaol]].
==Early life==


Historian [[Geoffrey Serle]] called Kelly and his gang "the last expression of the lawless frontier in what was becoming a highly organised and educated society, the last protest of the mighty bush now tethered with iron rails to Melbourne and the world".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Serle |first=Geoffrey |title=The Rush to Be Rich: A History of the Colony of Victoria 1883–1889 |publisher=Melbourne University Press |year=1971 |isbn=978-0-522-84009-4 |page=11 |author-link=Geoffrey Serle}}</ref> In the century after his death, Kelly became a [[cultural icon]], inspiring [[Cultural depictions of Ned Kelly|numerous works in the arts and popular culture]], and is the subject of more biographies than any other Australian. Kelly continues to cause division in his homeland: he is variously considered a [[Robin Hood]]-like [[folk hero]] and crusader against oppression, and a murderous villain and [[terrorist]].{{Sfn|Basu|2012|pp=182–187}}<ref name=":8" /> Journalist [[Martin Flanagan (journalist)|Martin Flanagan]] wrote: "What makes Ned a legend is not that everyone sees him the same—it's that everyone sees him. Like a bushfire on the horizon casting its red glow into the night."<ref>[[Martin Flanagan (journalist)|Flanagan, Martin]] (30 March 2013). [http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/rebels-who-knew-the-end-was-coming-but-stood-up-anyway-20130329-2gz9t.html "Rebels who knew the end was coming, but stood up anyway"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130520001417/http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/rebels-who-knew-the-end-was-coming-but-stood-up-anyway-20130329-2gz9t.html |date=20 May 2013 }}, ''The Age''. Retrieved 13 July 2015.</ref>
John "Red" Kelly, the father of Ned Kelly, was born and raised in Ireland, where he was convicted of criminal acts sometime during his adulthood. There is uncertainty surrounding the exact nature of his crime as most of Ireland's court records were destroyed during the [[Irish Civil War]]. Ian Jones claims that Red Kelly stole two pigs and was an informer, but the claim is contested in Kenneally who said 'Red' was a patriot.<ref> J. J. Kenneally, ''The Inner History of the Kelly Gang'', p. 17.</ref> Red Kelly was sentenced to seven years of [[penal servitude]] and transported to [[Van Diemen's Land]] (now [[Tasmania]]) and arrived in 1843.


==Family background and early life==
After his release in 1848, Red Kelly moved to Victoria Australia and found work in [[Beveridge, Victoria|Beveridge]] at the farm of James Quinn. At the age of 30 he married Quinn's daughter Ellen, then 18. Their first child died early, but Ellen then gave birth to a daughter, Annie, in 1853. Seven of their children survived past infancy.
[[File:Kelly House at Beveridge.jpg|thumb|left|Kelly's boyhood home, built by his father in [[Beveridge, Victoria|Beveridge]] in 1859]]
Kelly's father, John Kelly (nicknamed "Red"), was born in 1820 at Clonbrogan near Moyglas, [[County Tipperary]], Ireland.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=284}} Aged 21, he was found guilty of stealing two pigs{{sfn|Molony|2001|pp=6–7}} and was [[penal transportation|transported]] on the [[convicts in Australia|convict]] ship ''Prince Regent'' to [[Hobart|Hobart Town]], [[Van Diemen's Land]] (modern-day [[Tasmania]]), arriving on 2 January 1842. Granted his [[certificate of freedom]] in January 1848, Red moved to the [[Port Phillip District]] (modern-day [[Victoria (state)|Victoria]]) and was employed as a carpenter by farmer James Quinn at [[Wallan, Victoria|Wallan Wallan]].{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=284}}


On 18 November 1850, at [[St Francis Church, Melbourne|St Francis Church]], [[Melbourne]], Red married Ellen Quinn, his employer's 18-year-old daughter, who was born in [[County Antrim]], Ireland and migrated as a child with her parents to the Port Phillip District.{{sfn|Jones|2010}} In the wake of the 1851 [[Victorian gold rush]], the couple turned to mining and earned enough money to buy a small [[freehold (law)|freehold]] in [[Beveridge, Victoria|Beveridge]], north of Melbourne.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|pp=284–85}}
Their first son, Edward (Ned), was born in [[Beveridge, Victoria|Beveridge]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] just north of [[Melbourne]] in June 1855.


Edward ("Ned") Kelly was their third child.<ref name="TA2">{{Cite news|last=Aubrey|first=Thomas|date=11 July 1953|title=The Real Story of Ned Kelly|page=9|work=The Mirror|location=Perth|url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article75734010|url-status=live|access-date=16 June 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031430/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/75734010|archive-date=10 July 2020|via=National Library of Australia}}</ref> His exact birth date is unknown, but was probably in December 1854.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=261}}{{efn|name=dob}} Kelly was possibly baptised by Augustinian priest [[Charles O'Hea]], who also administered his last rites before his execution.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=378}} His parents had seven other children: Mary Jane (born 1851, died 6 months later), Annie (1853&ndash;1872), Margaret (1857&ndash;1896), James ("Jim", 1859&ndash;1946), [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Daniel]] ("Dan", 1861&ndash;1880), [[Kate Kelly (sister of Ned Kelly)|Catherine]] ("Kate", 1863&ndash;1898) and Grace (1865&ndash;1940).{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|pp=262–63}}
Ned was baptised by an [[Augustinian]] priest, [[Charles O'Hea]]. As a boy, he obtained some basic schooling and once risked his life to save another boy, Richard Shelton, from [[drowning]]. As a reward he was given a green sash by the boy's family, which he wore under his armour during his final showdown with police in 1880.<ref>The boy's great-grandson coincidentally became an Australian Rules footballer, [[Ian Shelton (footballer)|Ian "Bluey" Shelton]] and played 91 first-grade games for Essendon from 1959 to 1965 — Bluey was "as game as Ned Kelly", and played his last season with Essendon with only one eye, following a tractor accident on his farm at Avanel.[http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Ned-was-a-champ-with-a-soft-spot-under-his-armour/2004/12/10/1102625538990.html] [http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Such-is-life-for-the-legend-that-is-Ned-Kelly/2004/12/10/1102625530637.html] [http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/09/16/1032054751911.html][http://www.essendonfc.com.au/champions/profile.asp?ID=50]</ref>


[[File:Ned Kelly green sash.jpg|thumb|According to oral tradition, a young Kelly was awarded this green sash after saving another boy from drowning in a creek. Kelly wore it under [[armour of the Kelly gang|his armour]] during [[#Last stand and capture|his last stand]] at [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]]. It remains stained with his blood. (Benalla Museum)]]
The Kellys were suspected many times of [[cattle]] or horse stealing, though never convicted. Red Kelly was arrested when he killed and skinned a calf claimed to be the property of his neighbour. He was found innocent of theft, but guilty of removing the brand from the skin and given the option of a twenty-five [[Pound sterling|pound]] fine or a sentence of six months with hard labour. Without money to pay the fine Red served his sentence in [[Kilmore]] gaol, with the sentence having an ultimately fatal effect on his health. The saga surrounding Red, and his treatment by the police, made a strong impression on his son Ned.
The Kellys struggled on inferior farmland at Beveridge and Red began drinking heavily.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=286}} In 1864 the family moved to [[Avenel, Victoria|Avenel]], near [[Seymour, Victoria|Seymour]], where they soon attracted the attention of local police.{{sfn|Jones|2010|p=2016}} As a boy Kelly obtained basic schooling and became familiar with [[The bush#The Australian bush|the bush]]. According to oral tradition, he risked his life at Avenel by saving another boy from drowning in a creek,<ref>{{Cite news|last=Schwartz|first=Larry|date=11 December 2004|title=Ned was a champ with a soft spot under his armour|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Ned-was-a-champ-with-a-soft-spot-under-his-armour/2004/12/10/1102625538990.html|url-status=live|access-date=16 June 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924194201/http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Ned-was-a-champ-with-a-soft-spot-under-his-armour/2004/12/10/1102625538990.html|archive-date=24 September 2015}}</ref> for which the boy's family gifted him a green sash. It is said this was the same sash worn by Kelly during his last stand in 1880.<ref>{{Cite news|last1=Rennie|first1=Ann|last2=Szego|first2=Julie|date=1 August 2001|title=Ned Kelly saved our drowning dad ... the softer side of old bucket head|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|url=https://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/09/16/1032054751911.html|url-status=live|access-date=16 June 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006002528/http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/09/16/1032054751911.html|archive-date=6 October 2014}}</ref>


In 1865, Red was convicted of receiving a stolen hide and, unable to pay the £25 fine, sentenced to six months' hard labour. In December 1866, Red was fined for being drunk and disorderly. Badly affected by alcoholism, he died later that month at Avenel, two days after Christmas. Ned signed his death certificate.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=286}}
Red Kelly died at [[Avenel, Victoria|Avenel]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] on 27 December 1866 when Ned was eleven and a half years old. It was at this time that the Kelly family acquired land and moved to the [[Greta, Victoria|Greta]] area of Victoria, which to this day is known as "Kelly Country".


The following year, the Kellys moved to [[Greta, Victoria|Greta]] in north-eastern Victoria, near the Quinns and their relatives by marriage, the Lloyds. In 1868, Kelly's uncle Jim Kelly was convicted of arson after setting fire to the rented premises where the Kellys and some of the Lloyds were staying. Jim was sentenced to death, but this was later commuted to fifteen years of hard labour.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=264}} The family soon [[Selection (Australian history)|leased a small farm]] of {{Cvt|88|acre|m2}} at Eleven Mile Creek near Greta. The Kelly selection proved ill-suited for farming, and Ellen supplemented her income by offering accommodation to travellers and [[Sly-grog shop|selling sly-grog]].{{sfn|Jones|1995|pp=26–31}}
In all, eighteen charges were brought against members of Ned's immediate family before he was declared an outlaw, while only half that number resulted in guilty verdicts. This is a highly unusual ratio for the time, and is one of the reasons that has caused many to posit that Ned's family was unfairly targeted from the time they moved to North-East Victoria. Perhaps the move was necessary because of Ellen's squabbles with family members and her appearances in court over family disputes.<ref>Jones, p. 25</ref> Antony O'Brien however argued that Victoria's colonial policing had nothing to do with winning a conviction, rather the determinant of one's criminality was the arrest.<ref>O'Brien, pp. 12-16</ref> Further, O'Brien argued, using the "Statistics of Victoria" crime figures that the region's or family's or national criminality was determined not by individual arrests, but rather by the total number of arrests.<ref>O'Brien, pp. 13-15.</ref>


==Rise to notoriety==
==Rise to notoriety==
===Bushranging with Harry Power===
{{Wikisource|Ned Kelly Letter to Sgt. James Babington}}
{{Blockquote|text=I'm a bushranger.
In 1869, the 14-year-old Ned Kelly was arrested for assaulting a [[Chinese people|Chinese]] pig farmer named Ah Fook.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.glenrowan1880.com/ah_fook.htm |title=Ah Fook |publisher=Glenrowan 1880}}</ref> Ah Fook claimed that he had been robbed by Ned, who stated that Ah Fook had had a row with his sister Annie. Kelly spent ten days in custody before the charges were dismissed. From then on the police regarded him as a "juvenile [[bushranger]]".
|source=The earliest known words attributed to Kelly in public record, as reported by Chinese hawker Ah Fook, 1869.{{Sfn|Molony|2001|p=37}}
}}
[[File:Bushranger Harry Power.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Harry Power]] has been described as Kelly's bushranging "mentor".]]
In 1869, 14-year-old Kelly met Irish-born [[Harry Power]] (alias of Henry Johnson), a transported convict who turned to bushranging in north-eastern Victoria after escaping Melbourne's [[HM Prison Pentridge|Pentridge Prison]]. The Kellys were Power sympathisers, and by May 1869 Ned had become his bushranging protégé. That month, they attempted to steal horses from the [[Mansfield, Victoria|Mansfield]] property of [[Squatting (Australian history)|squatter]] John Rowe as part of a plan to rob the [[Woods Point, Victoria|Woods Point]]–Mansfield gold escort. They abandoned the idea after Rowe shot at them, and Kelly temporarily broke off his association with Power.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=85–86}}


Kelly's first brush with the law occurred in October 1869. A Chinese hawker named Ah Fook said that as he passed the Kelly family home, Ned brandished a long stick, declared himself a bushranger and robbed him of 10 shillings. Kelly, arrested and charged with [[highway robbery]], claimed in court that Fook had abused him and his sister Annie in a dispute over the hawker's request for a drink of water. Family witnesses backed Ned and the charge was dismissed.{{sfn|Jones|2010}}
The following year, he was arrested and accused of being an accomplice of bushranger [[Harry Power]]. No evidence was produced in court and he was released after a month. Historians tend to disagree over this episode: some see it as evidence of police harassment; others believe that Kelly’s relatives intimidated the witnesses, making them reluctant to give evidence. Ned's grandfather, James Quinn, owned a huge piece of land at the headwaters of the [[King River]] known as [[Glenmore Station]], where Power was ultimately arrested.


Kelly and Power reconciled in March 1870 and, over the next month, committed a series of armed robberies. By the end of April, the press had named Kelly as Power's young accomplice, and a few days later he was captured by police and confined to [[HM Prison Beechworth|Beechworth Gaol]]. Kelly fronted court on three robbery charges, with the victims in each case failing to identify him. On the third charge, Superintendents Nicolas and [[Francis Augustus Hare|Hare]] insisted Kelly be tried, citing his resemblance to the suspect. After a month in custody, Kelly was released due to insufficient evidence. The Kellys allegedly intimidated witnesses into withholding testimony. Another factor in the lack of identification may have been that Power's accomplice was described as a "[[Half-caste#Australia|half-caste]]", but the police believed this to be the result of Kelly going unwashed.{{sfn|Jones|2010}}
In October 1870, Kelly was arrested again for assaulting a hawker, Jeremiah McCormack, and for his part in sending McCormack's childless wife an indecent note that had calves' [[testicle]]s enclosed. This was a result of a row earlier that day caused when McCormack accused a friend of the Kellys, Ben Gould, of using his horse without permission. Gould wrote the note, and Kelly passed it on to one of his cousins to give to the woman. He was sentenced to three months' hard labour on each charge.


[[File:Harry Power capture.jpg|thumb|upright|Power's capture. Kelly was accused of informing on the bushranger.]]
Upon his release Kelly returned home. There he met Isaiah "Wild" Wright who had arrived in the area on a chestnut [[Mare (horse)|mare]]. The mare had gone missing and since Wright needed to go back to [[Mansfield, Victoria|Mansfield]] he asked Kelly to find and keep it until his return. Kelly found the mare and used it to go to town. He always maintained that he had no idea that the mare actually belonged to the Mansfield postmaster and that Wright had stolen it. While riding through Greta, Ned was approached by police constable Hall who, from the description of the animal, knew the horse was stolen property. When his attempt to arrest Kelly turned into a fight, Hall drew his gun and tried to shoot him, but Kelly overpowered the policeman and humiliated him by riding him like a horse.<ref>as described by Kelly himself in ''The Jerilderie Letter''</ref> Hall later struck Kelly several times with his revolver after he had been arrested. After just three weeks of freedom, the 16-year-old Kelly was sentenced to three years imprisonment along with his brother-in-law Alex Gunn. "Wild" Wright got only eighteen months.
Power often camped at Glenmore Station on the [[King River (Victoria)|King River]], owned by Kelly's maternal grandfather, James Quinn. In June 1870, while resting in a mountainside [[humpy|gunyah]] (bark shelter) that overlooked the property, Power was captured and arrested by police. Word soon spread that Kelly had informed on him. Kelly denied the rumour, and in the only surviving [[s:Ned Kelly Letter to Sgt. James Babington|letter]] known to bear his handwriting, he pleads with Sergeant James Babington of [[Kyneton, Victoria|Kyneton]] for help, saying that "everyone looks on me like a black snake". The informant turned out to be Kelly's uncle, Jack Lloyd, who received £500 for his assistance.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 51–56</ref> However, Kelly had also given information which led to Power's capture, possibly in exchange for having the charges against him dropped. Power always maintained that Kelly betrayed him.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=35–37}}


Reporting on Power's criminal career, the ''[[Benalla Ensign]]'' wrote:{{sfn|Jones|2010}}
While Kelly was in prison, his brothers Jim (aged 12) and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan]] (aged 10) were arrested by Constable Flood for riding a horse that did not belong to them. The horse had been lent to them by a farmer for whom they had been doing some work, but the boys spent a night in the cells before the matter was cleared.
{{blockquote|The effect of his 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.}}


===Horse theft, assault and imprisonment===
Two years later, Jim Kelly was arrested for cattle-rustling. He and his family claimed that he did not know that some of the cattle did not belong to his employer and cousin Tom Lloyd. Jim was given a five-year sentence, but as O'Brien pointed out the receiver of the 'stolen stock' James Dixon was not prosecuted as he was 'a gentleman' <ref>O'Brien, 'Awaiting Ned Kelly',p. 69.</ref>
[[File:Ned Kelly mugshot.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Mugshot of Kelly, aged 15]]
In October 1870, a hawker, Jeremiah McCormack, accused a friend of the Kellys, Ben Gould, of stealing his horse. Gould responded by sending an indecent note and a parcel of calves' testicles to McCormack's wife, which Kelly helped deliver. When McCormack later confronted Kelly for assisting Gould, Kelly punched him and was arrested for both the note and the assault, receiving three months’ hard labor for each charge.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=265}}


Kelly was released from Beechworth Gaol on 27 March 1871, five weeks early, and returned to Greta. Shortly after, horse-breaker Isaiah "Wild" Wright rode into town on a horse he supposedly borrowed. Later that night, the horse went missing. While Wright was away in search of the horse, Kelly found it and took it to [[Wangaratta]], where he stayed for four days. On 20 April 1871, while Kelly was riding back into Greta, Constable Edward Hall tried to arrest him on the suspicion that the horse was stolen. Kelly resisted and overpowered Hall, despite the constable's attempts to shoot him. Kelly was eventually subdued with the help of bystanders, and Hall [[Pistol-whipping|pistol-whipped]] him until his head became "a mass of raw and bleeding flesh".{{sfn|FitzSimons|2013|pp=81–82}} Initially charged with horse stealing, the charge was downgraded to "feloniously receiving a horse", resulting in a three-year sentence. Wright received eighteen months for his part.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=507}}
In October 1877, Gustav and William Baumgarten were arrested for supplying stolen horses to Ned Kelly and were later sentenced in 1878. William served time in [[Pentridge]] Prison, Melbourne.


[[File:Ned Kelly boxing.jpg|thumb|upright|Kelly in boxing attire, 1874]]
==The Fitzpatrick Incident==
Kelly served his sentence at Beechworth Gaol and Pentridge Prison, then aboard the prison hulk ''Sacramento'', off [[Williamstown, Victoria|Williamstown]]. He was freed on 2 February 1874, six months early for good behaviour, and returned to Greta. According to one possibly apocryphal story, Kelly, to settle the score with Wright over the horse, fought and beat him in a [[bare-knuckle boxing]] match.{{sfn|Jones|2010|p=}} A photograph of Kelly in a boxing pose is commonly linked to the match. Regardless of the story's veracity, Wright became a known Kelly sympathiser.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|p=105}}
Following Red Kelly's death, Ned's mother, Ellen, married a [[California]]n named George King, with whom she had three children. He, Ned and Dan became involved in a cattle rustling operation.


Over the next few years, Kelly worked at sawmills and spent periods in [[New South Wales]], leading what he called the life of a "rambling gambler".{{Sfn|Jones|2010|p=507}} During this time, his mother married an American, George King.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|pp=265–66}} In early 1877, Ned joined King in an organised horse theft operation. Ned later claimed that the group stole 280 horses.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=266}} Its membership overlapped with that of the Greta Mob, a bush [[larrikin]] gang known for their distinctive "flash" attire. Apart from Ned, the gang included his brother [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan]], cousins Jack and [[Tom Lloyd (bushranger)|Tom Lloyd]], and [[Joe Byrne]], [[Steve Hart]] and [[Aaron Sherritt]].{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=204}}
On the 15 April 1878, Constable Alexander Fitzpatrick arrived at [[Benalla]] suffering from wounds to his left wrist. He claimed that he had been attacked by Ned, Dan, Ellen, their associate Bricky Williamson and Ned's brother-in-law, Bill Skilling. Fitzpatrick claimed that all except Ellen had been armed with revolvers. Williamson and Skilling were arrested for their part in the affair. Ned and Dan were nowhere to be found, but Ellen was taken into custody along with her baby, Alice. She was still in prison at the time of Ned's execution. (Ellen would outlive her most famous son by several decades and died on 27 March 1923).


On 18 September 1877, Kelly was arrested in [[Benalla]] for riding over a footpath while drunk. The following day he brawled with four policemen who were escorting him to court, including a friend of the Kellys, Constable Alexander Fitzpatrick. Another constable involved, Thomas Lonigan, supposedly grabbed Kelly's testicles during the fraccas; legend has it that Kelly vowed, "If I ever shoot a man, Lonigan, it'll be you."<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 98–100.</ref> Kelly was fined and released.
The Kellys claimed that Fitzpatrick came into their house to question Dan over a cattle [[wikt:duff|duffing]] incident. While there, he made a pass at Ellen's daughter [[Kate Kelly (Australian outlaw)|Kate]]. Her mother hit his hand with a coal shovel and the men knocked Fitzpatrick to the floor. They then bandaged his injured wrist, and he had left saying that no real harm had been done. No guns, they claimed, were used during the incident, and Ned was not involved since he had been away in [[New South Wales]]. The belief that Ned was in New South Wales is still disputed, although Fitzpatrick's testimony of events is coloured by the fact that he was later dismissed from the force for [[alcoholism|drunkenness]] and [[perjury]].


In August 1877, Kelly and King sold six horses they had stolen from pastoralist James Whitty to William Baumgarten, a horse dealer in [[Barnawartha]], near the New South Wales border. On 10 November, Baumgarten was arrested for selling the stolen horses. Warrants for the arrest of Ned and Dan in relation to the theft were sworn in March and April 1878. King disappeared around this time.{{Sfn|Jones|2010|pp=94–106|ps=. [1995 edition]}}
'''The trial at Beechworth'''


==Fitzpatrick incident==
Ellen Kelly, Skillon and Williamson appeared on 9 October 1878 before Judge Redmond Barry charged with attempted murder and were convicted on Fitzpatrick's unsupported evidence. Barry stated that if Ned were present he would 'give him 15 years'<ref> Kenneally, p. 44.</ref>
===Fitzpatrick's version of events===
[[File:ConstableAlexanderFitzpatrick.jpg|thumb|upright|Constable Fitzpatrick]]
On 11 April 1878, Constable Strachan of Greta heard that Ned was at a shearing shed in New South Wales and left to apprehend him. Four days later, Constable Fitzpatrick arrived at Greta for relief duty and called at the Kellys' home to arrest Dan for horse theft. Finding Dan absent, Fitzpatrick stayed and conversed with Ellen Kelly.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=201–08}}


[[File:Kelly House at Greta.jpg|thumb|left|Remains of the Kelly residence at Greta, site of the Fitzpatrick incident]]
==The Killings at Stringybark Creek==
When Dan and his brother-in-law Bill Skillion arrived later that evening, Fitzpatrick informed Dan that he was under arrest. Dan asked to be allowed to have dinner first. The constable consented and stood guard over his prisoner.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=205–08}}
[[Image:MansfieldKellyMonument.JPG|thumb|Monument erected in [[Mansfield, Victoria]] in honour of the three policemen murdered by Kelly's gang, Lonigan, Scanlon and Kennedy]]
Dan and Ned Kelly doubted they could convince the police of their story. Instead they went into hiding, where they were later joined by friends [[Joe Byrne (bushranger)|Joe Byrne]] and [[Steve Hart]].


