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{{Short description|Australian bushranger (1856–1880)}}
{{otherpeople}}
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{{More citations needed|date=December 2016}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}
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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Joe Byrne
| name = Joe Byrne
| image = Joe Byrne the 19th-century outlaw.jpg
| image = Joe Byrne the 19th-century outlaw.jpg
| caption =
| caption =
| birth_name = Joseph Byrne
| birth_name = Joseph Byrne
| birth_date = November 21, 1856
| birth_date = 21 November 1856
| birth_place = [[Beechworth]], [[Victoria, Australia|Victoria]], Australia
| birth_place = [[Beechworth]], [[Victoria, Australia|Victoria]], Australia
| death_date = {{death date and age|1880|06|28|1856|11}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1880|06|28|1856|11}}
| death_place = [[Glenrowan, Victoria]], Australia
| death_place = [[Glenrowan, Victoria]], Australia
| death_cause = [[Gunshot wound]] to the groin
| death_cause = [[Gunshot wound]] to the femoral artery
| nationality = Australian
| nationality = Australian
| occupation = [[Bushranger]]
| occupation = [[Bushranger]]
| organization = [[Kelly Gang]]
| organization =
| father = Patrick Byrne
| father =
| mother = Margaret White
| mother =
}}
}}
'''Joseph Byrne''' (21 November 1856 – 28 June 1880)<ref name=obit>{{Cite web|url=http://oa.anu.edu.au/obituary/byrne-joseph-joe-13576|title=Byrne, Joseph (Joe) (1856–1880)|work=Obituaries Australia|accessdate=23 January 2017}}</ref> was an Australian [[bushranger]] born in Victoria to an Irish immigrant. A friend of [[Ned Kelly]], he was a member of the "[[Kelly Gang]]" who were declared outlaws after the murder of three policemen at [[Ned Kelly#Killings at Stringybark Creek|Stringybark Creek]]. Despite wearing the [[Armour of the Kelly gang|improvised]] [[body armour]] for which Ned Kelly and his gang are now famous (and which he is reputed to have designed), Byrne received a fatal gunshot during the gang's final violent confrontation with police at [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]], in June 1880.
'''Joseph Byrne''' (21 November 1856 – 28 June 1880)<ref name=obit>{{Cite web|url=http://oa.anu.edu.au/obituary/byrne-joseph-joe-13576|title=Byrne, Joseph (Joe) (1856–1880)|work=Obituaries Australia|access-date=23 January 2017}}</ref> was an Australian [[bushranger]], outlaw and member of the Kelly gang, referred to as leader [[Ned Kelly]]'s second in command.


Byrne was born in country [[Victoria (state)|Victoria]] with an [[Irish Catholic]] background. He was named after his paternal grandfather, an Irish rebel who was transported as a [[convicts in Australia|convict]] to Australia. Growing up near Chinese mining camps, Byrne became fluent in [[Cantonese]] and addicted to opium, and in later years was even mistakenly assumed to be part-Chinese. Through his childhood friend [[Aaron Sherritt]], Byrne became an associate of the Greta Mob, a [[larrikin]] gang that counted brothers Ned and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] among its members.
==First years==
Joe Byrne was born in 1856 in Woolshed, on the Reedy Creek flat 10km NW of [[Beechworth]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]]. His father Patrick Byrne came from [[Carlow]], [[Ireland]] (1831 Carlow Ireland- Nov 1870 Beechworth). He is buried at [[Benalla]], Victoria. Joe's mother Margaret (née White) was born at [[Scariff]], [[County Clare, Ireland]]. She was one of the "Irish Famine Girls" who immigrated to [[Sydney]], [[Port Phillip]] and [[Adelaide]] from [[workhouses]] in every county of Ireland. These girls were given free passages to Australia due to poverty, death of their parents, or widowed parent unable to care for them during the [[Great Irish Famine]]. All, including Margaret, ended up in workhouses from where they were chosen to come to Australia via the Irish Famine Scheme between 1848 and 1850. Australia welcomed over 4,000 Irish 'orphan' girls during this period. Aged between 14 and 18, they were given the opportunity to make a new life in Australia. The Hyde Park Barracks in Sydney, operated as a depot where the girls were first accommodated, is home to the Irish Famine Memorial. Margaret White was the daughter of Denis White and Margaret Ryan who were both from Scariff, County Clare (only Margaret's father was listed as living in Scariff at the time of Margaret's departure to Australia). She came with many other young women on the ship 'Thomas Arbuthnot'. The ship's surgeon, Charles Strutt was a kind and compassionate man and accompanied over 100 of these young women on a journey south to Yass and Gundagai where they found work in suitable families. Margaret was indentured a servant girl [as most of these girls were] for an Irishman, Nathaniel Stephen Powell, who was a grazier and the local magistrate for at Bungendore NSW, near modern-day [[Canberra]].
She stayed at the Hyde Park Barracks for 40 days until she and many other girls were personally accompanied by Surgeon Charles Strutt to Nathaniel Powell's property 'Turella' in NSW. Sadly many of the records of the workhouses do not survive and that is the case for the Scariff workhouse in County Clare where Margaret was before she emigrated.{{Citation needed|date=July 2018}}