Minutes later, Ned rushed in and shot at Fitzpatrick with a revolver, missing him. Ellen then hit Fitzpatrick over the head with a fire shovel. A struggle ensued and Ned fired again, wounding Fitzpatrick above his left wrist. Skillion and Williamson came in, brandishing revolvers, and Dan disarmed Fitzpatrick.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=208–10}}
On 25 October 1878, Sergeant Kennedy set off to search for the Kellys, accompanied by Constables McIntyre, Lonigan, and Scanlon. The wanted men were suspected of being in the [[Wombat Ranges]] north of Mansfield, Victoria. The police set up a camp near two shepherd huts at Stringybark Creek in a heavily [[forest|timbered]] area. A second police party had set off from Greata near the Wangaratta end, with the intention of closing in on Ned in a pincer movement.


Ned apologised to Fitzpatrick, saying that he mistook him for another constable. Fitzpatrick fainted and when he regained consciousness Ned compelled him to extract the bullet from his own arm with a knife; Ellen dressed the wound. Ned devised a cover story and promised to reward Fitzpatrick if he adhered to it. Fitzpatrick was allowed to leave. About 1.5 km away he noticed two horsemen in pursuit, so he spurred his horse into a gallop to escape. He reached a hotel where his wound was re-bandaged, then rode to Benalla to report the incident.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=210–13}}
The Mansfield team of police under Kennedy on arrival at Stringybark split into two groups: Kennedy and Scanlon went in search of the Kellys, while the others, Lonigan and McIntyre remained to guard their camp. Brown suggested in, ''Australian Son'' (1948) that Sgt. Kennedy was tipped off as to the whereabouts of the Kellys. O'Brien (1999) drew attention to the 1881 Royal Commission's questioning of McIntyre, which explored a possibility that Kennedy and Scanlon may have searched for the Kellys to gain a reward for themselves. Jones stated (p. 131) that Kennedy and Scanlon had once split a reward for the arrest of 'Wild Wright'. O'Brien's research focus on the practice of splitting rewards highlighting that it was known as 'going whacks'.


===Kelly family version of events===
The Mansfield police team (Lonigan and McIntyre) remaining in the base camp fired at parrots, unaware they were only a mile away from the Kelly camp. Alerted by the shooting, the Kellys searched and discovered the well-armed police camped near the "shingle hut" at Stringybark Creek. Although the police were disguised as prospectors, they had pack horses with leather strap arrangements suitable for carrying out bodies.
In an interview three months before his [[execution]], Kelly said that at the time of the incident, he was 200 miles from home. According to him, his mother had asked Fitzpatrick if he had a warrant and Fitzpatrick replied that he had only a telegram, to which his mother said that Dan need not go. Fitzpatrick then said, pulling out a revolver, "I will blow your brains out if you interfere". His mother replied, "You would not be so handy with that popgun of yours if Ned were here". Dan then said, trying to trick Fitzpatrick, "There is Ned coming along by the side of the house". While he was pretending to look out of the window for Ned, Dan cornered Fitzpatrick, took the revolver and released Fitzpatrick unharmed. If Fitzpatrick suffered any wounds they were possibly self-inflicted. Skillion and Williamson were not present.<ref name=":02">{{Cite news|date=9 August 1880|title=Interview with Ned Kelly|work=The Age|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/202153563|access-date=18 September 2021}}</ref>


In 1879 Ned's sister Kate stated that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick after the constable had made a sexual advance to her.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=217}} After Kelly was captured, he called it "a foolish story".<ref name=":02" />
Ned Kelly and his brother Dan considered their chances of survival against the well-armed party and decided to overpower the two officers, then wait for the two others to return. According to Jones (p. 132) the Kellys knew that that a police member (Strahan), from Greta team boasted he would shoot Ned 'like a dog' and Kelly believed these police were that Greta party. He was unaware of the Mansfield group. Ned's plan was for the police to surrender, allowing the Kellys to take their arms and horses. Ned and Dan advanced to the police camp, ordering them to surrender. Constable McIntyre threw his arms up. Lonigan drew his revolver and Ned shot him. Lonigan staggered some distance, and collapsed dead.


In 1929 journalist [[J. J. Kenneally]] gave yet another version of the incident based on interviews with the remaining Kelly brother, Jim, and Kelly cousin and gang providore Tom Lloyd. In this version, Fitzpatrick was drunk when he arrived at the Kelly house, and while sitting in front of the fire he pulled Kate onto his knee, provoking Dan to throw him to the floor. In the ensuing struggle, Fitzpatrick drew his revolver, Ned appeared, and with his brother seized the constable, disarming him, but not before he struck his wrist against the projecting part of the door lock, an injury he claimed to be a gunshot wound.{{Sfn|Kenneally|1929|loc=Chapter 2}}
When the other two police returned to camp, Constable McIntyre, at Ned's direction, called on them to surrender. Scanlon went for his pistol; Ned fired. Scanlon was killed. Kennedy ran, firing as he sought cover moving from tree to tree. In an exchange of gunfire, Kennedy was mortally shot. Ned fired a fatal shot into Kennedy. McIntyre, in the confusion, escaped on horseback uninjured.


Three police officers later gave sworn evidence that Kelly, after his capture, admitted he had shot Fitzpatrick.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=215}} In 1881, Brickey Williamson, who was seeking remission for his sentence in relation to the incident, stated that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick after the constable had drawn his revolver.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=214–15}} Jones and Dawson have argued that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick but it was his friend Joe Byrne who was with him, not Bill Skillion.{{Sfn|Jones|1995|pp=115–18}}<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Dawson|first=Stuart|date=2015|title=Redeeming Fitzpatrick: Ned Kelly and the Fitzpatrick Incident|journal=Eras Journal|volume=17|issue=1|pages=60–91}}</ref>
The exact place at Germans Creek where this occurred has only recently been identified.<ref>{{cite web | last = Denheld | first = Bill | year = 2003 | url =http://www.denheldid.com/twohuts/germanscreek.html | title = Germans Creek | work = denheldid.com | accessdate = 2006-12-30}}</ref> On leaving the scene Ned stole Sergeant Kennedy's handwritten note for his wife and his gold fob watch. Asked later why he stole the watch, Ned replied, "What's the use of a watch to a dead man?" Kennedy's watch was returned to his kin many years later.


===Trial===
In response to these killings the Victorian parliament passed the ''Felons' Apprehension Act'' which outlawed the gang and made it possible for anyone to shoot them. There was no need for the outlaws to be arrested and for there to be a trial. The Act was based on the 1865 Act passed in New South Wales which declared [[Ben Hall]] and his gang outlaws.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.cultureandrecreation.gov.au/articles/benhall |title = Ben Hall and the outlawed bushrangers|work = Culture and Recreation Portal|publisher = Australian Government|date = 15 April 2008|accessdate = 2008-09-19}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.bailup.com/outlaws.htm| title = Felons' Apprehension Act (Act 612)|last = Cowie |first = N.|date = 5 July 2002|accessdate = 2008-09-19}}</ref>
[[File:Redmond Barry, Chancellor 1853-1880.jpg|thumb|upright|Judge [[Redmond Barry]] presided over both Ellen Kelly's trial and that Ned two years later.]]
Williamson, Skillion and Ellen Kelly were arrested and charged with aiding and abetting attempted murder; Ned and Dan were nowhere to be found. The three appeared on 9 October 1878 before Judge [[Redmond Barry]]. Fitzpatrick's doctor, who had treated his wound, gave evidence that the constable "was certainly not drunk" and that his wounds were consistent with his statement. The defence declined to call Ned's sisters, Kate and 12-year-old Grace, to give evidence even though they were eyewitnesses. The defence did call two witnesses to give evidence that Skillion was not present, which would cast doubt on Fitzpatrick's account. One of these witnesses was a friend of the Kellys, the other, Joe Ryan, was a relative. Ryan revealed that Ned was in Greta that afternoon, which was damaging to the defence. Ellen Kelly, Skillion and Williamson were convicted as accessories to the attempted murder of Fitzpatrick. Skillion and Williamson both received sentences of six years and Ellen three years of hard labour.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=220–44}}


Ellen's sentence was considered harsh, even by people who had no cause to be Kelly sympathisers, especially as she was nursing a newborn baby. Alfred Wyatt, a police magistrate in Benalla, told the later [[Royal Commission]], "I thought the sentence upon that old woman, Mrs Kelly, a very severe one."{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=220}}
==Bank robberies==
[[Image:Reward.jpg|thumb|right|200px|8000 pound reward notice for the capture of the Ned Kelly gang, 15 February 1879]]
Following the killings at Stringybark, the gang committed two major robberies, at [[Euroa, Victoria|Euroa]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and [[Jerilderie]], [[New South Wales]]. Their strategy involved the taking of hostages and robbing the bank safes.
===Euroa===
On the 10 December 1878, the gang raided the [[Australian National Bank|National Bank]] at Euroa. They had already taken a number of hostages at [[Faithful Creek]] station and went to the bank claiming to be delivering a message from McCauley, the station manager. They got into the bank and held up the manager, Scott, and his two tellers. After obtaining all the money available, the outlaws ordered Scott, along with his wife, family, maids and tellers to accompany them to Faithful Creek where they were locked up with the other hostages, who included the station's staff and some passing hawkers and sportsmen.


==Stringybark Creek police murders==
It is claimed that Ned, posing as a policeman, took one of the men prisoner on the grounds of being the "notorious Ned Kelly". The man was locked up in the storeroom saying that he would report the "officer" to his superiors. It was only then that he was told who his captor was.
{{multiple image|perrow = 3|total_width=300
| image1 = Bushranger Dan Kelly.jpg |width1=157|height1=
| image2 = SteveHart.jpg |width2=143|height2=
| image3 = Joe Byrne the 19th-century outlaw.jpg |width3=177|height3=
| footer = Greta Mob members [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] (left), [[Steve Hart]] (centre) and [[Joe Byrne (bushranger)|Joe Byrne]] (right) took to bushranging with Ned Kelly after the Fitzpatrick incident.
}}
After the Fitzpatrick incident, Ned and Dan escaped into the bush and were joined by Greta Mob members Joe Byrne and Steve Hart. Hiding out at Bullock Creek in the Wombat Ranges, they earned money sluicing gold and distilling whisky, and were supplied with provisions and information by sympathisers.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|pp=460–61}}


The police were tipped off about the gang's whereabouts and, on 25 October 1878, two mounted police parties were sent to capture them. One party, consisting of Sergeant Michael Kennedy and constables Michael Scanlan, Thomas Lonigan and Thomas McIntyre camped overnight at an abandoned mining site at [[Stringybark Creek]], Toombullup, 36 km north of [[Mansfield, Victoria|Mansfield]].{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=259–60}} Unbeknownst to them, the gang's hideout was only 2.5 km away{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|p=76}} and Ned had observed their tracks.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=259–60}}
The outlaws gave an exhibition of horsemanship which entertained and surprised their hostages. After having supper, and telling the hostages not to raise the alarm for another three hours, they left. The entire crime was carried out without injury and the gang netted £2000, a large sum in those days.


[[File:Mansfield-police-photomontage.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Clockwise from top left: Constable Lonigan, Sergeant Kennedy, Constable McIntyre and Constable Scanlan]]
===Jerilderie===
The following day at about 5 p.m., while Kennedy and Scanlan were out scouting, the gang bailed up McIntyre and Lonigan at the camp.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}} McIntyre was then unarmed and surrendered. Lonigan made a motion to draw his revolver and ran for the cover of a log. Ned immediately shot Lonigan, killing him.<ref>Jones (1995) p. 364.</ref>{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}} Ned said he did not begrudge his death, calling him the "meanest man that I had any account against".{{Sfn|FitzSimons|2013|p=191}}
The raid on [[Jerilderie]] is particularly noteworthy for its boldness and cunning. The gang arrived in the town on Saturday 8 February 1879. They broke into the local police station and imprisoned police officers Richards and Devine in their own cell. The outlaws then changed into the police uniforms and mixed with the locals, claiming to be reinforcements from Sydney.


The gang questioned McIntyre and took his and Lonigan's firearms.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}} Hoping to convince Ned to spare Kennedy and Scanlan, McIntyre informed him that they too were Irish Catholics. Ned replied, "I will let them see what one native [Australian-born colonial] can do."{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=}} At about 5.30 p.m., the gang heard them approaching and hid. Ned advised McIntyre to tell them to surrender. As the constable did so, the gang ordered them to bail up. Kennedy reached for his revolver, whereupon the gang fired. Scanlan dismounted and, according to McIntyre, was shot while trying to unsling his rifle. Ned maintained that Scanlan fired and was trying to fire again when he fatally shot him.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}}<ref>Jones (1995). p. 136.</ref>
On Monday the gang rounded up various people and forced them into the back parlour of the Royal Mail Hotel. While Dan Kelly and Steve Hart kept the hostages busy with "drinks on the house" <ref>''An Illustrated History of the Kelly Gang'' by Alec Brierley, published in 1979</ref>, Ned Kelly and Joe Byrne raided the local bank of about two thousand pounds. Kelly also burned all the townspeople's [[mortgage]] [[deed]]s in the bank.


[[File:Stringybark_attack.jpg|thumb|The gang prepares to open fire as Kennedy and Scanlan arrive. Lonigan's body lies in the foreground.]]
==The Jerilderie Letter==
According to McIntyre, the gang continued firing at Kennedy as he dismounted and tried to surrender. Ned later stated that Kennedy hid behind a tree and fired back, then fled into the bush. Ned and Dan pursued and exchanged gunfire with the sergeant for over 1 km before Ned shot him in the right side.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|p=87}} According to Ned, Kennedy then turned to face him and Ned shot him in the chest with his shotgun, not realising that Kennedy had dropped his revolver and was trying to surrender.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}}
Months prior to arriving in Jerilderie, and with help from Joe Byrne, Ned Kelly dictated a lengthy letter for publication describing his view of his activities and the treatment of his family and, more generally, the treatment of [[Irish Catholic]]s by the police and the English and Irish [[Protestant]] [[squatter]]s.


Amidst the shootout, McIntyre, still unarmed, escaped on Kennedy's horse.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=70–73}} He reached Mansfield the following day and a search party was quickly dispatched and found the bodies of Lonigan and Scanlan. Kennedy's body was found two days later.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=462}}{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=76–77}}
[[The Jerilderie Letter]], as it is called, is a document of 7,391 words and has become a famous piece of [[Australian literature]]. Kelly had written a previous letter (14 December 1878) to a member of [[Parliament of Victoria|Parliament]] stating his grievances, but the correspondence had been suppressed from the public. The letter highlights the various incidents that led to him becoming an outlaw (see [[Ned Kelly#Rise to notoriety|Rise to notoriety]]).


In his accounts of the shootout, Ned justified the killings as acts of self-defence, citing reports of policemen boasting that they would shoot him on sight, the cache of weapons and ammunition that the police carried, and their failure to surrender as evidence of their intention to kill him.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=216–28}} McIntyre stated that the police party's intention was to arrest him, that they were not excessively armed, and that it was the gang who were the aggressors.<ref>Jones (1995) pp. 132, 134.</ref>{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|p=69}} Jones, Morrissey and others have questioned aspects of both versions of events.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 132–33.</ref>{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=216–28}}
The letter was never published and was concealed until re-discovered in 1930. It was then published by the ''[[Melbourne Herald]]''. {{wikisourcepar|The Jerilderie Letter}}


===Outlawed under the ''Felons Apprehension Act''===
The handwritten document was donated anonymously to the [[State Library of Victoria]] in 2000. Historian Alex McDermott says of the Letter, "... even now it's hard to defy his voice. With this letter Kelly inserts himself into history, on his own terms, with his own voice...We hear the living speaker in a way that no other document in our history achieves..." Kelly's language is colorful, rough and full of metaphors; it is "one of the most extraordinary documents in Australian history".
[[File:Outlaw_Proclamation_Kellys.png|thumb|upright|Proclamation by Governor [[George Bowen]] declaring Ned and Dan outlaws]]
On 28 October, the Victorian government announced a reward of £800 for the arrest of the gang; it was soon increased to £2,000. Three days later, the [[Parliament of Victoria]] passed the ''Felons Apprehension Act'', which came into effect on 1 November. The bushrangers were given until 12 November to surrender. On 15 November, having remained at large, they were officially outlawed. As a result, anyone who encountered them armed, or had a reasonable suspicion that they were armed, could kill them without consequence. The act also penalised anyone who gave "any aid, shelter or sustenance" to the outlaws or withheld information, or gave false information, to the authorities. Punishment was imprisonment with or without hard labour for up to 15 years.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 144, 146, 159–60.</ref>


The Victorian act was based on the 1865 ''Felons Apprehension Act'', passed by the [[Parliament of New South Wales]] to reign in bushrangers such as the [[Gardiner–Hall gang]] and [[Daniel Morgan (bushranger)|Dan Morgan]]. In response to the Kelly gang, the New South Wales parliament re-enacted their legislation as the ''Felons Apprehension Act 1879''.<ref name=":12">{{Cite journal|last=Eburn|first=Michael|date=2005|title=Outlawry in Colonial Australia, the Felons Apprehension Acts 1865–1899|url=http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ANZLawHisteJl/2005/6.pdf|journal=ANZLH e-Journal|volume=25|pages=80–93}}</ref>
==Capture, trial and execution==
[[Image:nedkellysarmour1882.jpg|thumb|right|Ned Kelly's armour, from an 1880 illustration]]
[[Image:Ned Kelly trial.jpg|thumb|right|The trial of Ned Kelly]]
[[Image:NedKelly dock.jpg|thumb|right|Kelly in the dock]]
[[Image:Ned Kelly death mask.jpg|thumb|right|Ned Kelly's [[death mask]] in the [[Old Melbourne Gaol]]]]


==Euroa raid==
The gang discovered that [[Aaron Sherritt]], Joe Byrne's erstwhile best friend, was a police informer. On the 26 June 1880 Dan Kelly and Joe Byrne went to Sherritt's house and killed him. (Ian Jones, authority on the Kelly Gang, has made a compelling case in his book, ''The Fatal Friendship'' that the police manipulated events so that Sherritt appeared a traitor and to provoke the gang into emerging from hiding to dispose of him.) The four policemen who were living openly with him at the time hid under the bed and did not report the murder until late the following morning. This delay was to prove crucial since it upset Ned's timing for another ambush.
[[File:Kelly robbery Euora.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Scenes from the [[Euroa]] raid]]
After the police killings, the gang tried to escape into New South Wales but, due to flooding of the [[Murray River]], were forced to return to north-eastern Victoria. They narrowly avoided the police on several occasions and relied on the support of an extensive network of sympathisers.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 142–60.</ref>{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=294–306}}


In need of funds, the gang decided to rob the bank of [[Euroa]]. Byrne reconnoitered the small town on 8 December 1878. Around midday the next day, the gang held up Younghusband Station, outside Euroa. Fourteen male employees and passers-by were taken hostage and held overnight in an outbuilding on the station; female hostages were held in the homestead. A number of hostages were likely sympathisers of the gang and had prior knowledge of the raid.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 161–64.</ref>
The Kelly Gang arrived in [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]] on 27 June forcibly taking about seventy hostages at the Glenrowan Inn. They knew that a train loaded with police was on its way and ordered the rail tracks pulled up in order to cause a derailment.


The following day, Dan guarded the hostages while Ned, Byrne and Hart rode out to cut Euroa's telegraph wires. They encountered and held up a hunting party and some railway workers, whom they took back to the station. Ned, Dan and Hart then went into Euroa, leaving Byrne to guard the prisoners.<ref>Jones (1995), pp. 165–67.</ref>
The gang members donned their now-famous armour. It is not known exactly who made the armour, although it was likely forged from stolen and donated plow parts. Each man's armour weighed about 96 pounds (44&nbsp;kg); all four had helmets, and Byrne's was said to be the most well done, with the brow reaching down to the nose piece, almost forming two eye slits.


Around 4 p.m., the three outlaws held up the Euroa branch of the [[National Bank of Australasia]], netting cash and gold worth £2,260 and a small number of documents and securities.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 167–68.</ref> Fourteen staff members were taken back to Younghusband Station as hostages.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=320}} There the gang performed [[trick riding]] for the thirty-seven hostages, before leaving at about 8.30 p.m., warning their captives to stay put for three hours or suffer reprisals.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 176–77.</ref>
While holed up in the Glenrowan Inn, the Kelly gang's attempt to derail the police train failed due to the bravery of a released hostage, schoolmaster [[Thomas Curnow]]. Curnow convinced Ned to let him go and then as soon as he was released he alerted the authorities, at great risk to his own life, by standing on the railway line near sunrise and waving a lantern wrapped in his red scarf. The police then stopped the train before it would have been derailed and laid siege to the inn.


Following the raid, a number of newspapers commented on the efficiency of its execution and compared it with the inefficiency of the police. Several hostages stated that the gang had behaved courteously and without violence during the raid.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 172.</ref> However, hostages also stated that on several occasions the bushrangers threatened to shoot them and burn buildings containing hostages if there was any resistance.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=311–15, 324, 330–31}}
At about dawn on Monday 28 June, Ned Kelly emerged from the inn in his suit of armour. He marched towards the police, firing his gun at them, while their bullets bounced off his armour. His lower limbs, however, were unprotected and he was shot repeatedly in the legs. The other Kelly Gang members died in the hotel; Joe Byrne allegedly perished due to loss of blood due to a gunshot wound that severed his [[femoral artery]], and Dan Kelly and Steve Hart committed suicide (according to witness [[Matthew Gibney]]). The police suffered only one minor injury: Superintendent Francis Hare, the senior officer on the scene, received a slight wound to his wrist, then fled the battle. For his cowardice the Royal Commission later suspended Hare from the [[Victorian Police Force]].<ref>J.J. Kenneally, pp. 190-191</ref> Several hostages were also shot, two fatally.


=== Cameron Letter ===
Ned Kelly survived to stand trial, and was sentenced to death by the Irish-born judge Sir [[Redmond Barry]]. This case was extraordinary in that there were exchanges between the prisoner Kelly and the judge, and the case has been the subject of attention by historians and lawyers. When the judge uttered the customary words "May God have mercy on your soul", Kelly replied "I will go a little further than that, and say I will see you there when I go".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ironoutlaw.com/html/trial.html |title=The sentencing of Edward Kelly |work=ironoutlaw.com |accessdate=2006-11-11}}</ref> He was [[hanging|hanged]] on 11 November 1880 at the Melbourne Gaol for the murder of Constable Lonigan. Although two newspapers (''The Age'' and ''The Herald'') reported Kelly's last words as "Such is life", another source, Kelly's gaol warden, wrote in his diary that when Kelly was prompted to say his last words, the prisoner opened his mouth and mumbled something that he couldn't hear. Sir Redmond Barry died of the effects of a [[carbuncle]] on his neck on 23 November 1880, twelve days after Kelly.
At Younghusband Station, Byrne wrote two copies of a letter that Kelly had dictated. They were posted on 14 December to Donald Cameron, a Victorian parliamentarian who Kelly mistook as sympathetic to the gang, and Superintendent John Sadleir. In the letter, Kelly gives his version of the Fitzpatrick incident and the Stringybark Creek killings, and describes cases of alleged police corruption and harassment of his family, signing off as "Edward Kelly, enforced outlaw". He expected Cameron to read it out in parliament, but the government only allowed summaries to be made public. ''[[The Argus (Melbourne)|The Argus]]'' called it the work of "a clever illiterate".{{Sfn|Jones|1992|pp=88–89, 216}} Premier [[Graham Berry]], a vociferous critic of the gang, also found it "very clever", and alerted railway authorities to an allusion Kelly makes to tearing up tracks. Kelly expanded on much of its content in the [[Jerilderie Letter]] of 1879.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|pp=91–95}}


==Kelly sympathisers detained==
Although the exact number is unknown, it is estimated that a petition to spare Kelly's life attracted over 30,000 signatures.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://nedonline.imagineering.net.au/masterframeset.html?page=/documents/04966-p0000-000003-0010-010-001.htm|title=REPRIEVE|work=ned online|accessdate=2008-08-29}}</ref>
[[File:Kelly Gang sympathisers.jpg|thumb|The imprisonment of Kelly sympathisers without trial turned public opinion against the police. Among those imprisoned were John Quinn (left), John Stewart (centre), and Joseph Ryan (right).]]
On 2 January 1879, police obtained warrants for the arrest of 30 presumed Kelly sympathisers, 23 of whom were remanded in custody.{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=114}} Over a third were released within seven weeks due to lack of evidence, but nine sympathisers had their remand renewed on a weekly basis for almost three months, despite the police failing to produce evidence for a committal hearing. In a letter to Acting Chief Secretary [[Bryan O’Loghlen]], Kelly accused the government of "committing a manifest injustice in imprisoning so many innocent people" and threatened reprisals. Police claimed that such threats dissuaded their informants from giving sworn evidence.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|pp=12, 20–21}}


On 22 April, police magistrate Foster refused prosecution requests to continue remands and discharged the remaining detainees. Although the police command opposed this decision, by then it was clear that the tactic of detaining sympathisers had not impeded the gang.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=21}}
==Grave discovered==
On 9 March 2008 it was announced that Australian archaeologists believed they had found Kelly's grave on the site of an abandoned prison.<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSSYD14597520080309 Grave of Australian outlaw Ned Kelly said found]</ref> The bones were uncovered at a mass grave, and Kelly's are among those of thirty-two felons who had been executed by hanging. [[Historian]]s had discovered records which suggested that Kelly's remains were buried at [[HM Prison Pentridge|Pentridge prison]] after having been removed from the [[Old Melbourne Gaol]] when it closed in 1929. Jeremy Smith, a senior [[archaeologist]] with [[Heritage Victoria]] said, "We believe we have conclusively found the burial site but that is very different from finding the remains."


Jones argues that the detention strategy swung public sympathy away from the police.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 178.</ref> Dawson, however, points out that while there was widespread condemnation of the denial of the civil liberties of those detained, this did not necessarily mean support for the outlaws grew.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|pp=21–22}}
[[Forensic pathology|Forensic pathologists]] have examined the bones, which are much decayed and jumbled with the remains of others, making identification difficult. However, Kelly's remains were identified by an old wrist injury and by the fact that his head was removed for [[Phrenology|phrenological]] study. Mrs. Ellen Hollow, Kelly's 62-year old great-niece, offered to supply her own [[DNA]] to help identify Kelly's bones.<ref>The Times, March 10, 2008</ref>


==Jerilderie raid==
==The Kelly aftermath and the lessons==
[[File:Ned Kelly Jerilderie.jpg|thumb|The gang bails up the Jerilderie police barracks]]
Some dismiss the Kelly Outbreak as simply a spate of criminality. These included: Boxhall, ''The Story of Australian Bushrangers'' (1899), Henry Giles Turner, ''History of the Colony of Victoria'' (1904) and several police writers of the time like Hare and more modern writers like Penzig (1988) who wrote legitimizing narratives about law and order and moral justification.
Following the Euroa raid, the reward for Kelly's capture increased to £1,000. Fifty-eight police were transferred to north-eastern Victoria, totaling 217 in the district. Around 50 soldiers were also deployed to guard local banks. The gang distributed most proceeds from the raid to family and other sympathisers. Once more in need of funds, they planned to rob the bank at [[Jerilderie]], a town 65 km across the border in New South Wales. A number of sympathisers moved into Jerilderie before the raid to provide undercover support.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 173–74, 179–80.</ref>{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=326–28, 334, 338}}


On 7 February 1879, the gang crossed the Murray River between [[Mulwala]] and [[Tocumwal]] and camped overnight in the bush. The following day they visited a hotel about 3 km from Jerilderie, where they drank and chatted with patrons and staff, learning more about the town and its police presence.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 182.</ref>
Others, commencing with Kenneally (1929), and McQuilton (1979) and Jones (1995), perceived the Kelly Outbreak and the problems of Victoria's Land Selection Acts post-1860s as interlinked. McQuilton identified Kelly as the "social bandit" who was caught up in unresolved social contradictions - that is, the selector-squatter conflicts over land - and that Kelly gave the selectors the leadership they so lacked. O'Brien (1999) identified a leaderless rural malaise in Northeastern Victoria as early as 1872-73, around land, policing and the ''Impounding Act''.


In the early hours of 9 February, the gang bailed up the Jerilderie police barracks and secured in the lockup the two constables present, George Devine and Henry Richards. They also held Devine's wife and young children hostage overnight.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 181–82.</ref> The following afternoon, Byrne and Hart, dressed as police, went out with Richards to familiarise themselves with the town.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 183–85.</ref>
After Ned Kelly's death, the Victorian Royal Commission (1881-83) into the Victorian Police Force led to many changes to the nature of policing in the colony.


At 10 am on 10 February, Ned and Byrne donned police uniforms and took Richards with them into town, leaving Devine in the lockup and warning his wife that they would kill her and her children if she left the barracks.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=346}} The gang held up the Royal Mail Hotel and, while Dan and Hart controlled the hostages, Ned and Byrne robbed the neighbouring [[Bank of New South Wales]] of £2,141 in cash and valuables.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 186.</ref> Ned also found and burnt deeds, mortgages and securities, saying "the bloody banks are crushing the life's blood out of the poor, struggling man".{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=347–49}}
Though the Kelly Gang was destroyed in 1880, for almost seven years a serious threat of a second outbreak existed because of major problems around land settlement and selection (McQuilton, Ch. 10).


With hostages from the bank now detained in the hotel, Byrne held up the post office and smashed its telegraph system while Ned had several hostages cut down telegraph wires. After lecturing the 30 or so hostages on police corruption and the justice system, Ned freed them, except for Richards and two telegraphists, who he had secured in the lockup.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=352–56}} Dan and Byrne then left town with the police's horses and weapons. Ned stayed a while longer to [[shout (paying)|shout]] a group of sympathisers at the Albion Hotel. While there, he forced Hart to return a watch he had stolen from priest [[J. B. Gribble]], who also persuaded Ned to leave a racehorse he had taken as it belonged to "a young lady".{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=356–62}} After the raid, the gang went into hiding for 17 months.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 194.</ref>
McQuilton suggested two police officers involved in the pursuit of the Kelly Gang — namely, Superintendent John Sadleir (1833-1919),[http://www.brightoncemetery.com/HistoricInterments/150Names/sadleirj.htm] author of ''Recollections of a Victorian Police Officer'', and Inspector W.B. Montford — averted the Second Outbreak by coming to understand that the unresolved social contradiction in Northeastern Victoria was around land, not crime, and by their good work in aiding small selectors.


===Jerilderie Letter===
==The Kellys and the modern era==
{{main|Jerilderie Letter}}
Ned's mother Ellen died in 1923 at the age of 92, by which time planes, cars and radio had been introduced to Australia. Photographs have recently been discovered showing her sitting in a motor car.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2006/12/01/1164777793311.html|title=Found: Rare pictures of Kelly gang matriarch|work="The Age" newspaper|accessdate=2006-12-02}}</ref>
{{Blockquote|text=I wish to acquaint you with some of the occurrences of the present past and future.|sign=Opening line of the Jerilderie Letter<ref name=conv/>}}
{{Wikisource|The Jerilderie Letter}}
[[File:Ned Kelly Jerilderie Letter.jpg|thumb|Some of the 56 pages comprising the Jerilderie Letter, on display at [[State Library Victoria]]]]
Prior to arriving in Jerilderie, Kelly composed a lengthy letter with the aim of tracing his path to outlawry, justifying his actions, and outlining the alleged injustices he and his family suffered at the hands of the police. He also implores [[Squatting (Australian history)|squatters]] to share their wealth with the rural poor, invokes a history of Irish rebellion against the English, and threatens to carry out a "colonial stratagem" designed to shock not only Victoria and its police "but also the whole British army".{{sfn|Jones|2010|pp=184–85}}<ref name="gelderweaver">Gelder, Ken; Weaver, Rachael (2017). ''Colonial Australian Fiction: Character Types, Social Formations and the Colonial Economy''. [[Sydney University Press]]. {{ISBN|978-1-74332-461-5}}, pp. 57–58.</ref> Dictated to Byrne, the Jerilderie Letter, a handwritten document of fifty-six pages and 7,391 words, was described by Kelly as "a bit of my life". He tasked Edwin Living, a local bank accountant, with delivering it to the editor of the ''[[Jerilderie Herald and Urana Advertiser|Jerilderie and Urana Gazette]]'' for publication.{{sfn|Molony|2001|pp=136–37}} Due to political suppression, only excerpts were published in the press, based on a copy transcribed by John Hanlon, owner of the Eight Mile Hotel in [[Deniliquin]]. The letter was rediscovered and published in full in 1930.<ref name=gelderweaver/>


According to historian Alex McDermott, "Kelly inserts himself into history, on his own terms, with his own voice. ... We hear the living speaker in a way that no other document in our history achieves".{{sfn|Kelly|2012|p=xxviii}} It has been interpreted as a proto-[[Republicanism in Australia|republican]] manifesto;<ref name="barkham">Barkham, Patrick (4 December 2000). [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/dec/04/worlddispatch.patrickbarkham "Ned Kelly's Last Testament"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180519204735/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/dec/04/worlddispatch.patrickbarkham |date=19 May 2018 }}. ''The Guardian''. Retrieved 19 May 2018.</ref> one eyewitness to the Jerilderie raid noted that the letter suggested Kelly would "have liked to have been at the head of a hundred followers or so to upset the existing government".<ref>[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/134454902/15403431 "The Kelly Raid on Jerilderie"]. ''[[Jerilderie Herald and Urana Advertiser]]''. 2 January 1914. p. 1. Retrieved 10 January 2024.</ref>{{sfn|Jones|2010|pp=371–72}} It has also been described as a "murderous, ... maniacal rant",<ref name="farrell">Farrell, Michael (2015). ''Writing Australian Unsettlement: Modes of Poetic Invention, 1796–1945''. Springer. {{ISBN|978-1-137-46541-2}}, p. 17.</ref> and "a remarkable insight into Kelly's grandiosity".<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=MacFarlane |first1=Ian |last2=Scott |first2=Russ |date=2014 |title=Ned Kelly – Stock Thief, Bank Robber, Murderer – Psychopath |journal=Psychiatry, Psychology and Law |volume=21 |issue=5}}.</ref> Noted for its unorthodox grammar, the letter reaches "delirious poetics",<ref name="gelderweaver" /> Kelly's language being "hyperbolic, allusive, hallucinatory ... full of striking metaphors and images".<ref name="conv">Gelder, Ken (5 May 2014). [http://theconversation.com/the-case-for-ned-kellys-jerilderie-letter-25898 "The case for Ned Kelly's Jerilderie Letter"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402141310/http://theconversation.com/the-case-for-ned-kellys-jerilderie-letter-25898 |date=2 April 2015 }}, ''[[The Conversation (website)|The Conversation]]''. Retrieved 20 March 2015.</ref> His invective and sense of humour are also present; in one well-known passage, he calls the Victorian police "a parcel of big ugly fat-necked [[wombat]] headed, big bellied, [[Australian magpie|magpie]] legged, narrow hipped, splaw-footed sons of Irish bailiffs or English landlords".<ref>Woodcock, Bruce (2003). ''Peter Carey''. Manchester University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7190-6798-3}}, p. 139.</ref> The letter closes:{{sfn|Seal|2002|p=88}}
===November 2007 auctioning of claimed Kelly revolver===
{{blockquote|neglect this and abide by the consequences, which shall be worse than the rust in the wheat of Victoria or the druth of a dry season to the grasshoppers in New South Wales I do not wish to give the order full force without giving timely warning. but I am a widows son outlawed and my orders <u>must</u> be obeyed.}}
On 13 November 2007, a weapon claimed to be Constable Fitzpatrick's service revolver was auctioned for approximately $70,000 in Melbourne and is now located in Westbury Tasmania.


==Reward increase and disappearance==
The vendor's representative, Tom Thompson, claimed that the revolver was left by Constable Fitzpatrick at the Kelly house after the melee in 1878, given to Kate Kelly, and then (much later) found in a house or shed in [[Forbes, New South Wales]].<ref>{{cite web | title = Kelly Gang gun goes for $70,000, but is it the real thing? | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/kelly-gang-gun-goes-for-70000-but-is-it-the-real-thing/2007/11/13/1194766681230.html | accessdate = 2008-03-08 }} </ref>
[[File:Reward.jpg|thumb|£8000 reward notice for the capture of the gang, about $3 million in modern Australian currency]]
In response to the Jerilderie raid, the New South Wales government and several banks collectively issued £4,000 for the gang's capture, dead or alive, the largest reward offered in the colony since £5,000 was placed on the heads of the outlawed [[Clarke brothers]] in 1867.<ref>Smith, Peter. C.. (2015). ''The Clarke Gang: Outlawed, Outcast and Forgotten''. Rosenberg Publishing, {{ISBN|978-1-925078-66-4}}, endnotes.</ref> The Victorian government matched the offer for the Kelly gang, bringing the total amount to £8,000, bushranging's largest-ever reward.{{sfn|Kenneally|1929|p=105}}


The Victorian police continued to receive many reports of sightings of the outlaws and information about their activities from their network of informants. Chief Commissioner of Police [[Frederick Standish]] and Superintendent [[Francis Augustus Hare]] directed operations against the gang from Benalla. Hare organised frequent search parties and surveillance of Kelly sympathisers.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=368–78}}{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|pp=121–23}}
According to press reports<ref>{{cite web | title = Kelly gang gun is a fake, say firearms experts | url=http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/kelly-gang-gun-is-a-fake-say-firearms-experts/2007/11/14/1194766771590.html | accessdate = 2008-03-08 }} </ref> in the days following the auction, firearms experts assessed the revolver as being of a design (a copy of an English [[Webley]] .32 revolver) not manufactured until 1884, well after the claimed provenance had the weapon changing hands from Constable Fitzpatrick to the Kellys. In addition, a stamp on the gun which the auction catalogue interpreted as R*C, an indication that the revolver was of the Royal Constabulary, was instead read as a European manufacturer's [[proof mark]].


[[File:Queensland Police Trackers to hunt the Kelly Gang, 1879.jpg|thumb|[[Native police]] unit, sent from Queensland to Victoria in 1879 to help capture the gang|left]]
Further, evidence by Constable Fitzpatrick said that when he left the Kelly homestead after the incident, he had his revolver and handcuffs; (cited in Keith McMenomy (1984), p. 69.)
In March 1879, six Queensland [[native police]] troopers and a senior constable under the command of sub-Inspector Stanhope O'Connor were deployed to Benalla to join the hunt for the gang. Although Kelly feared the [[Aboriginal tracker|tracking]] ability of the Aboriginal troopers, Standish and Hare doubted their value and temporarily withdrew their services.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 226, 243–44.</ref><ref>Jones (1995). pp. 203–04, 222.</ref>


In May 1879, on the advice of Standish, the [[Board of Land and Works|Victorian Land Board]] blacklisted 86 alleged Kelly sympathisers from buying land in the secluded areas of northeastern Victoria. The aim of the policy was to disperse the gang's network of sympathisers and disrupt stock theft in the region. Jones and others claim that it caused widespread resentment and hardened support for the outlaws.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 207–10.</ref> Morrissey, however, states that although the policy was sometimes used unfairly, it was effective and supported by the majority of the community.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=151–52}}
==Cultural effect==
[[Image:ned kelly armour library.JPG|thumb|Ned Kelly's armour on display in the Victoria State Library]]
One of the gaols in which Kelly was incarcerated has become the ''Ned Kelly Museum'' in Glenrowan, Victoria, and many weapons and artifacts used by him and his gang are in exhibit there. Since his death, Kelly has become part of Australian folklore, the language and the subject of a large number of books and several films. The Australian term "as game as Ned Kelly" entered the language and is a common expression.<ref name="Barry 1974">{{cite encyclopedia | author = Barry, John V. | title = Kelly, Edward (Ned) (1855 - 1880) | encyclopedia = Australian Dictionary of Biography | volume = 5 | publisher = Melbourne University Press | year = 1974 | pages = 6-8 | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A050009b.htm | accessdate = 2007-04-08}}</ref>


[[File:Troopers in pursuit of Kelly Gang.jpg|thumb|A party of troopers participating in the hunt for the Kelly gang]]
Films included the first [[feature film]], ''[[The Story of the Kelly Gang]]'' (Australia, 1906), [[Ned Kelly (1970 movie)|another]] with [[Mick Jagger]] in the title role (1970), and more recently ''[[Ned Kelly (2003 movie)|Ned Kelly]]'' (2003) starring [[Heath Ledger]], [[Orlando Bloom]] and [[Geoffrey Rush]]. A TV mini series of six episodes ''The Last Outlaw'' (1980) highlighted the plight of the selector and the social conflicts and battles between selector and squatters. During the 1960s, Ned Kelly graduated from folk lore into the academic arena. His story and the social issues around land selection, squatters, national identity,<ref>Gibb (1982)</ref> policing and his court case are studied at universities, seminars and lectures.
Facing media and parliamentary criticism over the costly and failed gang search, Standish appointed Assistant Commissioner [[Charles Hope Nicolson]] as leader of operations at Benalla on 3 July 1879. Standish reduced Nicolson's police forces, withdrew most of the soldiers guarding banks, and cut the search budget. Nicolson relied more heavily on targeted surveillance and his network of spies and informers.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 208–09.</ref>


After almost a year of unsuccessful efforts to capture the outlaws, Nicolson was replaced by Hare. In June 1880, police informant Daniel Kennedy reported that the gang were planning another raid and had made bullet-proof armour out of agricultural equipment. Hare dismissed the latter as preposterous and sacked Kennedy.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=384–86}}<ref>Jones (1995). p. 226.</ref>
===Ned Kelly as a political icon===
In the time since his execution, Ned Kelly has been mythologized among some into a [[Robin Hood]],<ref>C. Turnbull (1942) and Hobsbawm (1972)</ref> a political revolutionary and a figure of Irish Catholic and working-class resistance to the establishment and British colonial ties.<ref>O'Brien (2006)</ref> It is claimed that Kelly's bank robberies were to fund the push for a "Republic of the North-East of Victoria", and that the police found a declaration of the republic in his pocket when he was captured, which has led to him being seen as an icon by some in the [[Australian republicanism]] cause.


==Glenrowan affair==
====Ned Kelly captures President Kruger and wins the Boer War, 1900====
===Murder of Aaron Sherritt===
In early June 1900, when the [[Boer]] [[Transvaal]] capital [[Pretoria]] fell to the British assault, President [[Paul Kruger]] and his government fled east on a train and evaded capture. In the ''Melbourne Punch'' of 21 June 1900, a cartoon titled "BAIL-UP!" depicted the Kelly Gang capturing Kruger's train and seizing Kruger's gold, thus winning the [[Boer War]] for the British<ref>Wilcox, p. 103.</ref>. This is among the first of the Australian political cartoons to invoke Kelly's memory.
{{Blockquote|text=... I look upon Ned Kelly as an extraordinary man; there is no man in the world like him, he is superhuman.|sign=[[Aaron Sherritt]] to Superintendent [[Francis Augustus Hare]]{{sfn|Jones|2010|p=}}}}
[[File:Aaron Sherritt 2.jpg|thumb|upright|Portrait of Sherritt showing his "larrikin heel" and wearing his hat in the Greta mob fashion with the chin strap resting under his nose]]
During the Kelly outbreak, police watch parties monitored Byrne's mother's house in the Woolshed Valley near [[Beechworth]]. The police used the house of her neighbour, [[Aaron Sherritt]], as a base of operations and kept watch from nearby caves at night. Sherritt, a former Greta Mob member and lifelong friend of Byrne, accepted police payments for camping with the watch parties and for informing on the gang.{{sfn|Jones|2010|p=}} Detective [[Michael Edward Ward|Michael Ward]] doubted Sherritt's value as an informer, suspecting he lied to the police to protect Byrne.{{sfn|Kelson|McQuilton|2001|p=128}}<ref name=":5">Jones (1995). p. 205.</ref>


In March 1879 Byrne's mother saw Sherritt with a police watch party and later publicly denounced him as a spy.{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=122}}<ref name=":6">Jones (1995). p. 206</ref> In the following months, Byrne and Ned sent invitations to Sherritt to join the gang, but when he continued his relationship with the police, the outlaws decided to murder him as a means to launch a grander plot, one that they boasted would "astonish not only the Australian colonies but the whole world".{{sfn|Farwell|1970|p=193}}
====Ned Kelly the honest bushranger, 1915====
During the tough days during [[World War I]] cartoons in the ''[[Queensland Worker]]'', later re-printed in ''Labor Call'', 16 September 1915, showed profiteers robbing Australian citizens, while Ned Kelly in armour watched on saying; "Well Well! I never got as low as that, and they hung me."<ref>(J. Beaumont, ''Australia's War 1914-18'', 1995.)</ref>


[[File:MurderOfSherritt.jpg|thumb|left|Sherritt's murder]]
====Ned Kelly - invoked to fight the Japanese in 1942====
On 26 June 1880, Dan and Byrne rode into the Woolshed Valley. That evening, they kidnapped a local gardener, Anton Wick, and took him to Sherritt's hut, which was occupied by Sherritt, his pregnant wife Ellen and her mother, and a four-man police watch party.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=390–92}}
During [[World War II]], [[Clive Turnbull]] published ''Ned Kelly: Being His Own Story of His Life and Crimes''. In the introduction Turnbull invoked the Kelly historical memory to urge Australians to adopt the Kelly spirit and resist the oppression of the potential invader.


Byrne forced Wick to knock on the back door and call out for Sherritt. When Sherritt answered the door, Byrne shot him in the throat and chest with a shotgun, killing him. Byrne and Dan then entered the hut while the policemen hid in one of the bedrooms. Byrne overheard them scrambling for their shotguns and demanded that they come out. When they did not respond he fired into the bedroom. He then sent Ellen into the bedroom to bring the police out, but they detained her in the room.<ref name=":7">Jones (1995). pp. 230–31.</ref>
===Ned Kelly in iconography===
[[Image:Sidney Nolan -Kelly-the trial.jpg|thumb|250px|right|[[Sidney Nolan]]'s painting ''[[The Trial (Sidney Nolan painting)|The Trial]]'', depicting Ned Kelly on trial]]
The distinctive homemade armour Kelly wore for his final unsuccessful stand against the police was the subject of a famous series of paintings by [[Sidney Nolan]].


The outlaws left the hut, collected kindling, and loudly threatened to burn alive those inside. They stayed outside for approximately two hours, yelled more threats, then released Wick and rode away.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=392–93}}{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=122–23}}
[[Jerilderie]], one of the towns Kelly robbed, built its police station featuring numerous structural components mimicking his distinctive face plate. Some examples include walls made of differently toned bricks making up his image to storm drains with holes cut in them to form it.{{Fact|date=February 2008}}


===Plot to wreck the police train and attack Benalla===
An image of Kelly, based on Sidney Nolan's imagery, appeared in the "Tin Symphony" segment of the opening ceremony for the year [[2000 Summer Olympics|2000 Olympic Games]].<ref>Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games, ''[http://www.gamesinfo.com.au/of/AR/AROFOC.html The who's who and what's what of the Opening Ceremnony]'', [http://www.gamesinfo.com.au/ GamesInfo.com.au]</ref><ref>David Fickling, ''[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/worldview/story/0,,1096370,00.html Ned Kelly, the legend that still torments Australia]'', [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/ The Observer], 30 November 2003</ref> He has also appeared in advertisements, most notably in television spots for Bushell's [[tea]]. A man drinking tea in the iconic suit of armour is the focal point of part of the ad.
[[File:Ned Kelly attemps to derail train.jpg|thumb|upright|Kelly forces two railway workers to damage the track at [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]] in a plot to derail the police special train]]
The gang estimated that the policemen at Sherritt's would report his murder to Beechworth within a few hours, prompting a police special train to be sent up from Melbourne. They also surmised that the train would collect reinforcements in [[Benalla]] before continuing through [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]], a small town in the [[Warby Ranges]]. There, the gang planned to derail the train and shoot dead any survivors, then ride to an unpoliced Benalla where they would bomb the railway bridge over the [[Broken River (Victoria)|Broken River]], thereby isolating the town and giving them time to rob the banks, bomb the police barracks, torch the courthouse, free the gaol's prisoners, and generally sow chaos before returning to the bush.{{sfn|Innes|2008|p=105}}{{sfn|Dawson|2018|pp=57–58}}


While Byrne and Dan were in the Woolshed Valley, Ned and Hart forced two railway workers camped at Glenrowan to damage the track. The outlaws selected a sharp curve at an incline, where the train would be speeding at 60 mph before derailing into a deep gully. They told their captives they were going to "send the train and its occupants to hell".{{sfn|McMenomy|1984|p=152}}{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=156}}
[[Australia Post]] produced a stamp/envelope set ''The Siege Of Glenrowan - Centenary 1980'' to mark the capture of Kelly 100 years before. The 22-cent 'stamp' printed on the envelope shows Kelly 'at bay' wearing his armoured helmet and Colt revolver in hand.