Byrne, the Kellys and [[Steve Hart]] were outlawed in 1878 for the murder of three policemen at [[Stringybark Creek]]. As a result of this and raids on [[Euroa]] and [[Jerilderie]], bushranging's largest ever reward was placed on their heads. In 1880, Byrne, believing Sherritt had turned police informer, murdered him as part of a plot to derail a police train and raid [[Benalla]], but the gang was cornered by the police at a hotel in [[Glenrowan, Victoria|Glenrowan]]. Despite wearing [[Armour of the Kelly gang|bulletproof armour]] in the ensuing shootout, Byrne was fatally shot while making a [[Toast (honor)|toast]] in the hotel bar, his final words being, "Many more years in the bush for the Kelly gang!"
Joe Byrne commenced school at the [[Catholic school]] at Woolshed in 1862. He was a good student, normally among the top students in his class and developed a reputation as a "flash writer". He also became very good friends with fellow student [[Aaron Sherritt]]. However, Byrne's father Patrick developed heart disease and Byrne's school results suffered. He finished school in 1869 with a fifth-grade education while his father died in the same year from heart disease. Joe Byrne also learnt how to speak [[Yue Chinese|Cantonese]] from nearby [[China|Chinese]] gold miners and learned how to smoke [[opium]].{{Citation needed|date=July 2018}}


Byrne was known for his literary talents, writing out the [[Jerilderie Letter]] and other documents on behalf of Ned, and composing [[bush poetry|bush ballads]] about the gang. He also had a reputation as a womaniser, and on screen has been portrayed by the likes of [[Orlando Bloom]] (''[[Ned Kelly (2003 film)|Ned Kelly]]'', 2003).
Byrne and Sheritt became close friends and found themselves in trouble with the law by falling foul of a local, corrupt police constable. Byrne made his first appearance in court in 1871 on the charge of illegally using a horse, and had to pay a fine of 20 shillings to avoid going to jail. Byrne and Sherritt were later convicted of stealing a bullock and served six months in [[HM Prison Beechworth]]. During this imprisonment, Byrne and Sherritt met Jim Kelly who was the brother of Ned Kelly and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]]. Joe Byrne met in Ned in 1876 and the pair soon became firm friends.


==The Kelly Gang==
==Early years and family==
Byrne was born in 1856 in Woolshed, on the Reedy Creek flat near [[Beechworth]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], to [[Irish Catholic]] parents Patrick Byrne and Margaret (née White). Byrne was named after his paternal grandfather, Irish [[Whiteboys|Whiteboy]] (agrarian rebel) and [[convicts in Australia|convict]] Joseph Byrne, who was [[penal transportation|transported]] to the penal colony of [[New South Wales]] in 1833 for "unlawful oaths". Patrick, born in 1831, followed his father to Australia in 1849. Margaret was born at [[Scariff]], [[County Clare, Ireland|County Clare]], Ireland. She was one of the "Irish Famine Girls" given free passage to Australia during the [[Great Famine (Ireland)|Great Famine]].{{cn|date=August 2024}} Margaret was an indentured servant for Nathaniel Stephen Powell, an Irish-born grazier and the local magistrate for [[Bungendore]], near modern-day [[Canberra]].{{cn|date=August 2024}}
[[File:PolicemanWearingKellyArmour.jpg|thumb|upright|Photograph taken on 5 July 1880 of a policeman equipped with Byrne's helmet and Ned Kelly's rifle and skull cap.]]