The bushrangers took over the [[Glenrowan railway station]], the stationmaster's home and Ann Jones' Glenrowan Inn, opposite the station. They used the hotel to hold the workers, passers-by, and other men; most of the women and children taken prisoner were held at the stationmaster's home. The other hotel in town, McDonnell's Railway Hotel, was used to stable the gang's stolen horses, one of which carried a keg of blasting powder and fuses.<ref name=":5" /> The packhorses also carried [[Armour of the Kelly gang|helmeted suits of bullet-repelling armour]], each made from stolen [[plough#Parts|plough mouldboards]] and weighing about {{convert|44|kg}}. Kelly conceived of the armour to protect the outlaws in shootouts with the police and planned to wear it when inspecting the train wreckage for survivors.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|p=121}}
==Ned Kelly in fiction==
[[A. Bertram Chandler]]'s novel ''[[Kelly Country]]'' (1983) is an [[alternate history (fiction)|alternate history]] in which Kelly leads a successful revolution; the result is that Australia becomes a world power.


===Siege and shootout===
''Our Sunshine''(1991) by Robert Drewe was the basis of the 2003 film ''Ned Kelly'' that starred Heath Ledger.
[[File:The Kellys, the Glenrowan Quadrilles.jpg|thumb|left|A sketch by [[George Gordon McCrae]] shows the gang dancing with hostages.]]
By the afternoon of 27 June, the train still had not arrived, as the policemen in Sherritt's hut remained there until morning, for fear that the bushrangers were still outside.{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|pp=156–57}} The outlaws meanwhile had gathered all sixty-two hostages in the Glenrowan Inn. Amongst them were sympathisers planted by the gang to help control the situation. As the hours passed without sight of the train, the gang plied the hostages with drink and organised music, singing, dancing and games.<ref name=":6" /> One hostage later testified, "[Ned] did not treat us badly—not at all".<ref name="seal2">Seal, Graham (1996). ''The Outlaw Legend: A Cultural Tradition in Britain, America and Australia''. Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-55740-5}}, p. 159.</ref> However, Ned terrorised a young hostage by threatening to shoot him.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=44}}


Towards evening, Ned let 21 hostages he deemed trustworthy to leave, then captured Glenrowan's lone constable, Hugh Bracken, with the assistance of hostage [[Thomas Curnow]], a local schoolmaster who sought to gain the gang's trust in order to thwart their plans. Believing that Curnow was a sympathiser, Ned let him and his wife return home, but warned them to "go quietly to bed and not to dream too loud".<ref name=":7" />{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=158}}
[[Peter Carey (novelist)|Peter Carey]]'s [[novel]] ''[[True History of the Kelly Gang]]'' was published in 2000, and was awarded the 2001 [[Booker Prize]] and the [[Commonwealth Writers Prize]].


[[File:Thomas Curnow.jpg|thumb|upright|Hostage [[Thomas Curnow]] thwarted the gang's plans.]]
==Films and television==
News of Sherritt's death finally reached the outside world at midday 27 June, and at 9 pm, a police special train left Melbourne for Beechworth. In addition to its crew and four journalists, the train carried sub-Inspector O'Connor, his native police unit, wife and sister-in-law. They stopped at Benalla at 1:30 a.m. to take on Superintendent Hare and eight troopers, bringing the total contingent to 27. Hare ordered a pilot engine to travel ahead of them as a lookout. One hour later, as the pilot approached Glenrowan, Curnow signalled it to stop and alerted the driver of the danger.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 243–45.</ref>
''[[The Story of the Kelly Gang]]'' (1906) now recognised as the world's first feature-length film{{Fact|date=June 2008}} had a then-unprecedented running time of 70 minutes. One of the actual suits worn by the gang (probably Joe Byrne's) was borrowed from the [[Victorian Museum]] and worn in the film. Pieces of the film still exist.


Kelly had decided to free the hostages and was delivering them a final lecture on the police when the train pulled into Glenrowan. The outlaws donned their armour and prepared for a confrontation. Meanwhile, Bracken escaped to the railway station to explain the situation to the police, after which Hare led his troopers towards the hotel.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 245–49.</ref> It was just after 3 a.m.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=64}}
Harry Southwell wrote, directed and produced three films based on the Kelly Gang: ''[[The Kelly Gang]]'' (1920), ''[[When the Kellys Were Out]]'' (1923) and ''[[When the Kellys Rode]]'' (1934), as well as the unfinished, ''[[A Message to Kelly]]'' (1947).


The outlaws lined up in the shadow of the hotel's porch and, when the police appeared about 30 m away in the moonlight, opened fire. About 150 shots were exchanged in the first volley. Someone shouted that women and children were in the hotel, prompting a ceasefire. Hare was shot through the left wrist and, fainting from blood loss, returned to Benalla for treatment. Ned was wounded in the left hand, left arm and right foot. Byrne was shot in the calf. Two hostages were fatally wounded by police fire into the weatherboard building: thirteen-year-old John Jones and railway worker Martin Cherry.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 249–50.</ref> A third hostage, George Metcalf, was also fatally wounded, either by police fire or shot accidentally by Ned.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 250.</ref>{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|p=1}}{{Wide image|Glenrowan shootout.jpg|700px|The gang and police exchange gunfire. Drawing by [[Tom Carrington (illustrator)|Tom Carrington]], one of several journalists present during the battle.}}
''[[The Glenrowan Affair]]'' was produced by [[Rupert Kathner]] in 1951, featuring the exploits of Kelly and his "wild colonial boys" on their journey of treachery, violence, murder and terror, told from the perspective of an aging Dan Kelly. It starred the famous [[Carlton, Australia|Carlton]] footballer [[Bob Chitty]] as Ned Kelly. It was one of the last films to portray him with an Australian accent.


During the lull in gunfire, a number of hostages, mostly women and children, escaped the hotel.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 251–52.</ref>{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=234–35}} Kelly, bleeding heavily, retreated about 90 m into the bush behind the hotel, where police found his skull cap and rifle at around 3.30 a.m. Kelly was lying in the bush nearby.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|pp=34–35}}
In [[1967 in film|1967]], independent filmmaker Garry Shead directed and produced ''[[Stringybark Massacre]]'', an [[avant garde]] re-creation of the murder of the three police officers at [[Stringybark Creek]].


Police surrounded the hotel throughout the night, and the firing continued intermittently. At about 5:30 a.m., Byrne was fatally shot while drinking whiskey in the bar, his last words being a toast to the gang.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=36}}{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=161}} Over the next two hours, police reinforcements under Sergeant Steele and Superintendent Sadleir arrived from Wangaratta and Benalla, bringing the police contingent to about forty.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=37}}{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|pp=160, 163}}
The next major film of the Kelly story was ''[[Ned Kelly (1970)|Ned Kelly]]'' (1970), starring [[Rolling Stone]] [[Mick Jagger]] and directed by [[Tony Richardson]]. It was not a success and during its making it led to a protest by Australian [[Actors Equity]] over the importation of Jagger, with complaints from Kelly family descendants and others over the film being shot in [[New South Wales]], rather than in the Victoria locations where most of the events actually took place.


===Last stand and capture===
[[Ian Jones]] and [[Bronwyn Binns]] wrote a script for a four-part television mini-series, ''The Last Outlaw'' 1980, which they co-produced. The series premiered on the centenary of the day that Kelly was hanged. The film's detailed historical accuracy distinguished it from many other Kelly films.
[[File:A strange apparition Ned Kelly's last stand.jpg|thumb|left|"A strange apparition": when Kelly appeared out of the mist-shrouded bush, clad in armour, bewildered policemen took him to be a ghost, a [[bunyip]], and "[[Satan|Old Nick]] himself".]]
Seriously wounded, Kelly lay in the bush for most of the night.{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=35–38}} At dawn (about 7 a.m.), clad in armour and armed with three handguns, he rose out of the bush and attacked the police from their rear. Police returned fire as Kelly moved from tree to tree towards the hotel, at times staggering from his injuries, the weight of his armour and the impact of bullets on the plate iron, which he later described as "like blows from a man's fist". Due to these factors, Kelly had difficulty aiming, firing and reloading his guns.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 259–62, 382.</ref>


[[File:Ned Kelly capture.jpg|thumb|Sergeant Steele and railway guard Dowsett capture Kelly.]]
[[Yahoo Serious]] wrote, directed and starred in the [[1993 in film|1993]] satire film ''[[Reckless Kelly]]'' as a descendant of Ned Kelly.
Eyewitnesses struggled to identify the figure moving in the dim misty light and, astonished as it withstood bullets, variously called it a ghost, a [[bunyip]], and the devil.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=412–13}} Journalist [[Tom Carrington (illustrator)|Tom Carrington]] wrote:{{sfn|Kieza|2017|p=414}}
{{blockquote|With the steam rising from the ground, it looked for all the world like the [[ghost (Hamlet)|ghost of Hamlet's father]] with no head, only a very long thick neck ... It was the most extraordinary sight I ever saw or read of in my life, and I felt fairly spellbound with wonder, and I could not stir or speak.}}


The gun battle with Kelly lasted around 15 minutes with Dan and Hart providing covering fire from the hotel.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|p=137}} It ended when Steele brought down Ned with two shotgun blasts to his unprotected legs and thighs. Ned was disarmed and divested of his armour by the police while Dan and Hart continued firing on them. Dan was wounded by return fire, and Ned was carried to the railway station, where a doctor attended to him.{{Sfn|Kieza|2017|p=414–18}} He was later found to have twenty-eight wounds, including serious gunshot wounds to his left elbow and right foot, several flesh wounds caused by gunshots, and cuts and abrasions from bullets striking his armour,<ref>Jones (1995). p. 383.</ref>{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|pp=25–26}} which showed a total of 18 bullet marks, including five in the helmet.{{sfn|Cormick|2014|p=150}}
In [[2003 in film|2003]], ''[[Ned Kelly (2003 movie)|Ned Kelly]]'', a $30 million budget movie about Kelly's life was released. Directed by [[Gregor Jordan]], and written by John M. McDonagh, it starred [[Heath Ledger]] as Kelly, along with [[Orlando Bloom]], [[Geoffrey Rush]], and [[Naomi Watts]]. Based on [[Robert Drewe]]'s book ''[[Our Sunshine]]'', the film covers the period from Kelly's arrest for horse theft as a teenager to the gang's armour-clad battle at Glenrowan. It attempts to portray the events from the perspectives of both Kelly and of the authorities responsible for his capture and prosecution. It was not a success; one review dismissed it as fiction.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsweekly.com.au/articles/2003apr19_ned.html|title=FILM REVIEW: Ned Kelly|work=News Weekly}}</ref>


[[File:ned kelly armour library.JPG|thumb|upright|Kelly's armour on display at [[State Library Victoria]]. The helmet, breastplate, backplate and shoulder plates show 18 bullet marks. Also on display are Kelly's [[Snider Enfield]] rifle and one of his boots.]]
That same year ([[2003 in film|2003]]) a low budget satire movie called [[Ned (movie)|''Ned'']] was released. Written, directed and starring [[Abe Forsythe]], it depicted the Kelly gang wearing fake beards and tin buckets on their heads.
In the meantime, the siege continued. Around 10 a.m., a ceasefire was called and the remaining thirty hostages left the hotel. They were ordered to lie down as police checked for any outlaws among them. Two of the hostages were arrested for being known Kelly sympathisers.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 265.</ref>


===Fire and aftermath===
In 2008 the [[DC Comics]] comic arc [[Batman RIP]] introduced a [[Batman]] villain named Swagman who appears identical to Ned Kelly in his armour.
[[File:JonesHotel.jpeg|left|thumb|Ruins of Jones's Hotel after the fire]]
[[File:Group_at_the_Kelly_Tree.jpg|thumb|left|Police and Aboriginal trackers pose in front of the "Kelly Tree", the fallen [[Eucalyptus|gum tree]] where Kelly was captured]]
By the afternoon of 28 June, some 600 spectators had gathered at Glenrowan, and Dan and Hart had ceased shooting. Forbidding his men from storming the hotel, Sadleir ordered a cannon from Melbourne to blast out the outlaws, then decided to burn them out instead. At 2.50 p.m, Senior Constable Charles Johnson, under cover of police fire, set the hotel alight.{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=162}}


Passing through the area, Catholic priest [[Matthew Gibney]] halted his travels to administer the [[last rites]] to Ned, then entered the burning hotel in an attempt to rescue anyone inside. He found the bodies of Byrne, Dan and Hart. The causes of Dan and Hart's deaths remain a mystery.{{sfn|McMenomy|1984|p=163}} Police retrieved Byrne's body and rescued the mortally wounded Martin Cherry. After the fire died out at 4 p.m., the police recovered the badly burnt bodies of Dan and Hart.{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987|pp=162–63}}
== '''Bush poems and verse''' ==
Many poems and ditties emerged during the Kelly era (1878-80) relating their exploits. Some were later put to music. ''Stringybark Creek'' (below) was often sung during the Outbreak. Offenders caught chanting or singing this piece were fined (£2) $4 or (£5) $10, in default one or two months.<ref> Max Brown, ''Australian Son'', p. 81.</ref>


Others wounded during the shootout were hostages Michael Reardon and his baby sister Bridget (who was grazed by a bullet),{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|p=23}}{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=134, 138}} and Jimmy, an Aboriginal trooper.{{Sfn|Shaw|2012|p=}} Jones' sister Jane received a head wound from a stray bullet, and two years later died from a lung infection that her mother believed was hastened by the injury.{{sfn|Kelson|McQuilton|2001|p=147}}
::::'''Stringybark Creek'''
:::A sergeant and three constables
:::Set out from Mansfield town
:::Near the end of last October
:::For to hunt the Kellys down;
:::So they travelled to the Wombat,
:::And thought it quite a lark,
:::And they camped upon the borders of
:::A creek called Stringybark.


Following the siege, Byrne's body was strung up in Benalla and photographed, with casts taken of his head and limbs for a [[wax museum|waxwork]], later exhibited in Melbourne.<ref>{{cite book |last=Gilmour |first=Joanna |author-link= |date=2015 |title=Sideshow Alley: Infamy, the Macabre & the Portrait |url= |location= |publisher=National Portrait Gallery |pages=110, 119, 132 |isbn= 9780975103067}}</ref> Sympathisers asked for his body, but the police arranged a hasty inquiry and burial in an unmarked grave in Benalla Cemetery. Dan and Hart's charred remains were buried by their families in unmarked graves in Greta Cemetery.<ref>Jones (1995). pp. 274, 280, 282.</ref>
:::They had grub and ammunition there
:::To last them many a week.
:::Next morning two of them rode out,
:::All to explore the creek.
:::Leaving McIntyre behind them at
:::The camp to cook the grub,
:::And Lonigan to sweep the floor
:::And boss the washing tub. <ref> Max Brown, ''Australian Son'', pp. 80-81.</ref>


Kelly was transported to Benalla, where doctors determined that his injuries were non-fatal. He recuperated at [[Old Melbourne Gaol|Melbourne Gaol]] hospital ahead of his trial at the [[Supreme Court of Victoria|Supreme Court]]. His preliminary hearing began at Beechworth Court in August 1880, but was transferred to the Central Criminal Court in Melbourne. Despite claims that this was due to fears that a jury from "Kelly Country" would be unwilling to convict him, the primary reason was to avoid threats against jurors from Kelly sympathisers.{{Sfn|Castles|2005|pp=141, 148, 154–166}}
==Music==
===Songs===
In 1971, US country singer [[Johnny Cash]] wrote and recorded the song "Ned Kelly" for his album ''The Man in Black''.


==Trial and execution==
Other songs about Ned Kelly include those by [[Paul Kelly (musician)|Paul Kelly]] ("Our Sunshine" (1999)), [[Slim Dusty]] ("Game as Ned Kelly" and "Ned Kelly Isn't Dead"), [[Ashley Davies]] ("Ned Kelly" (2001)), [[Waylon Jennings]] ("Ned Kelly" (1970)), [[Redgum]] ("Poor Ned" (1978)), [[Midnight Oil]] ("If Ned Kelly Was King" (1983)), [[The Whitlams]] ("Kate Kelly" (2002)), and [[Trevor Lucas]] ("Ballad of Ned Kelly", performed by [[Fotheringay]] on their eponymous album). He was also referred to in the [[Midnight Oil]] song "Mountains of Burma" (1990) ("The heart of Kelly's country cleared").
[[File:Ned Kelly in court.jpg|thumb|left|Kelly in the dock]]
Kelly's trial began on 19 October 1880 in Melbourne before Sir [[Redmond Barry]], the judge who had sentenced his mother over the Fitzpatrick incident.{{sfn|Cormick|2014|p=}} Charles Smyth and Arthur Chomley appeared for the Crown, and the novice barrister Henry Bindon for the prisoner with [[David Gaunson]] serving as counsel.{{Sfn|Castles|2005|p=180}} Kelly was charged with the murder of constables Lonigan and Scanlan. The trial was adjourned to 28 October and the prosecution chose to proceed only with Lonigan's murder, for which Kelly was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging.{{Sfn|Castles|2005|pp=179, 183, 185}} After handing down the sentence, Barry concluded with the customary words, "May God have mercy on your soul", to which Kelly replied, "I will go a little further than that, and say I will see you there where I go".{{Sfn|Castles|2005|pp=191–94}} Barry was to die of natural causes twelve days after Kelly's execution.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ryan |first=Peter |date=1969 |title=Barry, Sir Redmond (1813–1880) |url=https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/barry-sir-redmond-2946 |access-date=13 May 2022 |website=Australian Dictionary of Biography}}</ref>


On 3 November, the [[Cabinet of Victoria|Executive Council of Victoria]] announced that Kelly was to be hanged on 11 November, at the Melbourne Gaol.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|p=460}} In response, thousands turned out at protests in Melbourne demanding a reprieve for Kelly, and a failed petition for clemency attracted over 32,000 signatures.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=461–63}} The press was uniformly scathing: one journalist called the protests "inflammatory, seditious and plainly useless";{{sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=}} another, having noted the number of protesters, warned that Victoria was trending towards "a [[socialism|socialistic]] revolt of class against class".<ref>[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/900915 "Friday, November 12, 1880"]. ''[[The Courier-Mail|The Brisbane Courier]]'' (Brisbane). 12 November 1880. p. 2. Retrieved 12 April 2021.</ref> Police reinforcements were mobilised to guard the gaol and other government buildings in Melbourne in case of a mob attack.{{sfn|McQuilton|1987|p=}}
The Australian band "The Kelly Gang" consisted of Jack Nolan, Scott Aplin, [[Richard Grossman (musician)|Rick Grossman]] (bassist for [[Hoodoo Gurus]]) and [[Rob Hirst]] (drummer for [[Midnight Oil]]) and recorded one album ''Looking for the Sun'' (2004)<ref name="OzRockDbGross">{{cite web |url=http://hem.passagen.se/honga/database/g/grossmanrick.html |title=Australian Rock Database entry on Rick Grossman |publisher=Magnus Holmgren |accessdate=2008-01-25 }}</ref> which has one of [[Sydney Nolan|Sydney Nolan's]] iconic "Ned Kelly" series as its album cover.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.amo.org.au/artist.asp?id=3734 |title=Australian Music Online entry on The Kelly Gang |last=Piggot |first=Stacey |accessdate=2008-01-24 }}</ref>


[[File:Ned Kelly Scaffold.jpg|thumb|upright|Kelly goes to the gallows]]
"Shelter for my Soul" was written and recorded by [[Powderfinger]]'s [[Bernard Fanning]] for the 2003 film ''Ned Kelly''. It was written from Kelly's perspective on [[death row]] and played over the movie's closing credits.
The day before his execution, Kelly had his photographic portrait taken as a keepsake for his family, and he was granted farewell meetings with relatives. One newspaper reported that his mother's last words to him were, "Mind you die like a Kelly", but Jones and Castles have questioned this.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 320.</ref>{{Sfn|Castles|2005|pp=213–14}}


The following morning at 9 am, Kelly was led to the gallows. When passing the gaol's garden he commented on the beauty of the flowers.<ref>Jones (1995). p. 321.</ref> He was hanged at 10 am. Accounts differ about Kelly's [[last words]]. Some witnesses reported that it was, "Such is life", while others recorded that this was his response when told of the intended hour of his execution, earlier that day.{{sfn|Cormick|2014|p=8}} ''[[The Argus (Melbourne)|The Argus]]'' wrote that Kelly's last words were, "Ah, well, I suppose it has come to this", as the rope was placed round his neck.<ref name="THE EXECUTION OF EDWARD KELLY">{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article5982177 |title=The Execution of Edward Kelly |newspaper=[[The Argus (Melbourne)|The Argus]] |location=Melbourne |date=12 November 1880 |access-date=3 February 2012 |page=6 |via=National Library of Australia |archive-date=10 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031548/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/5982177 |url-status=live }}</ref> According to another account, Kelly intended to make a speech, but "made no audible sound".{{sfn|Cormick|2014|p=8}} A policeman present later said that immediately before the cap was drawn over Kelly's head, he glanced up at the skylight and muttered something indiscernible.{{Sfn|Dawson|2016|pp=41, 47}}
"888" was written and recorded by Melbourne Celt/Punk band The Currency. It has a reference to the Old Melbourne Gaol. And it's lyrics say "It says here, Ned's parting words, it says here, such is life".


==Royal Commission and aftermath==
==Notes==
[[File:Royal Commission Kelly Outbreak.jpg|thumb|The royal commission into police conduct during the Kelly outbreak resulted in many force members being censured, reprimanded, demoted, suspended or dismissed]]
{{reflist}}
In March 1881, the Victorian government approved a [[royal commission]] into the conduct of the Victorian police during the Kelly outbreak.{{sfn|Kieza|2017|p=479}} Over the next six months, the commission, chaired by [[Francis Longmore]], held sixty-six meetings, examined sixty-two witnesses and visited towns throughout "Kelly Country". While its report found that the police had acted properly in relation to the criminality of the Kellys, it exposed widespread corruption and ended a number of police careers, including that of Chief Commissioner Standish.<ref>''[http://www.ibac.vic.gov.au/docs/default-source/reports/opi-report/past-patterns-future-directions---feb-2007.pdf?sfvrsn=8 Past Patterns, Future Directions: Victoria Police and the Problems of Corruption and Serious Misconduct] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180419074108/http://www.ibac.vic.gov.au/docs/default-source/reports/opi-report/past-patterns-future-directions---feb-2007.pdf?sfvrsn=8 |date=19 April 2018 }}'' (2007). [[Office of Police Integrity]]. {{ISBN|978-0-9757991-0-9}}. pp. 19–20.</ref> Numerous other officers, including senior staff, were reprimanded, [[demotion|demoted]] or suspended. It concluded with a list of thirty-six recommendations for reform.{{sfn|Cormick|2014|p=}} Kelly hoped that his death would lead to an investigation into police conduct, and although the report did not exonerate him or his gang, its findings were said to strip the authorities "of what scanty rags of reputation the Kellys had left them."{{sfn|Kieza|2017|p=479}}


The £8,000 reward money was divided among various claimants with £6,000 going to members of the Victorian police, Superintendent Hare receiving the lion's share of £800. After Curnow complained about his payout of £550, it was increased to £1,000. Seven Aboriginal trackers were each awarded £50, but the Victorian and Queensland governments kept the money under the pretext that "It would not be desirable to place any considerable sum of money in the hands of persons unable to use it."{{sfn|Kieza|2017|pp=478–79}}
==References==
* Sadleir, J., ''Recollections of a Victorian Police Officer'', George Robertson & Co., (Melbourne), 1913. (Facsimile reprint, Penguin Books, 1973, ISBN 0-140-70037-4)
*{{Cite book |last=O'Brien |first=Antony |title=Bye-Bye Dolly Gray |publisher=Artillery Publishing |location=Hartwell |year=2006}}(historical fiction with lots of Kelly oral and histories in a twisting & turning plot)
*{{Cite book |last=Brown |first=Max |title=Australian Son |publisher=Georgian House |location=Melbourne |year=1948}} (plus reprints)(a sound pro-Kelly history of the events)
* 'Cameron Letter', 14 December 1878, in Meredith, J. & Scott, B. ''Ned Kelly After a Century of Acrimony'', Lansdowne, Sydney, 1980, pp. 63-66. (Ned Kelly's own words)
*{{Cite book |last=Gibb |first=D. M. |title=National Identity and Counsciousness: Commentary and Documents |publisher=Nelson |location=Melbourne |year=1982}} (Chapter 1. Ned Kelly's view of his world and others)
*{{Cite book |last=Hare |first=F.A. |title=The Last of the Bushrangers |location=London |year=1892}} (a police perspective of the 'criminal class')
*{{Cite book |last=Hobsbawm |first=E.J. |title=Bandits |publisher=Pelican |location=Ringwood |year=1972}} (wide ranging world wide history on social bandits in which he argues that Ned Kelly can be better understood)
*{{Cite book |last=Jones |first=Ian |title=Ned Kelly : A Short Life |publisher=Lothian |location=Port Melbourne |year=1995}} (a comprehensive and well researched piece of history and events)
*{{Cite book |last=Kenneally |first=J.J. |title=Inner History of the Kelly Gang |year=1929}} (plus many reprints) (the first pro-Kelly piece of literature)
*{{Cite book |editor=McDermott, Alex |title=The Jerilderie Letter |publisher=Text Publishing |location=Melbourne |year=2001}} (an insight into the famous Jerilderie Letter)
*{{Cite book |last=McMenomy |first=Keith |title=Ned Kelly: The Authentic Illustrated Story |publisher=Curry O'Neill Ross |location=South Yarra |year=1984}} (lots of photos from the era, photos of records etc. a sound research piece)
*McQuilton, John, ''The Kelly Outbreak 1788-1880; The geographical dimension of social banditry'', 1979. (among the most important academic works, which expands on Hobsbawm; links the unresolved land problems to the Kelly Outbreak)
*{{Cite book |last=Penzig |first=Edgar, F. |title=Bushrangers - Heroes or Villains |publisher=Tranter |location=Katoomba |year=1988}} ( a pro-police/establishment piece)
*{{Cite book |author=Deakin University |title=The Kelly Outbreak Reader |publisher=Deakin University |location=Geelong |year=1995}} (is now hard to locate but it contains a wide selection of research documents and commentary for university level history students)
*{{Cite book |last=Turnbull |first=C |title=Ned Kelly: Being his own story of his life and crimes |publisher=Hawthorn Press |location=Melbourne |year=1942}} ( very hard to locate, but Ned Kelly become a national figure)
*{{Cite book |last=Wilcox |first=Craig |title=Australia's Boer War: The War in South Africa 1899-1902 |publisher=Oxford |location=South Melbourne |year=2005}} (has a cartoon of 1900 depicting Ned Kelly and the gang capturing The Boer President Paul Kruger)
*O'Brien, Phil (2002) "101 Adventures that got me Absolutely Nowhere" Vol 2 (p.92 A resemblance to Ned Kelly's makeshift body armour of a child with a pot overturned on his head)
*Keith Dunstan, ''Saint Ned'', (1980), chronicles lesser known aspects of Ned Kelly's life, whilst discussing the rise of the 'Kellyana' industry.


There was widespread speculation that Kelly's execution would lead to further outbreaks of violence in north-eastern Victoria.<ref>Jones, Ian (1995). ''Ned Kelly, a short life''. Port Melbourne: Lothian Books. pp. 325, 332–33. {{ISBN|0-85091-631-3}}.</ref> Jones and Dawson argue that changes in policing methods reduced this threat. The police no longer pursued a policy of dispersing Kelly sympathisers by denying them land in the district,<ref>Jones, Ian (1995). pp. 326–27</ref>{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=48}} and assured them that they would be treated fairly if they kept the peace. During the royal commission there were threats of violence and intimidation against people who had assisted the police.<ref>Jones, Ian (1995). pp. 331–32</ref>{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|pp=49–50}} Nevertheless, the police reported a reduction in stock theft and crime in general in north-eastern Victoria following Kelly's death.{{Sfn|Macfarlane|2012|p=207}}
==Further reading==
===Fiction===
*{{Cite book |last=Carey |first=Peter |title=Ned Kelly, True History of the Kelly Gang |year=2000}}
* O'Brien, Antony (2006) ''Bye-Bye Dolly Gray'', Artillery Publishing, Hartwell. (Though this work is set 20 years after the Ned's death it contains insights into the Kelly story)
*Upfield, Arthur. (1960) ''Bony and the Kelly Gang'',Pan Books, London. (Upfield's famous fictional character, Inspector Boney, clashes with a new Kelly Gang)


Kelly's mother was released from prison in February 1881. Jones states that she met with Greta police constable Robert Graham soon after, and they reached an understanding which helped reduce tension in the community.<ref>Jones, Ian (1995). pp. 333–34</ref>
===Unpublished Kelly theses===

*Morrissey, Douglas. "Selectors, Squatters and Stock Thieves: A Social History of the Kelly Country", PhD, La Trobe (in Borchardt Library, La Trobe University, Victoria)
==Remains and graves==
*O'Brien, Antony. "Awaiting Ned Kelly: Rural Malaise in Northestern Victoria 1872-73", B.A. (Hons), Deakin University, 1999 (sighted in Burke Museum, Beechworth) (See. p. 45, re Royal Commission questions)
[[File:National Portrait Gallery, Canberra, Australia - Joy of Museums - Ned Kelly - Death Mask.jpg|thumb|upright|Kelly's [[death mask]] on display in the [[National Portrait Gallery (Australia)|National Portrait Gallery]]]]
Kelly was buried at the Old Melbourne Gaol in what was known as the "old men's yard".<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article71238643 |title=DEEMING'S GEAVE. |newspaper=[[Australian Town and Country Journal|Australian Town and Country Journal (NSW : 1870–1907)]] |location=NSW |date=28 May 1892 |access-date=8 October 2012 |page=14 |via=National Library of Australia |archive-date=10 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031603/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/71238643 |url-status=live }}</ref> In May 1881, reports emerged that Kelly's body had been illegally dissected by medical students for study.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article3150874 |title=Our Melbourne Letter |newspaper=[[The Northern Territory Times|Northern Territory Times and Gazette (Darwin, NT : 1873–1927)]] |location=Darwin, NT |date=14 May 1881 |access-date=16 September 2013 |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia |archive-date=10 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031609/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/3150874 |url-status=live }}</ref> Public outrage at the rumour raised concerns of civil unrest, leading the gaol's governor to deny that it had occurred.<ref name="Head">[http://www.sbs.com.au/documentary/program/nedshead Ned's Head] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110926193647/http://www.sbs.com.au/documentary/program/nedshead|date=26 September 2011}} [[SBS One]] Documentary: The scientific investigation and DNA testing of Kelly's skeletal remains 4 September 2011</ref>

In 1929, the Old Melbourne Gaol was closed for demolition works, during which the remains of felons were uncovered. Before being reinterred in a mass grave at Pentridge Prison, skeletal parts were looted by workers and spectators from a number of graves, including one marked with the initials "E.K.",<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article21366334 |title=Ned Kelly's Grave|newspaper=[[The Brisbane Courier]] |date=14 January 1929 |access-date=14 August 2012 |page=14 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref> situated apart from the rest on the opposite side of the yard.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article66218475 |title=DISHONORED DEAD. |newspaper=Oakleigh Leader |location=North Brighton, Vic. |date=22 December 1894 |access-date=9 September 2014 |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref> The skull from this grave was handed over to the police and stored at the Victorian Penal Department, then sent to the [[Australian Institute of Anatomy]], [[Canberra]] in 1934. It went missing but was later found in a safe.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article65505208 |title=Ned's Skull is Now Locked Up. |newspaper=[[Benalla Ensign]] |location=Vic. |date=8 January 1953 |access-date=8 October 2012 |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia |archive-date=10 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031534/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/65505208 |url-status=live }}</ref> From 1972 the skull was exhibited at the Old Melbourne Gaol until it was stolen on 12 December 1978.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article110928966 |title=Ned Kelly's skull stolen. |newspaper=[[The Canberra Times]] |date=13 December 1978 |access-date=1 September 2014 |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia |archive-date=10 July 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200710031603/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/110928966 |url-status=live }}</ref>

On 9 March 2008, archaeologists announced they believed they had found Kelly's burial site at Pentridge Prison, among the remains of 32 executed felons.<ref>{{cite news |agency=Reuters <!-- |author-link=Jonathan Standing --> |first=Jonathan |last=Standing |location=[[Sydney]] |date=9 March 2008 |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSSYD14597520080309 |title=Grave of Australian outlaw Ned Kelly said found |access-date=11 April 2015 |archive-date=9 January 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090109224747/http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSSYD14597520080309 |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2009, the skull that was stolen in 1978 was handed over for forensic testing along with the Pentridge remains. After conducting several tests in 2010–11, the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine concluded the skull was not Kelly's.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vifm.org/education-and-research/the-ned-kelly-project/vifm-media-release/|title=VIFM Media Release – Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine|access-date=8 September 2014|archive-date=27 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131227000228/http://www.vifm.org/education-and-research/the-ned-kelly-project/vifm-media-release/|url-status=live}}</ref> Kelly's skeleton was identified among the Pentridge remains through DNA analysis and comparisons to bullet wounds he received at Glenrowan. Most of the skull is missing,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/06/science/06kelly.html |title=A Hero's Legend and a Stolen Skull Rustle Up a DNA Drama |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=31 August 2011 |author-link=Christine Kenneally |first=Christine |last=Kenneally |access-date=8 September 2011 |archive-date=7 September 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110907070007/http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/06/science/06kelly.html |url-status=live }}</ref> with what remains of the [[occipital bone]] showing cuts consistent with dissection.<ref name="Head"/><ref name=WSJ2Sep2011>{{cite news |work=[[The Wall Street Journal]] |page=A6 |date=2 September 2011 |title=Scientists Nab an Australian Outlaw <!-- |author-link=Enda Curran --> |first=Enda |last=Curran |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424053111904716604576544123240961458?mod=googlenews_wsj |access-date=8 August 2017 |archive-date=31 August 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170831131934/https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424053111904716604576544123240961458?mod=googlenews_wsj |url-status=live }} (Article on the web is slightly different from the print edition.)</ref>

In 2012, the Victorian government approved the handover of Kelly's bones to his family, who made plans for his final burial and also appealed for the return of his skull.<ref>''Time'' magazine [https://newsfeed.time.com/2012/08/06/outlaw-ned-kellys-remains-given-to-family-132-years-after-his-death/ "Outlaw Ned Kelly's Remains Given to Family – 132 Years After His Death", 6 August 2012] Retrieved on 13 August 2012.</ref> On 20 January 2013, following a Requiem Mass at St Patrick's Catholic Church, Wangaratta, Kelly's final wish was granted as his remains were buried in consecrated ground at Greta Cemetery, near his mother's unmarked grave. It was encased in concrete to prevent looting.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/ned-kelly-laid-to-rest-20130120-2d0ws.html|title=Ned Kelly laid to rest|work=The Age|date=20 January 2013|access-date=20 January 2013|archive-date=23 January 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130123074952/http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/ned-kelly-laid-to-rest-20130120-2d0ws.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

Kelly's original headstone, along with those of other felons executed at the Old Melbourne Gaol, was repurposed during the [[Great Depression]] to construct bluestone walls protecting Melbourne beaches from erosion.<ref>[http://www.bayside.vic.gov.au/walksandtrails_historytrail_bluestoneseawall.htm Bluestone Seawall (stories in the stones)] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121023180428/http://www.bayside.vic.gov.au/walksandtrails_historytrail_bluestoneseawall.htm |date=23 October 2012 }} [[City of Bayside|Bayside City council]]</ref>

==Legacy==
===Kelly myth===
[[File:Ned Kelly letterbox.jpg|thumb|A homemade letterbox in the style of Ned Kelly's armour, [[Bullio, New South Wales|Bullio]], [[Southern Highlands (New South Wales)|Southern Highlands]], New South Wales]]
The myth surrounding Kelly pervades Australian culture, and he is one of Australia's most recognised national symbols. Academic and folklorist Graham Seal writes:<ref name=":0">Seal, Graham (2011). ''Outlaw Heroes in Myth and History''. Anthem Press, {{ISBN|978-0-85728-792-2}}. pp. 99–100.</ref>

{{blockquote|Ned Kelly has progressed from outlaw to national hero in a century, and to international icon in a further 20 years. The still-enigmatic, slightly saturnine and ever-ambivalent bushranger is the undisputed, if not universally admired, national symbol of Australia.}}

Seal argues that Kelly's story taps into the [[Robin Hood]] tradition of the outlaw hero and the myth of the [[The bush|Australian bush]] as a place of freedom from oppressive authority. For many admirers of Kelly, he embodies characteristics thought to be typically Australian such as defying authority, siding with the underdog and fighting bravely for one's beliefs.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Seal|first=Graham|title=Ned Kelly in Popular Tradition|publisher=Hyland House|year=1980|isbn=0-908090-32-3|location=Melbourne|pages=16, 28}}</ref> This view was already evident in the aftermath of his death. Reviewing an 1881 performance of the Kelly gang play ''[[Ostracised (play)|Ostracised]]'', staged at Melbourne's [[Princess Theatre (Melbourne)|Princess Theatre]], ''[[The Australasian]]'' wrote:<ref>Review dated 13 August 1881, in Stephen Torre, ed., ''The Macquarie Dictionary of Australian Quotations'', 1990, Plays and Playwrights, p. 307</ref>
{{blockquote|... judging from the way in which the applause was dealt out, it was pretty certain that the exploits of the outlaws excited admiration and prompted emulation. ... In short ''Ostracised'' will help to confirm the belief, in the young mind of Victoria, that the Kellys were martyrs and not sanguinary ruffians.}}

According to Ian Jones, after Kelly's death, "a Robin Hood-like figure survived: good-looking, brave, a fine horseman and bushman and a crack shot, devoted to his mother and sisters, a man who treated all women with courtesy, who stole from the rich to give to the poor, who dressed himself in his enemy's uniform to outwit him. Most of all a man who stood against the police persecutors of his family and was driven to outlawry when he defended his sister against a drunken constable. Such was Ned Kelly the myth".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Jones|first=Ian|title=Ned Kelly, a short life|publisher=Lothian Books|year=1995|isbn=0-85091-631-3|location=Port Melbourne|page=338}}</ref> Kelly sought to live up to the bushranger-hero myth. The gang's raids were partly public performances where they acted courteously to women, burned mortgage documents and entertained their hostages.<ref>Seal, Graham (2011). pp. 125–26.</ref>

By the time Kelly was outlawed, bushranging was an anachronism. Australia was highly urbanised, the telegraph and the railway were rapidly connecting the bush to the city, and Kelly was already an icon for a romanticised past.<ref name=":3">Seal, Graham (1980). pp. 16–17.</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite book|last=Hobsbawn|first=E. J.|title=Bandits|publisher=Weidenfeld and Nicolson|year=1969|location=London|pages=112–13}}</ref> Macintyre states that Kelly turning agricultural equipment into armour was an irresistible symbol of a passing era.<ref name=":8">{{Cite book|last=Mcintyre|first=Stuart|title=A Concise History of Australia|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2020|isbn=978-1-108-72848-5|edition=Fifth|location=Port Melbourne|pages=107–08}}</ref> For Seal, the failure of the gang to derail the train at Glenrowan was a symbol of the triumph of modern civilisation.<ref name=":3" /> The national image of Kelly, he writes, may bear "about the same resemblance" to the man as his armour does "to the plough mouldboards from which it was beaten". He concludes:<ref>Seal, Graham (1980). pp. 174–75.</ref>

{{blockquote|He is different things to different people{{Em dash}}a murderer, an Australian Robin Hood, a [[social banditry|social bandit]], a revolutionary leader, even a commercial commodity. But to most of us he is somehow essentially Australian.}}

===Cultural impact===
{{further|Cultural depictions of Ned Kelly}}
[[File:The Story of the Kelly Gang 1906.jpg|thumb|An actor playing Kelly in ''[[The Story of the Kelly Gang]]'' (1906), the world's first dramatic feature-length film]]
The siege at Glenrowan became a national and international media event, and reports of the armour sparked widespread fascination, cementing Kelly and his gang's lasting infamy. Songs, poems, popular entertainments, fiction, books, and newspaper and magazine articles about the Kelly gang proliferated in the decades that followed, and by 1943 Kelly was the subject of 42 major published works.<ref name=":1">Seal, Graham (1980). pp. 19, 130–64.</ref>

Within eight weeks of the Stringybark Creek killings, a play about the gang, ''[[Vultures of the Wombat Ranges]]'', was being staged in Melbourne. The farce ''[[Catching the Kellys]]'' debuted the following year. By 1900, Kelly gang plays were "appearing all over the continent in a remarkably successful exploitation of popular myth".<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |editor-last1= Fotheringham |editor-first1= Richard |editor-last2= Turner |editor-first2= Angela |date=2006 |title= Australian Plays for the Colonial Stage: 1839–1899 |url= |location= |publisher= University of Queensland Press |page= 553–59 |isbn= 9780702234880}}</ref> Later plays include [[Douglas Stewart (poet)|Douglas Stewart]]'s 1942 verse drama ''[[Ned Kelly (play)|Ned Kelly]]''.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=456}}

[[Robert Drewe]]'s novel ''[[Our Sunshine]]'' (1991) is a fictionalised account of the Glenrowan siege.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=134}} [[Peter Carey (novelist)|Peter Carey]] won the 2001 [[Booker Prize]] for his novel ''[[True History of the Kelly Gang]]'', written from Kelly's perspective and in emulation of his voice in the Jerilderie Letter.<ref>{{cite book |last=Snodgrass |first=Mary Ellen |author-link= |date=2010 |title=Peter Carey: A Literary Companion |url= |location= |publisher= McFarland, Inc., Publishers |page=9 |isbn= 9780786455720}}</ref>

The first ballads about the Kelly gang were published in 1879 and it quickly became a popular genre.<ref name=":1" /> In 1939 [[Tex Morton]] recorded a country and western-style ballad about Kelly, and singers including [[Slim Dusty]], [[Smoky Dawson]] and [[Buddy Williams (country musician)|Buddy Williams]] followed.<ref>Seal, Graham (1980). p. 151</ref> Non-Australian artists who have recorded songs about Kelly include [[Waylon Jennings]]<ref>{{Cite web|title=Ned Kelly (original score)|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/ned-kelly-original-score-mw0000865387|access-date=10 September 2021|publisher=AllMusic}}</ref> and [[Johnny Cash]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Johnny Cash, A Man in Black (1971)|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-man-in-black-mw0000885026|access-date=10 September 2021|publisher=AllMusic}}</ref>

Kelly has figured prominently in [[Cinema of Australia|Australian cinema]] since the 1906 release of ''[[The Story of the Kelly Gang]]'', the world's first dramatic feature-length film.<ref>Bertrand, Ina; D. Routt, William (2007). ''The Picture that Will Live Forever: The Story of the Kelly Gang''. Australian Teachers and Media. {{ISBN|978-1-876467-16-6}}, pp. 3–19.</ref> Among those who have portrayed him on screen are [[Australian rules football]] player [[Bob Chitty]] (''[[The Glenrowan Affair]]'', 1951), rock musician [[Mick Jagger]] (''[[Ned Kelly (1970 film)|Ned Kelly]]'', 1970), [[John Jarratt]] (''[[The Last Outlaw (miniseries)|The Last Outlaw]]'', 1980), [[Heath Ledger]] (''[[Ned Kelly (2003 film)|Ned Kelly]]'', 2003) and [[George MacKay (actor)|George MacKay]] (''[[True History of the Kelly Gang (film)|True History of the Kelly Gang]]'', 2019).<ref>Groves, Don (9 November 2017). [https://www.if.com.au/many-ned-kelly-movies-many/ "How many Ned Kelly movies are too many?"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180617043737/https://www.if.com.au/many-ned-kelly-movies-many/|date=17 June 2018}}, ''[[If Magazine]]''. Retrieved 17 June 2018.</ref> A comic film, ''[[Reckless Kelly]]'' (1993), drew on the Kelly legend.{{Sfn|Corfield|2003|p=260}}

In the visual arts, [[Sidney Nolan]]'s 1946–47 Kelly series is considered "one of the greatest sequences of Australian painting of the twentieth century".<ref>[http://artsearch.nga.gov.au/Detail.cfm?IRN=28926 Ned Kelly] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150602083432/http://artsearch.nga.gov.au/Detail.cfm?IRN=28926|date=2 June 2015}}, [[National Gallery of Australia]]. Retrieved 15 December 2014.</ref><ref>{{cite web|date=13 August 2018|title=Sidney Nolan's Ned Kelly – in pictures|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2018/aug/13/sidney-nolans-ned-kelly-in-pictures|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180812212851/https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2018/aug/13/sidney-nolans-ned-kelly-in-pictures|archive-date=12 August 2018|access-date=13 August 2018|newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref> His stylised depiction of Kelly's helmet has become an iconic Australian image. Hundreds of performers dressed as "Nolanesque Kellys" starred in the opening ceremony of the [[2000 Sydney Olympics]].{{Sfn|Innes|2008|p=247}}

The term "Kelly tourism" describes towns such as Glenrowan which sustain themselves economically "almost entirely through Ned's memory", while "Kellyana" refers to the collecting of Kelly memorabilia, merchandise, and other paraphernalia. The phrase "[[wikt:such is life|such is life]]", Kelly's probably apocryphal final words, has become "as much a part of the Kelly mythology as the famous armour".{{Sfn|Terry|2012|p=251}} "[[wikt:as game as Ned Kelly|As game as Ned Kelly]]" is an expression for bravery,<ref name="Barry 1974">{{cite encyclopedia | author=Barry, John V. | title=Kelly, Edward (Ned) (1855–1880) | chapter=Edward (Ned) Kelly (1855–1880) | encyclopedia=Australian Dictionary of Biography | volume=5 | publisher=Melbourne University Press | year=1974 | pages=6–8 | url=http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A050009b.htm | access-date=8 April 2007 | archive-date=21 March 2007 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070321122238/http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A050009b.htm | url-status=live }}</ref> and the term "[[Ned Kelly beard]]" is used to describe a trend in "[[hipster (contemporary subculture)|hipster]]" fashion.<ref>[http://ozwords.org/?p=6939 "Australian National Dictionary Centre's Word of the Year 2014"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141215085836/http://ozwords.org/?p=6939 |date=15 December 2014 }}, Ozwords. Retrieved 15 December 2014.</ref> The rural districts of north-eastern Victoria are collectively known as "Kelly Country".{{sfn|Kenneally|1929|p=15}}

===Controversy over political legacy===
[[File:Melbourne Punch Communism.png|thumb|upright|An 1879 political cartoon titled "Our Rulers", published in ''[[Melbourne Punch]]'', depicts Kelly, Premier [[Graham Berry]], and a personification of ''[[The Age]]'' dancing around the flag of [[communism]].]]
In ''[[Bandits (book)|Bandits]]'' (1969), [[Eric Hobsbawm]] argued that Kelly was a social bandit, a type of peasant outlaw and symbol of social rebellion with significant community support.<ref name=":4" /> Expanding on this thesis, McQuilton argued that the Kelly outbreak should be seen in the context of deteriorating economic conditions in rural Victoria in the 1870s and a conflict over land between selectors (mostly small farmers) and squatters (mostly wealthier pastoralists who had initially acquired their runs by "squatting" on [[Crown land]]).{{Sfn|McQuilton|1987}} Jones,{{Sfn|Jones|2010}} Molony{{Sfn|Molony|2001}} and others argue that Kelly was a political rebel with considerable support among selectors and labourers in north-eastern Victoria. Jones claims that Kelly intended to derail the train at Glenrowan to incite a rebellion of disaffected selectors and declare a "Republic of North-eastern Victoria".<ref>Jones, Ian (1995). pp. 213, 220–25.</ref>