Growing up in Woolshed, Byrne received his education at the local [[Catholic school]] from 1862. He was considered one of the better students there and developed a reputation as a "flash writer". He also built a strong friendship with fellow student [[Aaron Sherritt]]. In 1869, Byrne's father died from heart disease, and Byrne, now the eldest male in the household, left school that year to assume the duties of his deceased father.{{cn|date=August 2024}}

Byrne grew up near and frequented Chinese mining camps. As a result, he became fluent in [[Cantonese]] and acquired an addiction to opium.

Byrne and Sheritt found themselves in trouble with the law. Byrne made his first appearance in court in 1871 on the charge of illegally using a horse, and had to pay a fine of 20 shillings to avoid going to jail. Byrne and Sherritt were later convicted of stealing a bullock and served six months in [[HM Prison Beechworth]]. During this imprisonment, Byrne and Sherritt met Jim Kelly, the brother of [[Ned Kelly]] and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]]. Byrne met Ned in 1876 and the pair soon became firm friends.{{cn|date=August 2024}}

==Bushranging==
[[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] had discovered an abandoned gold diggings at [[Bullock Creek (Victoria)|Bullock Creek]], which was worked by the Kelly brothers, Byrne, Sherritt, and [[Steve Hart]] during the next couple of years. Byrne was likely present at the Kelly homestead on 15 April 1878 when [[Ned Kelly#Fitzpatrick incident|Constable Fitzpatrick]] claimed that Ned Kelly shot him and [[Ellen Kelly]], Ned's mother, hit him over the head with a shovel. Afterwards, Ned and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] fled to Bullock Creek with a 100-pound bounty on their heads and Ellen Kelly was sentenced to three years hard labour for assaulting a police officer.
[[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] had discovered an abandoned gold diggings at [[Bullock Creek (Victoria)|Bullock Creek]], which was worked by the Kelly brothers, Byrne, Sherritt, and [[Steve Hart]] during the next couple of years. Byrne was likely present at the Kelly homestead on 15 April 1878 when [[Ned Kelly#Fitzpatrick incident|Constable Fitzpatrick]] claimed that Ned Kelly shot him and [[Ellen Kelly]], Ned's mother, hit him over the head with a shovel. Afterwards, Ned and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] fled to Bullock Creek with a 100-pound bounty on their heads and Ellen Kelly was sentenced to three years hard labour for assaulting a police officer.


Joe Byrne was present at Stringybark Creek with the Kelly brothers and Steve Hart on 26 October 1878 when they surprised a patrol of four police officers on their trail, with three of them shot time of his death. The gang were declared as outlaws for this incident on 15 November 1878 and a price of £2000 (equivalent to approximately A$754,000 in 2008) was placed on their heads.
Joe Byrne was present at Stringybark Creek with the Kelly brothers and Steve Hart on 26 October 1878 when they surprised a patrol of four police officers on their trail, with three of them shot dead. The gang were declared as outlaws for this incident on 15 November 1878 and a price of £2000 (equivalent to approximately A$754,000 in 2008) was placed on their heads.