Morrissey argues that McQuilton and Jones have exaggerated the degree of economic distress and support for Kelly among local selectors.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=13–18, 151–56, 181–87}} As for Kelly's alleged republican declaration or plan for a political rebellion, Dawson wrote: "there is no mention of any such document, plan or intention in any record of Kelly’s day, nor in the numerous interviews and memoirs of those connected with the gang, or its prisoners who listened to Kelly’s speeches while held up, nor in the work of early historians of the outbreak who knew the Kellys, their gang, their sympathisers, or the pursuing police."{{Sfn|Dawson|2018|p=1}} While Kelly frequently complained of oppression by the police and squatters, derided the Victorian government and the [[British monarchy]], and evoked historical Irish grievances against what he called "the tyrannism of the English yoke", his response was expressed in terms of a violent reckoning rather than a political program.<ref name="gelderweaver">Gelder, Ken; Weaver, Rachael (2017). ''Colonial Australian Fiction: Character Types, Social Formations and the Colonial Economy''. [[Sydney University Press]]. {{ISBN|978-1-74332-461-5}}, pp. 57–58.</ref>{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=152–58}}

Seal states that Kelly advocated for "a basic form of [[redistribution of income and wealth|wealth redistribution]]".<ref name=":2">Seal, Graham (2011) pp. 110–11.</ref> In the Jerilderie Letter, the outlaw calls on squatters to share resources with the poor of their district, and orders anyone opposed to him to "sell out" of Victoria and donate a portion of the profits to the Widows and Orphans Fund. Morrissey sees the [[social justice]] element of the letter as a traditional call for the rich to help the poor with an additional argument that it is in their own interest to do so.{{Sfn|Morrissey|2015|pp=13–18, 151–56, 181–87}}


==See also==
==See also==
* [[List of people on the postage stamps of Ireland]]
*[[Dan Kelly (bushranger)]]
* [[Steph Ryan]], the former member for [[Electoral district of Euroa|Euroa]], is a distant relative of Ned Kelly.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Gray|first1=Darren|date=16 May 2014|title=Such is life for candidate|url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/such-is-life-for-candidate-20140516-38frd.html|access-date=27 May 2021|website=The Age}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Gray|first1=Darren|title=New Nationals MP Stephanie Ryan breaks the country party's mould|url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/new-nationals-mp-stephanie-ryan-breaks-the-country-partys-mould-20141203-11z7qj.html|access-date=10 September 2021|website=The Age|date=3 December 2014 }}</ref>
*[[Glenrowan]]

*[[The Jerilderie Letter]]
==Notes==
*[[List of people on stamps of Ireland]]
{{notelist|notes=
{{efn|name=dob|The date of Kelly's birth is not known, and there is no record of his [[baptism]]. Kelly himself thought he was 28 years old when he was hanged.<ref>{{Cite news|author=<!--Staff writer(s)/no by-line.--> |title=Arrival of Ned Kelly in Melbourne.|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/196695949|work=Trove|date=3 July 1880|access-date=21 August 2021|quote=Look across there to the left. Do you see a little hill there?" Walsh replied that he did, and the outlaw continued, "That is where I was born, about twenty-eight years ago."}}</ref> Evidence for a December 1854 birth is from a 1963 interview with family descendants Paddy and Charles Griffiths quoting Ned's brother Jim Kelly who said it was a family tradition that Ned's birth was "at the time of the [[Eureka Stockade]]", which took place on 3 December 1854.<ref name="Jones2010p346">{{harvnb|Jones|2010|p=346}}</ref> In July 1870, Ellen Kelly, Ned's mother, recorded Ned's age as 15½, which could easily refer to a December 1854 birth.<ref name="Jones2010p346"/> There is also a remark made by G. Wilson Brown, school inspector, in his notebook on 30 March 1865, where he noted that Ned Kelly was 10 years and 3 months old.<ref name="Jones2010p346"/> The only evidence given in support for Ned Kelly's birth being in June 1855 is from the death certificate of his father, John Kelly, who died on 27 December 1866. Ned Kelly's age is written as 11½.}}
}}

==References==
{{reflist}}

==Bibliography==
'''Non-fiction'''
{{Refbegin}}
* {{cite book|last1=Baron|first1=Angeline|year=2004|last2=White|first2=David|title=Blood in the Dust: Inside the Minds of Ned Kelly and Joe Byrne|publisher=Network Creative Services Pty Ltd|isbn=978-0-9580162-5-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Basu|first=Laura|year=2012|title=Ned Kelly as Memory Dispositif: Media, Time, Power, and the Development of Australian Identities|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|isbn=978-3-11-028879-7}}
* {{cite book|last=Brown|first=Max|author-link=Max Brown (novelist)|year=2005|title=Australian Son: The Story of Ned Kelly|publisher=Network Creative Services Pty Ltd|isbn=978-0-9580162-6-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Castles|first=Alex C.|author-link=Alex Castles|year=2005|title=Ned Kelly's Last Days: Setting the Record Straight on the Death of an Outlaw|url=https://archive.org/details/nedkellyslastday0000cast|url-access=registration|publisher=Allen & Unwin|isbn=978-1-74115-914-1}}
* {{Cite book|last=Corfield|first=Justin|title=The Ned Kelly Encyclopaedia|publisher=Lothian Books|year=2003|isbn=0-7344-0596-0}}
* {{cite book|last=Cormick|first=Craig|author-link=Craig Cormick|year=2014|title=Ned Kelly: Under the Microscope|publisher=CSIRO Publishing|isbn=978-1-4863-0178-2}}
* {{cite journal |last=Dawson |first=Stuart |date=2016 |title=Ned Kelly's last words: 'Ah, well, I suppose' |url=http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/eras/files/2016/08/Eras181_Dawson.pdf |journal=Eras |volume=18 |issue=1 |pages=38–50 |doi= |access-date=}}
* {{cite book|last=Dawson|first=Stuart|year=2018|title=Ned Kelly and the Myth of a Republic of North-Eastern Victoria|isbn=978-1-64316-500-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Dunstan|first=Keith|author-link=Keith Dunstan|year=1980|title=Saint Ned: The Story of the Near Sanctification of an Australian Outlaw|publisher=Methuen Australia|isbn=978-0-454-00198-3}}
* {{cite book|last=Farwell|first=George|author-link=George Farwell|year=1970|title=Ned Kelly: The Life and Adventures of Australia's Notorious Bushranger|publisher=Cheshire|isbn=978-0-7015-1319-1}}
* {{cite book|last=FitzSimons|first=Peter|author-link=Peter FitzSimons|year=2013|title=Ned Kelly|publisher=Random House Australia|isbn=978-1-74275-890-9}}
* {{cite book|last=Innes|first=Lyn|author-link=Lyn Innes|year=2008|title=Ned Kelly: Icon of Modern Culture|publisher=Helm Information Ltd.|isbn=978-1-903206-16-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Jones|first=Ian|author-link=Ian Jones (author) |year=1992|title=The Friendship that Destroyed Ned Kelly: Joe Byrne Joe Byrne & Aaron Sherritt|publisher=Lothian Pub.|isbn=9780850915181}}
* {{cite book|last=Jones|first=Ian|author-link= |year=2010|title=Ned Kelly: A Short Life|publisher=Hachette UK|isbn=978-0-7336-2579-4}}
* {{cite book|last=Kelly|first=Ned|editor=McDermott, Alex|year=2012|title=The Jerilderie Letter: Text Classics|publisher=Text Publishing|isbn=978-1-921922-33-6}}
* {{cite book|last1=Kelson|first1=Brendon|year=2001|last2=McQuilton|first2=John|title=Kelly Country: A Photographic Journey|publisher=University of Queensland Press|isbn=978-0-7022-3273-2}}
* {{Cite book|last=Kenneally|first=J.J.|year=1929|author-link=J. J. Kenneally|title=Inner History of the Kelly Gang|publisher=The Kelly Gang Publishing Company|location=Dandenong, Victoria}}
* {{cite book|last=Kieza|first=Grantlee|year=2017|title=Mrs Kelly|publisher=HarperCollins Australia|isbn=978-1-74309-717-5}}
* {{Cite book|last=Macfarlane|first=Ian|title=The Kelly Gang Unmasked|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2012|isbn=978-0-19-551966-2|location=South Melbourne}}
* {{cite book|last=McMenomy|first=Keith|year=1984|title=Ned Kelly: The Authentic Illustrated History|publisher=C. O. Ross|isbn=978-0-85902-122-7}}
* {{Cite book|last=McQuilton|first=John|title=The Kelly Outbreak, 1878–1880|publisher=Melbourne University Press|year=1987|isbn=0-522-84332-8|location=Carlton}}
* {{cite book|last1=Meredith|first1=John|author-link1=John Meredith (folklorist)|year=1980|last2=Scott|first2=Bill|author-link2=Bill Scott (author)|title=Ned Kelly: After a Century of Acrimony|publisher=Lansdowne Press|isbn=978-0-7018-1470-0}}
* {{cite book|last=Molony|first=John|author-link=John Molony|year=2001|title=Ned Kelly|publisher=Melbourne University Publishing|isbn=978-0-522-85013-0}}
* {{Cite book|last=Morrissey|first=Doug|title=Ned Kelly, a Lawless Life|publisher=Connor Court|year=2015|isbn=978-1-925138-48-1|location=Ballarat}}
* {{cite book|last=Seal|first=Graham|year=2002|title=Tell 'em I Died Game: The Legend of Ned Kelly|publisher=Hyland House Pub|isbn=978-1-86447-047-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Shaw|first=Ian W.|year=2012|title=Glenrowan|publisher=Hyland House Pub|isbn=978-1-86447-047-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Terry|first=Paul|year=2012|title=The True Story of Ned Kelly's Last Stand|publisher=Pan Macmillan Australia|isbn=9781743345566}}
{{refend}}

'''Fiction'''
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite book |last=Carey |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Carey (novelist) |year=2012 |title=True History of the Kelly Gang |publisher=Random House Australia |isbn=978-1-74274-895-5|title-link=True History of the Kelly Gang }}
* {{cite book |last=Masson |first=Sophie |author-link=Sophie Masson |year=2010 |title=My Australian Story: The Hunt for Ned Kelly |publisher=Scholastic Australia |isbn=978-1-921990-72-4}}
* {{cite book |last=Drewe |first=Robert |author-link=Robert Drewe |year=2010 |title=Our Sunshine |publisher=Penguin Group |isbn=978-0-14-320476-3|title-link=Our Sunshine }}
* {{cite book |last=Thomas |first=Keneally |author-link=Thomas Keneally |year=1981 |title=Ned Kelly and the City of the Bees |publisher=D.R. Godine |isbn=978-1-56792-022-2}}
{{refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{wikisource author}}{{wikiquote}}
{{wikisource author}}{{wikiquote}}{{Wikivoyage|Ned Kelly Tourism}}
*[http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/collections/treasures/jerilderieletter1.html Images and transcript of the Jerilderie Letter] at the State Library of Victoria
* [http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-635784 Kelly, Ned (1855–1880)] National Library of Australia, ''Trove, People and Organisation record'' for Ned Kelly
*[http://www.nma.gov.au/collections/collection_interactives/ Images, transcript and audio of John Hanlon's transcript of the Jerilderie Letter] at the National Museum of Australia (scroll down page)
* [https://www.nma.gov.au/explore/collection/highlights/ned-kelly The Kelly collection, including John Hanlon's transcript of the Jerilderie letter] at the [[National Museum of Australia]]
*[http://www.ironoutlaw.com Ned Kelly: Australian Ironoutlaw (<i>the first site on Ned Kelly, established 1995<i>)]
* [https://prov.vic.gov.au/explore-collection/explore-topic/ned-kelly-historical-collection Ned Kelly Historical Collection, Public Records Office of Victoria]
*[http://www.australianbushrangers.com/ History of The Kelly's and other Australian Crooks]
* [http://www.cv.vic.gov.au/stories/ned-kelly/ Culture Victoria – historical images and video interview with Peter Carey about his novel "True History of the Kelly Gang"]
*[http://www.ironicon.com.au/ Ned Kelly, Australia's Iron Icon]
* {{Library resources about |viaf= 47572730}}
*[http://www.nedonthenet.com/ Ned on the net - Resource for information on Ned Kelly]
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Ned Kelly |sopt=t}}
*[http://www.denheldid.com/twohuts/twohuts.html Two Huts at Stringybark Creek]
* {{Librivox author |id=2416}}
*[http://www.glenrowan1880.com/ The Siege at Glenrowan 1880]
*[http://www.convictcreations.com/history/nedkelly.htm Convict Creations page on Ned Kelly]
*[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0277941/ IMDb: ''Ned Kelly'' (2003)]
*[http://dreamsis29.tripod.com A collection of traditional ballads about Ned Kelly]
*[http://www.crimelibrary.com/gangsters_outlaws/outlaws/ned_kelly/index.html Crime Library's account of Kelly's life and death]
*[http://www.pictureaustralia.org/apps/pictureaustralia?action=PASearch&mode=advanced&term1=ned+kelly&Start+Adv+Search.x=36&Start+Adv+Search.y=17&attribute1=title&loc1=&nr=27&op1=OR&term2=&attribute2=any+field&loc2=&op2=AND&term3=&attribute3=any+field&loc3= Ned Kelly on Picture Australia]
*[http://www.beechworth.com.au/nedkelly.htm Ned Kelly in Beechworth]
*[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=fHNcbvthSaM&feature=related Ned Kelly Hypothetical - Better Read than Dead? Ned Kelly and Education]
* [http://www.migrationheritage.nsw.gov.au/exhibitions/objectsthroughtime/objects/kelly/ The Jerilderie Letter ] (Only two original documents by Ned Kelly are known to have survived. The most significant of these is the Jerilderie Letter, dictated by Ned Kelly to Joe Byrne in February 1879.)
* [http://nedonline.imagineering.net.au/main.htm ''Ned Online''], an online exhibition featuring images and transcripts of documents at Public Record Office Victoria
* [http://www.GameAsNedKelly.com.au ''Game As Ned Kelly''] Game As Ned Kelly - The World's First Board Game based on the history of the Kelly Gang!
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=12694 Ned Kelly at FindaGrave]
{{Australian crime}}


{{Ned Kelly}}
{{Lifetime|1855|1880|Kelly, Ned}}
{{Bushrangers |state=autocollapse}}
[[Category:Australian murderers]]
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kelly, Ned}}
[[Category:1854 births]]
[[Category:1880 deaths]]
[[Category:19th-century Australian criminals]]
[[Category:Australian bank robbers]]
[[Category:Australian bank robbers]]
[[Category:Bushrangers]]
[[Category:Bushrangers]]
[[Category:Australian outlaws]]
[[Category:Australian outlaws]]
[[Category:People executed for murder]]
[[Category:People executed by Australia by hanging]]
[[Category:People executed by hanging]]
[[Category:Australian people of Irish descent]]
[[Category:Australian folklore]]
[[Category:People from the Colony of Victoria]]
[[Category:Australians of Irish descent]]
[[Category:People executed by Victoria (state)]]
[[Category:People from Victoria (Australia)]]
[[Category:People executed for murdering police officers]]
[[Category:People executed by Victoria (Australia)]]
[[Category:Australian people convicted of murdering police officers]]
[[Category:Australian people convicted of murdering police officers]]
[[Category:Executed Australian people]]
[[Category:Executed Australian people]]
[[Category:People convicted of murder by Victoria (state)]]

[[Category:19th-century executions by Australia]]
[[de:Ned Kelly]]
[[Category:1878 murders in Australia]]
[[es:Ned Kelly]]
[[Category:People from the City of Whittlesea]]
[[fr:Ned Kelly]]
[[Category:People executed by Australian colonies by hanging]]
[[ga:Ned Kelly]]
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[[uk:Келлі Нед]]

Latest revision as of 00:18, 22 November 2024

Ned Kelly
Kelly on 10 November 1880, the day before his execution
Born
Edward Kelly

(1854-12-00)December 1854[a]
Died11 November 1880(1880-11-11) (aged 25)
Melbourne, Colony of Victoria, Australia
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
OccupationBushranger
Relatives
Conviction(s)
  • Murder
  • assault
  • theft
  • armed robbery

Edward Kelly (December 1854[a] – 11 November 1880) was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader and convicted police-murderer. One of the last bushrangers, he is known for wearing a suit of bulletproof armour during his final shootout with the police.

Kelly was born and raised in rural Victoria, the third of eight children to Irish parents. His father, a transported convict, died in 1866, leaving Kelly, then aged 12, as the eldest male of the household. The Kellys were a poor selector family who saw themselves as downtrodden by the squattocracy and as victims of persecution by the Victoria Police. While a teenager, Kelly was arrested for associating with bushranger Harry Power and served two prison terms for a variety of offences, the longest stretch being from 1871 to 1874. He later joined the "Greta Mob", a group of bush larrikins known for stock theft. A violent confrontation with a policeman occurred at the Kelly family's home in 1878, and Kelly was indicted for his attempted murder. Fleeing to the bush, Kelly vowed to avenge his mother, who was imprisoned for her role in the incident. After he, his brother Dan, and associates Joe Byrne and Steve Hart shot dead three policemen, the government of Victoria proclaimed them outlaws.

Kelly and his gang, with the help of a network of sympathisers, evaded the police for two years. The gang's crime spree included raids on Euroa and Jerilderie, and the killing of Aaron Sherritt, a sympathiser turned police informer. In a manifesto letter, Kelly—denouncing the police, the Victorian government and the British Empire—set down his own account of the events leading up to his outlawry. Demanding justice for his family and the rural poor, he threatened dire consequences against those who defied him. In 1880, the gang tried to derail and ambush a police train as a prelude to attacking Benalla, but the police, tipped off, confronted them at Glenrowan. In the ensuing 12-hour siege and gunfight, the outlaws wore armour fashioned from plough mouldboards. Kelly, the only survivor, was severely wounded by police fire and captured. Despite thousands of supporters rallying and petitioning for his reprieve, Kelly was tried, convicted of murder and sentenced to death by hanging, which was carried out at the Melbourne Gaol.

Historian Geoffrey Serle called Kelly and his gang "the last expression of the lawless frontier in what was becoming a highly organised and educated society, the last protest of the mighty bush now tethered with iron rails to Melbourne and the world".[1] In the century after his death, Kelly became a cultural icon, inspiring numerous works in the arts and popular culture, and is the subject of more biographies than any other Australian. Kelly continues to cause division in his homeland: he is variously considered a Robin Hood-like folk hero and crusader against oppression, and a murderous villain and terrorist.[2][3] Journalist Martin Flanagan wrote: "What makes Ned a legend is not that everyone sees him the same—it's that everyone sees him. Like a bushfire on the horizon casting its red glow into the night."[4]

Family background and early life

Kelly's boyhood home, built by his father in Beveridge in 1859

Kelly's father, John Kelly (nicknamed "Red"), was born in 1820 at Clonbrogan near Moyglas, County Tipperary, Ireland.[5] Aged 21, he was found guilty of stealing two pigs[6] and was transported on the convict ship Prince Regent to Hobart Town, Van Diemen's Land (modern-day Tasmania), arriving on 2 January 1842. Granted his certificate of freedom in January 1848, Red moved to the Port Phillip District (modern-day Victoria) and was employed as a carpenter by farmer James Quinn at Wallan Wallan.[5]

On 18 November 1850, at St Francis Church, Melbourne, Red married Ellen Quinn, his employer's 18-year-old daughter, who was born in County Antrim, Ireland and migrated as a child with her parents to the Port Phillip District.[7] In the wake of the 1851 Victorian gold rush, the couple turned to mining and earned enough money to buy a small freehold in Beveridge, north of Melbourne.[8]

Edward ("Ned") Kelly was their third child.[9] His exact birth date is unknown, but was probably in December 1854.[10][a] Kelly was possibly baptised by Augustinian priest Charles O'Hea, who also administered his last rites before his execution.[11] His parents had seven other children: Mary Jane (born 1851, died 6 months later), Annie (1853–1872), Margaret (1857–1896), James ("Jim", 1859–1946), Daniel ("Dan", 1861–1880), Catherine ("Kate", 1863–1898) and Grace (1865–1940).[12]

According to oral tradition, a young Kelly was awarded this green sash after saving another boy from drowning in a creek. Kelly wore it under his armour during his last stand at Glenrowan. It remains stained with his blood. (Benalla Museum)

The Kellys struggled on inferior farmland at Beveridge and Red began drinking heavily.[13] In 1864 the family moved to Avenel, near Seymour, where they soon attracted the attention of local police.[14] As a boy Kelly obtained basic schooling and became familiar with the bush. According to oral tradition, he risked his life at Avenel by saving another boy from drowning in a creek,[15] for which the boy's family gifted him a green sash. It is said this was the same sash worn by Kelly during his last stand in 1880.[16]

In 1865, Red was convicted of receiving a stolen hide and, unable to pay the £25 fine, sentenced to six months' hard labour. In December 1866, Red was fined for being drunk and disorderly. Badly affected by alcoholism, he died later that month at Avenel, two days after Christmas. Ned signed his death certificate.[13]

The following year, the Kellys moved to Greta in north-eastern Victoria, near the Quinns and their relatives by marriage, the Lloyds. In 1868, Kelly's uncle Jim Kelly was convicted of arson after setting fire to the rented premises where the Kellys and some of the Lloyds were staying. Jim was sentenced to death, but this was later commuted to fifteen years of hard labour.[17] The family soon leased a small farm of 88 acres (360,000 m2) at Eleven Mile Creek near Greta. The Kelly selection proved ill-suited for farming, and Ellen supplemented her income by offering accommodation to travellers and selling sly-grog.[18]

Rise to notoriety

Bushranging with Harry Power

I'm a bushranger.

— The earliest known words attributed to Kelly in public record, as reported by Chinese hawker Ah Fook, 1869.[19]
Harry Power has been described as Kelly's bushranging "mentor".

In 1869, 14-year-old Kelly met Irish-born Harry Power (alias of Henry Johnson), a transported convict who turned to bushranging in north-eastern Victoria after escaping Melbourne's Pentridge Prison. The Kellys were Power sympathisers, and by May 1869 Ned had become his bushranging protégé. That month, they attempted to steal horses from the Mansfield property of squatter John Rowe as part of a plan to rob the Woods Point–Mansfield gold escort. They abandoned the idea after Rowe shot at them, and Kelly temporarily broke off his association with Power.[20]

Kelly's first brush with the law occurred in October 1869. A Chinese hawker named Ah Fook said that as he passed the Kelly family home, Ned brandished a long stick, declared himself a bushranger and robbed him of 10 shillings. Kelly, arrested and charged with highway robbery, claimed in court that Fook had abused him and his sister Annie in a dispute over the hawker's request for a drink of water. Family witnesses backed Ned and the charge was dismissed.[7]

Kelly and Power reconciled in March 1870 and, over the next month, committed a series of armed robberies. By the end of April, the press had named Kelly as Power's young accomplice, and a few days later he was captured by police and confined to Beechworth Gaol. Kelly fronted court on three robbery charges, with the victims in each case failing to identify him. On the third charge, Superintendents Nicolas and Hare insisted Kelly be tried, citing his resemblance to the suspect. After a month in custody, Kelly was released due to insufficient evidence. The Kellys allegedly intimidated witnesses into withholding testimony. Another factor in the lack of identification may have been that Power's accomplice was described as a "half-caste", but the police believed this to be the result of Kelly going unwashed.[7]

Power's capture. Kelly was accused of informing on the bushranger.