The Kelly Gang started developing a strategy with Byrne acting as Kelly's lieutenant, always being consulted about strategy. The Kelly Gang robbed the [[Euroa]] branch of the [[National Bank of Australia]] stealing over £2,000 which was the largest heist to that point. Joe Byrne drafted the [[Euroa letter]] (now known as the Cameron letter)<ref>{{citation |last=Kelly |first=Ned |author-link=Ned Kelly |title=The Cameron Letter |date=December 14, 1878}}</ref> in red ink sent by Ned Kelly to Donald Cameron, a local [[Member of Legislative Council|MLC]]. claiming that justice had not been done in the case of his mother and himself. It concluded "For I need no lead or powder to revenge my cause, And if words be louder I will oppose your laws."
The Kelly Gang started developing a strategy with Byrne acting as Kelly's lieutenant, always being consulted about strategy. The Kelly Gang robbed the [[Euroa]] branch of the [[National Bank of Australia]] stealing over £2,000 which was the largest heist to that point. Joe Byrne drafted the [[Euroa letter]] (now known as the Cameron letter)<ref>{{citation |last=Kelly |first=Ned |author-link=Ned Kelly |title=The Cameron Letter |date=14 December 1878}}</ref> in red ink sent by Ned Kelly to Donald Cameron, a local [[Member of Legislative Council|MLC]]. claiming that justice had not been done in the case of his mother and himself. It concluded "For I need no lead or powder to revenge my cause, And if words be louder I will oppose your laws."


{{Quote box
The police locked up over 20 alleged supporters of the Kelly gang between 3 January 1879 and 22 April 1879 under the ''[[Felons Apprehension Act 1878]]''. This cemented public support for the gang especially in northeast Victoria. Joe Byrne was able to use this support to advantage by penning a number of [[bush ballad]]s about the exploits of Kelly and his gang:
| quote = <poem>
<blockquote>
''My name is Ned Kelly,<br />
My name it is Ned Kelly, I'm known adversely well,
My ranks are free, my word is low, wherever I do dwell.
''I'm known adversely well.<br />
My friends are all united, my mates are lying near,
''My ranks are free,<br />
We sleep beneath shady trees, no danger do we fear.
''my name is law,<br />
</poem>
''Wherever I do dwell.<br />
| source = Lines from one of Byrne's Kelly gang ballads.<ref>Jones, Ian (1992). ''The Friendship that Destroyed Ned Kelly: Joe Byrne & Aaron Sherritt''. Lothian Pub., ISBN 9780850915181. p. 101</ref>
''My friends are all united,<br />
| align = right
''my mates are lying near.<br />
| bgcolor = #FFFFF0
''We sleep beneath shady trees,<br />
| quoted =
''No danger do we fear.<br />
| salign = right
</blockquote>
}}
The police locked up over 20 alleged supporters of the Kelly gang between 3 January 1879 and 22 April 1879 under the ''[[Felons Apprehension Act 1878]]''. This cemented public support for the gang especially in northeast Victoria. Joe Byrne was able to use this support to advantage by penning a number of [[bush ballad]]s about the exploits of Kelly and his gang.


Joe Byrne frequently visited his mother at her house in Beechworth and was also seen carousing in bars in the town, despite having a price on his head. This was due to a combination of his skill and daring, the incompetence of the police and the support of local residents for the Kelly Gang. There was a Royal Commission into the Victorian Police in 1881 after the capture of the Kelly Gang because of the deficiencies exposed by the Gang.
Joe Byrne frequently visited his mother at her house in Beechworth and was also seen carousing in bars in the town, despite having a price on his head. This was due to a combination of his skill and daring, the incompetence of the police and the support of local residents for the Kelly Gang. There was a Royal Commission into the Victorian Police in 1881 after the capture of the Kelly Gang because of the deficiencies exposed by the Gang.
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After the Jerilderie raid, the gang laid low for 16 months evading capture. This aided to their reputation and greatly embarrassed the [[government of Victoria]] and the police. The Victorian Government eventually increased the reward for capture of a member of the Kelly Gang to £8,000 (equivalent to two million [[Australian dollar]]s in 2005).
After the Jerilderie raid, the gang laid low for 16 months evading capture. This aided to their reputation and greatly embarrassed the [[government of Victoria]] and the police. The Victorian Government eventually increased the reward for capture of a member of the Kelly Gang to £8,000 (equivalent to two million [[Australian dollar]]s in 2005).