Power often camped at Glenmore Station on the King River, owned by Kelly's maternal grandfather, James Quinn. In June 1870, while resting in a mountainside gunyah (bark shelter) that overlooked the property, Power was captured and arrested by police. Word soon spread that Kelly had informed on him. Kelly denied the rumour, and in the only surviving letter known to bear his handwriting, he pleads with Sergeant James Babington of Kyneton for help, saying that "everyone looks on me like a black snake". The informant turned out to be Kelly's uncle, Jack Lloyd, who received £500 for his assistance.[21] However, Kelly had also given information which led to Power's capture, possibly in exchange for having the charges against him dropped. Power always maintained that Kelly betrayed him.[22]

Reporting on Power's criminal career, the Benalla Ensign wrote:[7]

The effect of his 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.

Horse theft, assault and imprisonment

Mugshot of Kelly, aged 15

In October 1870, a hawker, Jeremiah McCormack, accused a friend of the Kellys, Ben Gould, of stealing his horse. Gould responded by sending an indecent note and a parcel of calves' testicles to McCormack's wife, which Kelly helped deliver. When McCormack later confronted Kelly for assisting Gould, Kelly punched him and was arrested for both the note and the assault, receiving three months’ hard labor for each charge.[23]

Kelly was released from Beechworth Gaol on 27 March 1871, five weeks early, and returned to Greta. Shortly after, horse-breaker Isaiah "Wild" Wright rode into town on a horse he supposedly borrowed. Later that night, the horse went missing. While Wright was away in search of the horse, Kelly found it and took it to Wangaratta, where he stayed for four days. On 20 April 1871, while Kelly was riding back into Greta, Constable Edward Hall tried to arrest him on the suspicion that the horse was stolen. Kelly resisted and overpowered Hall, despite the constable's attempts to shoot him. Kelly was eventually subdued with the help of bystanders, and Hall pistol-whipped him until his head became "a mass of raw and bleeding flesh".[24] Initially charged with horse stealing, the charge was downgraded to "feloniously receiving a horse", resulting in a three-year sentence. Wright received eighteen months for his part.[25]

Kelly in boxing attire, 1874

Kelly served his sentence at Beechworth Gaol and Pentridge Prison, then aboard the prison hulk Sacramento, off Williamstown. He was freed on 2 February 1874, six months early for good behaviour, and returned to Greta. According to one possibly apocryphal story, Kelly, to settle the score with Wright over the horse, fought and beat him in a bare-knuckle boxing match.[7] A photograph of Kelly in a boxing pose is commonly linked to the match. Regardless of the story's veracity, Wright became a known Kelly sympathiser.[26]

Over the next few years, Kelly worked at sawmills and spent periods in New South Wales, leading what he called the life of a "rambling gambler".[27] During this time, his mother married an American, George King.[28] In early 1877, Ned joined King in an organised horse theft operation. Ned later claimed that the group stole 280 horses.[29] Its membership overlapped with that of the Greta Mob, a bush larrikin gang known for their distinctive "flash" attire. Apart from Ned, the gang included his brother Dan, cousins Jack and Tom Lloyd, and Joe Byrne, Steve Hart and Aaron Sherritt.[30]

On 18 September 1877, Kelly was arrested in Benalla for riding over a footpath while drunk. The following day he brawled with four policemen who were escorting him to court, including a friend of the Kellys, Constable Alexander Fitzpatrick. Another constable involved, Thomas Lonigan, supposedly grabbed Kelly's testicles during the fraccas; legend has it that Kelly vowed, "If I ever shoot a man, Lonigan, it'll be you."[31] Kelly was fined and released.

In August 1877, Kelly and King sold six horses they had stolen from pastoralist James Whitty to William Baumgarten, a horse dealer in Barnawartha, near the New South Wales border. On 10 November, Baumgarten was arrested for selling the stolen horses. Warrants for the arrest of Ned and Dan in relation to the theft were sworn in March and April 1878. King disappeared around this time.[32]

Fitzpatrick incident

Fitzpatrick's version of events

Constable Fitzpatrick

On 11 April 1878, Constable Strachan of Greta heard that Ned was at a shearing shed in New South Wales and left to apprehend him. Four days later, Constable Fitzpatrick arrived at Greta for relief duty and called at the Kellys' home to arrest Dan for horse theft. Finding Dan absent, Fitzpatrick stayed and conversed with Ellen Kelly.[33]

Remains of the Kelly residence at Greta, site of the Fitzpatrick incident

When Dan and his brother-in-law Bill Skillion arrived later that evening, Fitzpatrick informed Dan that he was under arrest. Dan asked to be allowed to have dinner first. The constable consented and stood guard over his prisoner.[34]

Minutes later, Ned rushed in and shot at Fitzpatrick with a revolver, missing him. Ellen then hit Fitzpatrick over the head with a fire shovel. A struggle ensued and Ned fired again, wounding Fitzpatrick above his left wrist. Skillion and Williamson came in, brandishing revolvers, and Dan disarmed Fitzpatrick.[35]

Ned apologised to Fitzpatrick, saying that he mistook him for another constable. Fitzpatrick fainted and when he regained consciousness Ned compelled him to extract the bullet from his own arm with a knife; Ellen dressed the wound. Ned devised a cover story and promised to reward Fitzpatrick if he adhered to it. Fitzpatrick was allowed to leave. About 1.5 km away he noticed two horsemen in pursuit, so he spurred his horse into a gallop to escape. He reached a hotel where his wound was re-bandaged, then rode to Benalla to report the incident.[36]

Kelly family version of events

In an interview three months before his execution, Kelly said that at the time of the incident, he was 200 miles from home. According to him, his mother had asked Fitzpatrick if he had a warrant and Fitzpatrick replied that he had only a telegram, to which his mother said that Dan need not go. Fitzpatrick then said, pulling out a revolver, "I will blow your brains out if you interfere". His mother replied, "You would not be so handy with that popgun of yours if Ned were here". Dan then said, trying to trick Fitzpatrick, "There is Ned coming along by the side of the house". While he was pretending to look out of the window for Ned, Dan cornered Fitzpatrick, took the revolver and released Fitzpatrick unharmed. If Fitzpatrick suffered any wounds they were possibly self-inflicted. Skillion and Williamson were not present.[37]

In 1879 Ned's sister Kate stated that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick after the constable had made a sexual advance to her.[38] After Kelly was captured, he called it "a foolish story".[37]

In 1929 journalist J. J. Kenneally gave yet another version of the incident based on interviews with the remaining Kelly brother, Jim, and Kelly cousin and gang providore Tom Lloyd. In this version, Fitzpatrick was drunk when he arrived at the Kelly house, and while sitting in front of the fire he pulled Kate onto his knee, provoking Dan to throw him to the floor. In the ensuing struggle, Fitzpatrick drew his revolver, Ned appeared, and with his brother seized the constable, disarming him, but not before he struck his wrist against the projecting part of the door lock, an injury he claimed to be a gunshot wound.[39]

Three police officers later gave sworn evidence that Kelly, after his capture, admitted he had shot Fitzpatrick.[40] In 1881, Brickey Williamson, who was seeking remission for his sentence in relation to the incident, stated that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick after the constable had drawn his revolver.[41] Jones and Dawson have argued that Kelly shot Fitzpatrick but it was his friend Joe Byrne who was with him, not Bill Skillion.[42][43]

Trial

Judge Redmond Barry presided over both Ellen Kelly's trial and that Ned two years later.

Williamson, Skillion and Ellen Kelly were arrested and charged with aiding and abetting attempted murder; Ned and Dan were nowhere to be found. The three appeared on 9 October 1878 before Judge Redmond Barry. Fitzpatrick's doctor, who had treated his wound, gave evidence that the constable "was certainly not drunk" and that his wounds were consistent with his statement. The defence declined to call Ned's sisters, Kate and 12-year-old Grace, to give evidence even though they were eyewitnesses. The defence did call two witnesses to give evidence that Skillion was not present, which would cast doubt on Fitzpatrick's account. One of these witnesses was a friend of the Kellys, the other, Joe Ryan, was a relative. Ryan revealed that Ned was in Greta that afternoon, which was damaging to the defence. Ellen Kelly, Skillion and Williamson were convicted as accessories to the attempted murder of Fitzpatrick. Skillion and Williamson both received sentences of six years and Ellen three years of hard labour.[44]

Ellen's sentence was considered harsh, even by people who had no cause to be Kelly sympathisers, especially as she was nursing a newborn baby. Alfred Wyatt, a police magistrate in Benalla, told the later Royal Commission, "I thought the sentence upon that old woman, Mrs Kelly, a very severe one."[45]

Stringybark Creek police murders

Greta Mob members Dan Kelly (left), Steve Hart (centre) and Joe Byrne (right) took to bushranging with Ned Kelly after the Fitzpatrick incident.

After the Fitzpatrick incident, Ned and Dan escaped into the bush and were joined by Greta Mob members Joe Byrne and Steve Hart. Hiding out at Bullock Creek in the Wombat Ranges, they earned money sluicing gold and distilling whisky, and were supplied with provisions and information by sympathisers.[46]

The police were tipped off about the gang's whereabouts and, on 25 October 1878, two mounted police parties were sent to capture them. One party, consisting of Sergeant Michael Kennedy and constables Michael Scanlan, Thomas Lonigan and Thomas McIntyre camped overnight at an abandoned mining site at Stringybark Creek, Toombullup, 36 km north of Mansfield.[47] Unbeknownst to them, the gang's hideout was only 2.5 km away[48] and Ned had observed their tracks.[47]

Clockwise from top left: Constable Lonigan, Sergeant Kennedy, Constable McIntyre and Constable Scanlan

The following day at about 5 p.m., while Kennedy and Scanlan were out scouting, the gang bailed up McIntyre and Lonigan at the camp.[49] McIntyre was then unarmed and surrendered. Lonigan made a motion to draw his revolver and ran for the cover of a log. Ned immediately shot Lonigan, killing him.[50][49] Ned said he did not begrudge his death, calling him the "meanest man that I had any account against".[51]

The gang questioned McIntyre and took his and Lonigan's firearms.[49] Hoping to convince Ned to spare Kennedy and Scanlan, McIntyre informed him that they too were Irish Catholics. Ned replied, "I will let them see what one native [Australian-born colonial] can do."[52] At about 5.30 p.m., the gang heard them approaching and hid. Ned advised McIntyre to tell them to surrender. As the constable did so, the gang ordered them to bail up. Kennedy reached for his revolver, whereupon the gang fired. Scanlan dismounted and, according to McIntyre, was shot while trying to unsling his rifle. Ned maintained that Scanlan fired and was trying to fire again when he fatally shot him.[49][53]

The gang prepares to open fire as Kennedy and Scanlan arrive. Lonigan's body lies in the foreground.

According to McIntyre, the gang continued firing at Kennedy as he dismounted and tried to surrender. Ned later stated that Kennedy hid behind a tree and fired back, then fled into the bush. Ned and Dan pursued and exchanged gunfire with the sergeant for over 1 km before Ned shot him in the right side.[54] According to Ned, Kennedy then turned to face him and Ned shot him in the chest with his shotgun, not realising that Kennedy had dropped his revolver and was trying to surrender.[49]

Amidst the shootout, McIntyre, still unarmed, escaped on Kennedy's horse.[49] He reached Mansfield the following day and a search party was quickly dispatched and found the bodies of Lonigan and Scanlan. Kennedy's body was found two days later.[55][56]

In his accounts of the shootout, Ned justified the killings as acts of self-defence, citing reports of policemen boasting that they would shoot him on sight, the cache of weapons and ammunition that the police carried, and their failure to surrender as evidence of their intention to kill him.[57] McIntyre stated that the police party's intention was to arrest him, that they were not excessively armed, and that it was the gang who were the aggressors.[58][59] Jones, Morrissey and others have questioned aspects of both versions of events.[60][57]

Outlawed under the Felons Apprehension Act

Proclamation by Governor George Bowen declaring Ned and Dan outlaws

On 28 October, the Victorian government announced a reward of £800 for the arrest of the gang; it was soon increased to £2,000. Three days later, the Parliament of Victoria passed the Felons Apprehension Act, which came into effect on 1 November. The bushrangers were given until 12 November to surrender. On 15 November, having remained at large, they were officially outlawed. As a result, anyone who encountered them armed, or had a reasonable suspicion that they were armed, could kill them without consequence. The act also penalised anyone who gave "any aid, shelter or sustenance" to the outlaws or withheld information, or gave false information, to the authorities. Punishment was imprisonment with or without hard labour for up to 15 years.[61]

The Victorian act was based on the 1865 Felons Apprehension Act, passed by the Parliament of New South Wales to reign in bushrangers such as the Gardiner–Hall gang and Dan Morgan. In response to the Kelly gang, the New South Wales parliament re-enacted their legislation as the Felons Apprehension Act 1879.[62]

Euroa raid

Scenes from the Euroa raid

After the police killings, the gang tried to escape into New South Wales but, due to flooding of the Murray River, were forced to return to north-eastern Victoria. They narrowly avoided the police on several occasions and relied on the support of an extensive network of sympathisers.[63][64]

In need of funds, the gang decided to rob the bank of Euroa. Byrne reconnoitered the small town on 8 December 1878. Around midday the next day, the gang held up Younghusband Station, outside Euroa. Fourteen male employees and passers-by were taken hostage and held overnight in an outbuilding on the station; female hostages were held in the homestead. A number of hostages were likely sympathisers of the gang and had prior knowledge of the raid.[65]

The following day, Dan guarded the hostages while Ned, Byrne and Hart rode out to cut Euroa's telegraph wires. They encountered and held up a hunting party and some railway workers, whom they took back to the station. Ned, Dan and Hart then went into Euroa, leaving Byrne to guard the prisoners.[66]

Around 4 p.m., the three outlaws held up the Euroa branch of the National Bank of Australasia, netting cash and gold worth £2,260 and a small number of documents and securities.[67] Fourteen staff members were taken back to Younghusband Station as hostages.[68] There the gang performed trick riding for the thirty-seven hostages, before leaving at about 8.30 p.m., warning their captives to stay put for three hours or suffer reprisals.[69]

Following the raid, a number of newspapers commented on the efficiency of its execution and compared it with the inefficiency of the police. Several hostages stated that the gang had behaved courteously and without violence during the raid.[70] However, hostages also stated that on several occasions the bushrangers threatened to shoot them and burn buildings containing hostages if there was any resistance.[71]

Cameron Letter

At Younghusband Station, Byrne wrote two copies of a letter that Kelly had dictated. They were posted on 14 December to Donald Cameron, a Victorian parliamentarian who Kelly mistook as sympathetic to the gang, and Superintendent John Sadleir. In the letter, Kelly gives his version of the Fitzpatrick incident and the Stringybark Creek killings, and describes cases of alleged police corruption and harassment of his family, signing off as "Edward Kelly, enforced outlaw". He expected Cameron to read it out in parliament, but the government only allowed summaries to be made public. The Argus called it the work of "a clever illiterate".[72] Premier Graham Berry, a vociferous critic of the gang, also found it "very clever", and alerted railway authorities to an allusion Kelly makes to tearing up tracks. Kelly expanded on much of its content in the Jerilderie Letter of 1879.[73]

Kelly sympathisers detained

The imprisonment of Kelly sympathisers without trial turned public opinion against the police. Among those imprisoned were John Quinn (left), John Stewart (centre), and Joseph Ryan (right).

On 2 January 1879, police obtained warrants for the arrest of 30 presumed Kelly sympathisers, 23 of whom were remanded in custody.[74] Over a third were released within seven weeks due to lack of evidence, but nine sympathisers had their remand renewed on a weekly basis for almost three months, despite the police failing to produce evidence for a committal hearing. In a letter to Acting Chief Secretary Bryan O’Loghlen, Kelly accused the government of "committing a manifest injustice in imprisoning so many innocent people" and threatened reprisals. Police claimed that such threats dissuaded their informants from giving sworn evidence.[75]

On 22 April, police magistrate Foster refused prosecution requests to continue remands and discharged the remaining detainees. Although the police command opposed this decision, by then it was clear that the tactic of detaining sympathisers had not impeded the gang.[76]

Jones argues that the detention strategy swung public sympathy away from the police.[77] Dawson, however, points out that while there was widespread condemnation of the denial of the civil liberties of those detained, this did not necessarily mean support for the outlaws grew.[78]

Jerilderie raid

The gang bails up the Jerilderie police barracks

Following the Euroa raid, the reward for Kelly's capture increased to £1,000. Fifty-eight police were transferred to north-eastern Victoria, totaling 217 in the district. Around 50 soldiers were also deployed to guard local banks. The gang distributed most proceeds from the raid to family and other sympathisers. Once more in need of funds, they planned to rob the bank at Jerilderie, a town 65 km across the border in New South Wales. A number of sympathisers moved into Jerilderie before the raid to provide undercover support.[79][80]

On 7 February 1879, the gang crossed the Murray River between Mulwala and Tocumwal and camped overnight in the bush. The following day they visited a hotel about 3 km from Jerilderie, where they drank and chatted with patrons and staff, learning more about the town and its police presence.[81]

In the early hours of 9 February, the gang bailed up the Jerilderie police barracks and secured in the lockup the two constables present, George Devine and Henry Richards. They also held Devine's wife and young children hostage overnight.[82] The following afternoon, Byrne and Hart, dressed as police, went out with Richards to familiarise themselves with the town.[83]

At 10 am on 10 February, Ned and Byrne donned police uniforms and took Richards with them into town, leaving Devine in the lockup and warning his wife that they would kill her and her children if she left the barracks.[84] The gang held up the Royal Mail Hotel and, while Dan and Hart controlled the hostages, Ned and Byrne robbed the neighbouring Bank of New South Wales of £2,141 in cash and valuables.[85] Ned also found and burnt deeds, mortgages and securities, saying "the bloody banks are crushing the life's blood out of the poor, struggling man".[86]

With hostages from the bank now detained in the hotel, Byrne held up the post office and smashed its telegraph system while Ned had several hostages cut down telegraph wires. After lecturing the 30 or so hostages on police corruption and the justice system, Ned freed them, except for Richards and two telegraphists, who he had secured in the lockup.[87] Dan and Byrne then left town with the police's horses and weapons. Ned stayed a while longer to shout a group of sympathisers at the Albion Hotel. While there, he forced Hart to return a watch he had stolen from priest J. B. Gribble, who also persuaded Ned to leave a racehorse he had taken as it belonged to "a young lady".[88] After the raid, the gang went into hiding for 17 months.[89]

Jerilderie Letter

I wish to acquaint you with some of the occurrences of the present past and future.

— Opening line of the Jerilderie Letter[90]
Some of the 56 pages comprising the Jerilderie Letter, on display at State Library Victoria

Prior to arriving in Jerilderie, Kelly composed a lengthy letter with the aim of tracing his path to outlawry, justifying his actions, and outlining the alleged injustices he and his family suffered at the hands of the police. He also implores squatters to share their wealth with the rural poor, invokes a history of Irish rebellion against the English, and threatens to carry out a "colonial stratagem" designed to shock not only Victoria and its police "but also the whole British army".[91][92] Dictated to Byrne, the Jerilderie Letter, a handwritten document of fifty-six pages and 7,391 words, was described by Kelly as "a bit of my life". He tasked Edwin Living, a local bank accountant, with delivering it to the editor of the Jerilderie and Urana Gazette for publication.[93] Due to political suppression, only excerpts were published in the press, based on a copy transcribed by John Hanlon, owner of the Eight Mile Hotel in Deniliquin. The letter was rediscovered and published in full in 1930.[92]

According to historian Alex McDermott, "Kelly inserts himself into history, on his own terms, with his own voice. ... We hear the living speaker in a way that no other document in our history achieves".[94] It has been interpreted as a proto-republican manifesto;[95] one eyewitness to the Jerilderie raid noted that the letter suggested Kelly would "have liked to have been at the head of a hundred followers or so to upset the existing government".[96][97] It has also been described as a "murderous, ... maniacal rant",[98] and "a remarkable insight into Kelly's grandiosity".[99] Noted for its unorthodox grammar, the letter reaches "delirious poetics",[92] Kelly's language being "hyperbolic, allusive, hallucinatory ... full of striking metaphors and images".[90] His invective and sense of humour are also present; in one well-known passage, he calls the Victorian police "a parcel of big ugly fat-necked wombat headed, big bellied, magpie legged, narrow hipped, splaw-footed sons of Irish bailiffs or English landlords".[100] The letter closes:[101]

neglect this and abide by the consequences, which shall be worse than the rust in the wheat of Victoria or the druth of a dry season to the grasshoppers in New South Wales I do not wish to give the order full force without giving timely warning. but I am a widows son outlawed and my orders must be obeyed.

Reward increase and disappearance

£8000 reward notice for the capture of the gang, about $3 million in modern Australian currency

In response to the Jerilderie raid, the New South Wales government and several banks collectively issued £4,000 for the gang's capture, dead or alive, the largest reward offered in the colony since £5,000 was placed on the heads of the outlawed Clarke brothers in 1867.[102] The Victorian government matched the offer for the Kelly gang, bringing the total amount to £8,000, bushranging's largest-ever reward.[103]

The Victorian police continued to receive many reports of sightings of the outlaws and information about their activities from their network of informants. Chief Commissioner of Police Frederick Standish and Superintendent Francis Augustus Hare directed operations against the gang from Benalla. Hare organised frequent search parties and surveillance of Kelly sympathisers.[104][105]

Native police unit, sent from Queensland to Victoria in 1879 to help capture the gang

In March 1879, six Queensland native police troopers and a senior constable under the command of sub-Inspector Stanhope O'Connor were deployed to Benalla to join the hunt for the gang. Although Kelly feared the tracking ability of the Aboriginal troopers, Standish and Hare doubted their value and temporarily withdrew their services.[106][107]

In May 1879, on the advice of Standish, the Victorian Land Board blacklisted 86 alleged Kelly sympathisers from buying land in the secluded areas of northeastern Victoria. The aim of the policy was to disperse the gang's network of sympathisers and disrupt stock theft in the region. Jones and others claim that it caused widespread resentment and hardened support for the outlaws.[108] Morrissey, however, states that although the policy was sometimes used unfairly, it was effective and supported by the majority of the community.[109]

A party of troopers participating in the hunt for the Kelly gang

Facing media and parliamentary criticism over the costly and failed gang search, Standish appointed Assistant Commissioner Charles Hope Nicolson as leader of operations at Benalla on 3 July 1879. Standish reduced Nicolson's police forces, withdrew most of the soldiers guarding banks, and cut the search budget. Nicolson relied more heavily on targeted surveillance and his network of spies and informers.[110]

After almost a year of unsuccessful efforts to capture the outlaws, Nicolson was replaced by Hare. In June 1880, police informant Daniel Kennedy reported that the gang were planning another raid and had made bullet-proof armour out of agricultural equipment. Hare dismissed the latter as preposterous and sacked Kennedy.[111][112]

Glenrowan affair

Murder of Aaron Sherritt

... I look upon Ned Kelly as an extraordinary man; there is no man in the world like him, he is superhuman.

Portrait of Sherritt showing his "larrikin heel" and wearing his hat in the Greta mob fashion with the chin strap resting under his nose

During the Kelly outbreak, police watch parties monitored Byrne's mother's house in the Woolshed Valley near Beechworth. The police used the house of her neighbour, Aaron Sherritt, as a base of operations and kept watch from nearby caves at night. Sherritt, a former Greta Mob member and lifelong friend of Byrne, accepted police payments for camping with the watch parties and for informing on the gang.[7] Detective Michael Ward doubted Sherritt's value as an informer, suspecting he lied to the police to protect Byrne.[113][114]

In March 1879 Byrne's mother saw Sherritt with a police watch party and later publicly denounced him as a spy.[115][116] In the following months, Byrne and Ned sent invitations to Sherritt to join the gang, but when he continued his relationship with the police, the outlaws decided to murder him as a means to launch a grander plot, one that they boasted would "astonish not only the Australian colonies but the whole world".[117]

Sherritt's murder

On 26 June 1880, Dan and Byrne rode into the Woolshed Valley. That evening, they kidnapped a local gardener, Anton Wick, and took him to Sherritt's hut, which was occupied by Sherritt, his pregnant wife Ellen and her mother, and a four-man police watch party.[118]

Byrne forced Wick to knock on the back door and call out for Sherritt. When Sherritt answered the door, Byrne shot him in the throat and chest with a shotgun, killing him. Byrne and Dan then entered the hut while the policemen hid in one of the bedrooms. Byrne overheard them scrambling for their shotguns and demanded that they come out. When they did not respond he fired into the bedroom. He then sent Ellen into the bedroom to bring the police out, but they detained her in the room.[119]

The outlaws left the hut, collected kindling, and loudly threatened to burn alive those inside. They stayed outside for approximately two hours, yelled more threats, then released Wick and rode away.[120][121]

Plot to wreck the police train and attack Benalla

Kelly forces two railway workers to damage the track at Glenrowan in a plot to derail the police special train

The gang estimated that the policemen at Sherritt's would report his murder to Beechworth within a few hours, prompting a police special train to be sent up from Melbourne. They also surmised that the train would collect reinforcements in Benalla before continuing through Glenrowan, a small town in the Warby Ranges. There, the gang planned to derail the train and shoot dead any survivors, then ride to an unpoliced Benalla where they would bomb the railway bridge over the Broken River, thereby isolating the town and giving them time to rob the banks, bomb the police barracks, torch the courthouse, free the gaol's prisoners, and generally sow chaos before returning to the bush.[122][123]

While Byrne and Dan were in the Woolshed Valley, Ned and Hart forced two railway workers camped at Glenrowan to damage the track. The outlaws selected a sharp curve at an incline, where the train would be speeding at 60 mph before derailing into a deep gully. They told their captives they were going to "send the train and its occupants to hell".[124][125]

The bushrangers took over the Glenrowan railway station, the stationmaster's home and Ann Jones' Glenrowan Inn, opposite the station. They used the hotel to hold the workers, passers-by, and other men; most of the women and children taken prisoner were held at the stationmaster's home. The other hotel in town, McDonnell's Railway Hotel, was used to stable the gang's stolen horses, one of which carried a keg of blasting powder and fuses.[114] The packhorses also carried helmeted suits of bullet-repelling armour, each made from stolen plough mouldboards and weighing about 44 kilograms (97 lb). Kelly conceived of the armour to protect the outlaws in shootouts with the police and planned to wear it when inspecting the train wreckage for survivors.[126]

Siege and shootout

A sketch by George Gordon McCrae shows the gang dancing with hostages.

By the afternoon of 27 June, the train still had not arrived, as the policemen in Sherritt's hut remained there until morning, for fear that the bushrangers were still outside.[127] The outlaws meanwhile had gathered all sixty-two hostages in the Glenrowan Inn. Amongst them were sympathisers planted by the gang to help control the situation. As the hours passed without sight of the train, the gang plied the hostages with drink and organised music, singing, dancing and games.[116] One hostage later testified, "[Ned] did not treat us badly—not at all".[128] However, Ned terrorised a young hostage by threatening to shoot him.[129]

Towards evening, Ned let 21 hostages he deemed trustworthy to leave, then captured Glenrowan's lone constable, Hugh Bracken, with the assistance of hostage Thomas Curnow, a local schoolmaster who sought to gain the gang's trust in order to thwart their plans. Believing that Curnow was a sympathiser, Ned let him and his wife return home, but warned them to "go quietly to bed and not to dream too loud".[119][130]

Hostage Thomas Curnow thwarted the gang's plans.

News of Sherritt's death finally reached the outside world at midday 27 June, and at 9 pm, a police special train left Melbourne for Beechworth. In addition to its crew and four journalists, the train carried sub-Inspector O'Connor, his native police unit, wife and sister-in-law. They stopped at Benalla at 1:30 a.m. to take on Superintendent Hare and eight troopers, bringing the total contingent to 27. Hare ordered a pilot engine to travel ahead of them as a lookout. One hour later, as the pilot approached Glenrowan, Curnow signalled it to stop and alerted the driver of the danger.[131]

Kelly had decided to free the hostages and was delivering them a final lecture on the police when the train pulled into Glenrowan. The outlaws donned their armour and prepared for a confrontation. Meanwhile, Bracken escaped to the railway station to explain the situation to the police, after which Hare led his troopers towards the hotel.[132] It was just after 3 a.m.[133]

The outlaws lined up in the shadow of the hotel's porch and, when the police appeared about 30 m away in the moonlight, opened fire. About 150 shots were exchanged in the first volley. Someone shouted that women and children were in the hotel, prompting a ceasefire. Hare was shot through the left wrist and, fainting from blood loss, returned to Benalla for treatment. Ned was wounded in the left hand, left arm and right foot. Byrne was shot in the calf. Two hostages were fatally wounded by police fire into the weatherboard building: thirteen-year-old John Jones and railway worker Martin Cherry.[134] A third hostage, George Metcalf, was also fatally wounded, either by police fire or shot accidentally by Ned.[135][136]

The gang and police exchange gunfire. Drawing by Tom Carrington, one of several journalists present during the battle.

During the lull in gunfire, a number of hostages, mostly women and children, escaped the hotel.[137][138] Kelly, bleeding heavily, retreated about 90 m into the bush behind the hotel, where police found his skull cap and rifle at around 3.30 a.m. Kelly was lying in the bush nearby.[139]

Police surrounded the hotel throughout the night, and the firing continued intermittently. At about 5:30 a.m., Byrne was fatally shot while drinking whiskey in the bar, his last words being a toast to the gang.[140][141] Over the next two hours, police reinforcements under Sergeant Steele and Superintendent Sadleir arrived from Wangaratta and Benalla, bringing the police contingent to about forty.[142][143]

Last stand and capture

"A strange apparition": when Kelly appeared out of the mist-shrouded bush, clad in armour, bewildered policemen took him to be a ghost, a bunyip, and "Old Nick himself".

Seriously wounded, Kelly lay in the bush for most of the night.[144] At dawn (about 7 a.m.), clad in armour and armed with three handguns, he rose out of the bush and attacked the police from their rear. Police returned fire as Kelly moved from tree to tree towards the hotel, at times staggering from his injuries, the weight of his armour and the impact of bullets on the plate iron, which he later described as "like blows from a man's fist". Due to these factors, Kelly had difficulty aiming, firing and reloading his guns.[145]

Sergeant Steele and railway guard Dowsett capture Kelly.

Eyewitnesses struggled to identify the figure moving in the dim misty light and, astonished as it withstood bullets, variously called it a ghost, a bunyip, and the devil.[146] Journalist Tom Carrington wrote:[147]

With the steam rising from the ground, it looked for all the world like the ghost of Hamlet's father with no head, only a very long thick neck ... It was the most extraordinary sight I ever saw or read of in my life, and I felt fairly spellbound with wonder, and I could not stir or speak.

The gun battle with Kelly lasted around 15 minutes with Dan and Hart providing covering fire from the hotel.[148] It ended when Steele brought down Ned with two shotgun blasts to his unprotected legs and thighs. Ned was disarmed and divested of his armour by the police while Dan and Hart continued firing on them. Dan was wounded by return fire, and Ned was carried to the railway station, where a doctor attended to him.[149] He was later found to have twenty-eight wounds, including serious gunshot wounds to his left elbow and right foot, several flesh wounds caused by gunshots, and cuts and abrasions from bullets striking his armour,[150][151] which showed a total of 18 bullet marks, including five in the helmet.[152]

Kelly's armour on display at State Library Victoria. The helmet, breastplate, backplate and shoulder plates show 18 bullet marks. Also on display are Kelly's Snider Enfield rifle and one of his boots.

In the meantime, the siege continued. Around 10 a.m., a ceasefire was called and the remaining thirty hostages left the hotel. They were ordered to lie down as police checked for any outlaws among them. Two of the hostages were arrested for being known Kelly sympathisers.[153]

Fire and aftermath

Ruins of Jones's Hotel after the fire
Police and Aboriginal trackers pose in front of the "Kelly Tree", the fallen gum tree where Kelly was captured

By the afternoon of 28 June, some 600 spectators had gathered at Glenrowan, and Dan and Hart had ceased shooting. Forbidding his men from storming the hotel, Sadleir ordered a cannon from Melbourne to blast out the outlaws, then decided to burn them out instead. At 2.50 p.m, Senior Constable Charles Johnson, under cover of police fire, set the hotel alight.[154]

Passing through the area, Catholic priest Matthew Gibney halted his travels to administer the last rites to Ned, then entered the burning hotel in an attempt to rescue anyone inside. He found the bodies of Byrne, Dan and Hart. The causes of Dan and Hart's deaths remain a mystery.[155] Police retrieved Byrne's body and rescued the mortally wounded Martin Cherry. After the fire died out at 4 p.m., the police recovered the badly burnt bodies of Dan and Hart.[156]

Others wounded during the shootout were hostages Michael Reardon and his baby sister Bridget (who was grazed by a bullet),[157][158] and Jimmy, an Aboriginal trooper.[159] Jones' sister Jane received a head wound from a stray bullet, and two years later died from a lung infection that her mother believed was hastened by the injury.[160]

Following the siege, Byrne's body was strung up in Benalla and photographed, with casts taken of his head and limbs for a waxwork, later exhibited in Melbourne.[161] Sympathisers asked for his body, but the police arranged a hasty inquiry and burial in an unmarked grave in Benalla Cemetery. Dan and Hart's charred remains were buried by their families in unmarked graves in Greta Cemetery.[162]

Kelly was transported to Benalla, where doctors determined that his injuries were non-fatal. He recuperated at Melbourne Gaol hospital ahead of his trial at the Supreme Court. His preliminary hearing began at Beechworth Court in August 1880, but was transferred to the Central Criminal Court in Melbourne. Despite claims that this was due to fears that a jury from "Kelly Country" would be unwilling to convict him, the primary reason was to avoid threats against jurors from Kelly sympathisers.[163]

Trial and execution

Kelly in the dock

Kelly's trial began on 19 October 1880 in Melbourne before Sir Redmond Barry, the judge who had sentenced his mother over the Fitzpatrick incident.[164] Charles Smyth and Arthur Chomley appeared for the Crown, and the novice barrister Henry Bindon for the prisoner with David Gaunson serving as counsel.[165] Kelly was charged with the murder of constables Lonigan and Scanlan. The trial was adjourned to 28 October and the prosecution chose to proceed only with Lonigan's murder, for which Kelly was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging.[166] After handing down the sentence, Barry concluded with the customary words, "May God have mercy on your soul", to which Kelly replied, "I will go a little further than that, and say I will see you there where I go".[167] Barry was to die of natural causes twelve days after Kelly's execution.[168]

On 3 November, the Executive Council of Victoria announced that Kelly was to be hanged on 11 November, at the Melbourne Gaol.[169] In response, thousands turned out at protests in Melbourne demanding a reprieve for Kelly, and a failed petition for clemency attracted over 32,000 signatures.[170] The press was uniformly scathing: one journalist called the protests "inflammatory, seditious and plainly useless";[52] another, having noted the number of protesters, warned that Victoria was trending towards "a socialistic revolt of class against class".[171] Police reinforcements were mobilised to guard the gaol and other government buildings in Melbourne in case of a mob attack.[52]

Kelly goes to the gallows

The day before his execution, Kelly had his photographic portrait taken as a keepsake for his family, and he was granted farewell meetings with relatives. One newspaper reported that his mother's last words to him were, "Mind you die like a Kelly", but Jones and Castles have questioned this.[172][173]

The following morning at 9 am, Kelly was led to the gallows. When passing the gaol's garden he commented on the beauty of the flowers.[174] He was hanged at 10 am. Accounts differ about Kelly's last words. Some witnesses reported that it was, "Such is life", while others recorded that this was his response when told of the intended hour of his execution, earlier that day.[175] The Argus wrote that Kelly's last words were, "Ah, well, I suppose it has come to this", as the rope was placed round his neck.[176] According to another account, Kelly intended to make a speech, but "made no audible sound".[175] A policeman present later said that immediately before the cap was drawn over Kelly's head, he glanced up at the skylight and muttered something indiscernible.[177]

Royal Commission and aftermath

The royal commission into police conduct during the Kelly outbreak resulted in many force members being censured, reprimanded, demoted, suspended or dismissed

In March 1881, the Victorian government approved a royal commission into the conduct of the Victorian police during the Kelly outbreak.[178] Over the next six months, the commission, chaired by Francis Longmore, held sixty-six meetings, examined sixty-two witnesses and visited towns throughout "Kelly Country". While its report found that the police had acted properly in relation to the criminality of the Kellys, it exposed widespread corruption and ended a number of police careers, including that of Chief Commissioner Standish.[179] Numerous other officers, including senior staff, were reprimanded, demoted or suspended. It concluded with a list of thirty-six recommendations for reform.[164] Kelly hoped that his death would lead to an investigation into police conduct, and although the report did not exonerate him or his gang, its findings were said to strip the authorities "of what scanty rags of reputation the Kellys had left them."[178]

The £8,000 reward money was divided among various claimants with £6,000 going to members of the Victorian police, Superintendent Hare receiving the lion's share of £800. After Curnow complained about his payout of £550, it was increased to £1,000. Seven Aboriginal trackers were each awarded £50, but the Victorian and Queensland governments kept the money under the pretext that "It would not be desirable to place any considerable sum of money in the hands of persons unable to use it."[180]

There was widespread speculation that Kelly's execution would lead to further outbreaks of violence in north-eastern Victoria.[181] Jones and Dawson argue that changes in policing methods reduced this threat. The police no longer pursued a policy of dispersing Kelly sympathisers by denying them land in the district,[182][183] and assured them that they would be treated fairly if they kept the peace. During the royal commission there were threats of violence and intimidation against people who had assisted the police.[184][185] Nevertheless, the police reported a reduction in stock theft and crime in general in north-eastern Victoria following Kelly's death.[186]

Kelly's mother was released from prison in February 1881. Jones states that she met with Greta police constable Robert Graham soon after, and they reached an understanding which helped reduce tension in the community.[187]

Remains and graves

Kelly's death mask on display in the National Portrait Gallery

Kelly was buried at the Old Melbourne Gaol in what was known as the "old men's yard".[188] In May 1881, reports emerged that Kelly's body had been illegally dissected by medical students for study.[189] Public outrage at the rumour raised concerns of civil unrest, leading the gaol's governor to deny that it had occurred.[190]

In 1929, the Old Melbourne Gaol was closed for demolition works, during which the remains of felons were uncovered. Before being reinterred in a mass grave at Pentridge Prison, skeletal parts were looted by workers and spectators from a number of graves, including one marked with the initials "E.K.",[191] situated apart from the rest on the opposite side of the yard.[192] The skull from this grave was handed over to the police and stored at the Victorian Penal Department, then sent to the Australian Institute of Anatomy, Canberra in 1934. It went missing but was later found in a safe.[193] From 1972 the skull was exhibited at the Old Melbourne Gaol until it was stolen on 12 December 1978.[194]

On 9 March 2008, archaeologists announced they believed they had found Kelly's burial site at Pentridge Prison, among the remains of 32 executed felons.[195] In 2009, the skull that was stolen in 1978 was handed over for forensic testing along with the Pentridge remains. After conducting several tests in 2010–11, the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine concluded the skull was not Kelly's.[196] Kelly's skeleton was identified among the Pentridge remains through DNA analysis and comparisons to bullet wounds he received at Glenrowan. Most of the skull is missing,[197] with what remains of the occipital bone showing cuts consistent with dissection.[190][198]

In 2012, the Victorian government approved the handover of Kelly's bones to his family, who made plans for his final burial and also appealed for the return of his skull.[199] On 20 January 2013, following a Requiem Mass at St Patrick's Catholic Church, Wangaratta, Kelly's final wish was granted as his remains were buried in consecrated ground at Greta Cemetery, near his mother's unmarked grave. It was encased in concrete to prevent looting.[200]

Kelly's original headstone, along with those of other felons executed at the Old Melbourne Gaol, was repurposed during the Great Depression to construct bluestone walls protecting Melbourne beaches from erosion.[201]

Legacy

Kelly myth

A homemade letterbox in the style of Ned Kelly's armour, Bullio, Southern Highlands, New South Wales

The myth surrounding Kelly pervades Australian culture, and he is one of Australia's most recognised national symbols. Academic and folklorist Graham Seal writes:[202]

Ned Kelly has progressed from outlaw to national hero in a century, and to international icon in a further 20 years. The still-enigmatic, slightly saturnine and ever-ambivalent bushranger is the undisputed, if not universally admired, national symbol of Australia.

Seal argues that Kelly's story taps into the Robin Hood tradition of the outlaw hero and the myth of the Australian bush as a place of freedom from oppressive authority. For many admirers of Kelly, he embodies characteristics thought to be typically Australian such as defying authority, siding with the underdog and fighting bravely for one's beliefs.[203] This view was already evident in the aftermath of his death. Reviewing an 1881 performance of the Kelly gang play Ostracised, staged at Melbourne's Princess Theatre, The Australasian wrote:[204]

... judging from the way in which the applause was dealt out, it was pretty certain that the exploits of the outlaws excited admiration and prompted emulation. ... In short Ostracised will help to confirm the belief, in the young mind of Victoria, that the Kellys were martyrs and not sanguinary ruffians.

According to Ian Jones, after Kelly's death, "a Robin Hood-like figure survived: good-looking, brave, a fine horseman and bushman and a crack shot, devoted to his mother and sisters, a man who treated all women with courtesy, who stole from the rich to give to the poor, who dressed himself in his enemy's uniform to outwit him. Most of all a man who stood against the police persecutors of his family and was driven to outlawry when he defended his sister against a drunken constable. Such was Ned Kelly the myth".[205] Kelly sought to live up to the bushranger-hero myth. The gang's raids were partly public performances where they acted courteously to women, burned mortgage documents and entertained their hostages.[206]

By the time Kelly was outlawed, bushranging was an anachronism. Australia was highly urbanised, the telegraph and the railway were rapidly connecting the bush to the city, and Kelly was already an icon for a romanticised past.[207][208] Macintyre states that Kelly turning agricultural equipment into armour was an irresistible symbol of a passing era.[3] For Seal, the failure of the gang to derail the train at Glenrowan was a symbol of the triumph of modern civilisation.[207] The national image of Kelly, he writes, may bear "about the same resemblance" to the man as his armour does "to the plough mouldboards from which it was beaten". He concludes:[209]

He is different things to different people—a murderer, an Australian Robin Hood, a social bandit, a revolutionary leader, even a commercial commodity. But to most of us he is somehow essentially Australian.

Cultural impact

An actor playing Kelly in The Story of the Kelly Gang (1906), the world's first dramatic feature-length film

The siege at Glenrowan became a national and international media event, and reports of the armour sparked widespread fascination, cementing Kelly and his gang's lasting infamy. Songs, poems, popular entertainments, fiction, books, and newspaper and magazine articles about the Kelly gang proliferated in the decades that followed, and by 1943 Kelly was the subject of 42 major published works.[210]

Within eight weeks of the Stringybark Creek killings, a play about the gang, Vultures of the Wombat Ranges, was being staged in Melbourne. The farce Catching the Kellys debuted the following year. By 1900, Kelly gang plays were "appearing all over the continent in a remarkably successful exploitation of popular myth".[211] Later plays include Douglas Stewart's 1942 verse drama Ned Kelly.[212]

Robert Drewe's novel Our Sunshine (1991) is a fictionalised account of the Glenrowan siege.[213] Peter Carey won the 2001 Booker Prize for his novel True History of the Kelly Gang, written from Kelly's perspective and in emulation of his voice in the Jerilderie Letter.[214]

The first ballads about the Kelly gang were published in 1879 and it quickly became a popular genre.[210] In 1939 Tex Morton recorded a country and western-style ballad about Kelly, and singers including Slim Dusty, Smoky Dawson and Buddy Williams followed.[215] Non-Australian artists who have recorded songs about Kelly include Waylon Jennings[216] and Johnny Cash.[217]

Kelly has figured prominently in Australian cinema since the 1906 release of The Story of the Kelly Gang, the world's first dramatic feature-length film.[218] Among those who have portrayed him on screen are Australian rules football player Bob Chitty (The Glenrowan Affair, 1951), rock musician Mick Jagger (Ned Kelly, 1970), John Jarratt (The Last Outlaw, 1980), Heath Ledger (Ned Kelly, 2003) and George MacKay (True History of the Kelly Gang, 2019).[219] A comic film, Reckless Kelly (1993), drew on the Kelly legend.[220]

In the visual arts, Sidney Nolan's 1946–47 Kelly series is considered "one of the greatest sequences of Australian painting of the twentieth century".[221][222] His stylised depiction of Kelly's helmet has become an iconic Australian image. Hundreds of performers dressed as "Nolanesque Kellys" starred in the opening ceremony of the 2000 Sydney Olympics.[223]

The term "Kelly tourism" describes towns such as Glenrowan which sustain themselves economically "almost entirely through Ned's memory", while "Kellyana" refers to the collecting of Kelly memorabilia, merchandise, and other paraphernalia. The phrase "such is life", Kelly's probably apocryphal final words, has become "as much a part of the Kelly mythology as the famous armour".[224] "As game as Ned Kelly" is an expression for bravery,[225] and the term "Ned Kelly beard" is used to describe a trend in "hipster" fashion.[226] The rural districts of north-eastern Victoria are collectively known as "Kelly Country".[227]

Controversy over political legacy

An 1879 political cartoon titled "Our Rulers", published in Melbourne Punch, depicts Kelly, Premier Graham Berry, and a personification of The Age dancing around the flag of communism.

In Bandits (1969), Eric Hobsbawm argued that Kelly was a social bandit, a type of peasant outlaw and symbol of social rebellion with significant community support.[208] Expanding on this thesis, McQuilton argued that the Kelly outbreak should be seen in the context of deteriorating economic conditions in rural Victoria in the 1870s and a conflict over land between selectors (mostly small farmers) and squatters (mostly wealthier pastoralists who had initially acquired their runs by "squatting" on Crown land).[52] Jones,[7] Molony[228] and others argue that Kelly was a political rebel with considerable support among selectors and labourers in north-eastern Victoria. Jones claims that Kelly intended to derail the train at Glenrowan to incite a rebellion of disaffected selectors and declare a "Republic of North-eastern Victoria".[229]

Morrissey argues that McQuilton and Jones have exaggerated the degree of economic distress and support for Kelly among local selectors.[230] As for Kelly's alleged republican declaration or plan for a political rebellion, Dawson wrote: "there is no mention of any such document, plan or intention in any record of Kelly’s day, nor in the numerous interviews and memoirs of those connected with the gang, or its prisoners who listened to Kelly’s speeches while held up, nor in the work of early historians of the outbreak who knew the Kellys, their gang, their sympathisers, or the pursuing police."[231] While Kelly frequently complained of oppression by the police and squatters, derided the Victorian government and the British monarchy, and evoked historical Irish grievances against what he called "the tyrannism of the English yoke", his response was expressed in terms of a violent reckoning rather than a political program.[92][232]

Seal states that Kelly advocated for "a basic form of wealth redistribution".[233] In the Jerilderie Letter, the outlaw calls on squatters to share resources with the poor of their district, and orders anyone opposed to him to "sell out" of Victoria and donate a portion of the profits to the Widows and Orphans Fund. Morrissey sees the social justice element of the letter as a traditional call for the rich to help the poor with an additional argument that it is in their own interest to do so.[230]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c The date of Kelly's birth is not known, and there is no record of his baptism. Kelly himself thought he was 28 years old when he was hanged.[236] Evidence for a December 1854 birth is from a 1963 interview with family descendants Paddy and Charles Griffiths quoting Ned's brother Jim Kelly who said it was a family tradition that Ned's birth was "at the time of the Eureka Stockade", which took place on 3 December 1854.[237] In July 1870, Ellen Kelly, Ned's mother, recorded Ned's age as 15½, which could easily refer to a December 1854 birth.[237] There is also a remark made by G. Wilson Brown, school inspector, in his notebook on 30 March 1865, where he noted that Ned Kelly was 10 years and 3 months old.[237] The only evidence given in support for Ned Kelly's birth being in June 1855 is from the death certificate of his father, John Kelly, who died on 27 December 1866. Ned Kelly's age is written as 11½.

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Bibliography

Non-fiction

Fiction