==Siege of Glenrowan==
===Murder of Sherritt, Glenrowan siege and death===
[[File:MurderOfSherritt.jpg|thumb|left|Byrne shooting Sherritt]]
{{multiple image
Short of funds, the gang made plans to raid [[Benalla]] in 1880. During this time, they became increasingly concerned that Aaron Sherritt's allegiance had swayed to the police. Byrne wrote letters to Sherritt, inviting him to join the gang, but grew increasingly wary of his former friend, and murdered him at his hut in the Woolshed Valley on 26 June 1880. A four-man police watch party was then occupying the hut, and hid in one of the rooms. Byrne shoot into the room and threatened to burn the hut down before riding off with Dan Kelly to meet the other gang members at Glenrowan.
| align = right

| direction = horizontal
That night, the gang took over Glenrowan, first tearing up the railway line in anticipation of a special trainload of police being sent to capture them after news of Sherritt's murder spread. The outlaws held over 60 people hostage in the town. [[Thomas Curnow]], the schoolmaster of the local school who had won Kelly's trust, escaped and warned the train crew who in turn told the police. This enabled 34 police to surround the Glenrowan Hotel and engage in a gunfight with the gang. In the ensuing blaze of light and smoke, the hotel was riddled with bullets, and several hostages were killed or wounded. Byrne received a gunshot wound to the calf.
| header_align = center

| header =
At around 5:30 a.m., Byrne entered the hotel bar and, after pouring himself a whiskey, made the toast, "Many more years in the bush for the Kelly Gang!" Moments later, a stray bullet entered a gap in his armour, severing his [[femoral artery]]. Byrne slumped on top of hostages crouching in fear on the floor, and bled out within minutes.
| image1 = Joe Byrne.jpg
| width1 = 110
| alt1 =
| caption1 = Byrne, shortly after his body was recovered
| image2 = Joe Byrne 1880.jpg
| width2 = 257
| alt2 =
| caption2 = This image of Byrne's body propped against the wall of the police station is recognised as Australia's first ever [[press photography|press photograph]].<ref>Powell, Rose (20 March 2015). [http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/art-and-design/first-australian-press-photo-shows-body-of-kelly-gang-member-joe-byrne-20150322-1m3xio.html "First Australian press photo shows body of Kelly Gang member Joe Byrne"], ''[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]''. Retrieved 4 September 2015.</ref>
}}
Byrne started plans with Kelly for another bank robbery in [[Benalla]] in 1880. However, they were becoming increasingly concerned about Sherritt who they feared was being targeted by police as an informant. While Byrne had previously used Sherritt to persuade the police that the gang was planning a raid in the [[Goulburn River, Victoria|Goulburn River]] rather than at [[Jerilderie]], both Kelly and Byrne believed that he had turned informant. This prompted Byrne and [[Dan Kelly (bushranger)|Dan Kelly]] to murder [[Aaron Sherritt|Sherritt]] as an informer on 26 June 1880.


[[File:Joe Byrne 1880.jpg|thumb|280px|This image of Byrne's body propped against the wall of the lockup of the Benalla police station has been called Australia's first ever [[press photography|press photograph]].<ref>Powell, Rose (20 March 2015). [http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/art-and-design/first-australian-press-photo-shows-body-of-kelly-gang-member-joe-byrne-20150322-1m3xio.html "First Australian press photo shows body of Kelly Gang member Joe Byrne"], ''[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]''. Retrieved 4 September 2015.</ref> The badly wounded Ned Kelly was at the time confined to the lockup. Artist [[Julian Ashton]], standing second from left, sketched Byrne's body the previous night.]]
The following day, the Kelly Gang took over Glenrowan, first tearing up the railway line in anticipation of a special trainload of police being sent to capture them. They held over 60 people hostage in the town. [[Thomas Curnow]], the schoolmaster of the local school who had won Kelly's trust, escaped and warned the train crew who in turn told the police. This enabled 34 police to surround the Glenrowan Hotel where the bushrangers had again shouted the bar.
After Ned Kelly's last stand and capture, the police set fire to the Glenrowan Inn and retrieved Byrne's body before the hotel was consumed by flames. In Byrne's coat pockets were found a prayer book, cartridges and a brown paper bag containing poison. Later that day, his body and the seriously wounded Ned Kelly were conveyed on the same train to Benalla, where they were kept in neighbouring cells in the lockup. The night of their arrival, artist [[Julian Ashton]] sketched Byrne's body by candlelight; in later years Ashton called it "the most miserable assignment I have ever had". The next day Byrne's body was strung up "like a puppet" on the door of the lockup and photographed by the press. Max Kreitmayer, owner of Melbourne's Waxworks Museum, made a death mask and other casts of Byrne and, within days, a wax figure of the outlaw was put on exhibition inside the museum's Chamber of Horrors, attracting large crowds. The wax figure had on Byrne's boots from the siege, which were still stained with his blood and initially displayed in the windows of the museum on [[Bourke Street, Melbourne|Bourke Street]].<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 |page=110, 119, 132 |isbn= 9780975103067}}</ref>


Joe Byrne is believed to have been heavily involved in designing the armour worn by all members of the Kelly Gang at the siege of Glenrowan. His armour did not prevent him from being shot in the groin by a stray bullet which severed his [[femoral artery]]. Eyewitnesses at the hotel claimed that a moment before the bullet struck Joe Byrne dead, he offered the toast "Here's to the bold Kelly Gang!". Another report states that he said "Many more years in the bush for the Kelly Gang!". He died from loss of blood on 28 June 1880. The next day his body was hung on the door of the lock-up at Benalla and photographed by the press. His family did not claim the body, and the police refused to hand it over to sympathisers, fearing a funeral would become a rallying point for the simmering rebellion. He was buried on the same day as Sherritt. Dan Kelly and Steve Hart also died on the day of the siege by shooting themselves,<ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18951996 |title=AN INTERVIEW WITH NED KELLY. |newspaper=[[The Maitland Mercury & Hunter River General Advertiser]] |location=NSW |date=1 July 1880 |accessdate=3 February 2012 |page=7 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref> while Ned Kelly was captured and tried in [[Melbourne]]. Ned Kelly was hanged at [[Old Melbourne Gaol]] on 11 November 1880. There is a legend that Kelly and Byrne had drafted a [[Declaration of a Republic of Northeast Victoria]] which was discovered in Kelly's possession at his capture and was destroyed by the Victorian Government.
His family did not claim the body, and the police refused to hand it over to sympathisers, fearing a funeral would become a rallying point for the simmering rebellion. He was buried on the same day as Aaron Sherritt. Dan Kelly and Steve Hart also died on the day of the siege in a suspect suicide pact, while Ned Kelly was captured and tried in [[Melbourne]]. Ned Kelly was hanged at [[Old Melbourne Gaol]] on 11 November 1880.


==Modern discoveries==
==Cultural references==
In [[Douglas Stewart (poet)|Douglas Stewart]]'s 1942 verse drama ''[[Ned Kelly (play)|Ned Kelly]]'', Byrne is depicted as a poet-philosopher whose function is to articulate what Ned Kelly, a man of action and lawlessness, stands for.
In September 2006, Darren Sutton found a piece of armour believed to be an offcut from Joe Byrne's armour in bushland near Beechworth, Victoria.
The armour is thought to have been created by local blacksmith Charlie Knight and friend [[Thomas Straughair]] for the Kelly Gang.<ref>{{cite web |author=APT |url=http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=102355 |title=Piece of Kelly's Armour Found |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090312072736/http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=102355 |archive-date=March 12, 2009 |journal=[[NineMSN]] News |date=September 30, 2006}}</ref>


A number of film actors have portrayed Byrne, including [[Mark McManus]] in ''[[Ned Kelly (1970 film)|Ned Kelly]]'' (1970) and [[Orlando Bloom]] in ''[[Ned Kelly (2003 film)|Ned Kelly]]'' (2003).
According to Heritage Victoria this is not considered to be from the same metal as the suit of armour made for Joe Byrne.


==References==
==References==
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*[http://www.google.com.au/search?q=cache:g5qvjpz1qp0J:www.latrobe.edu.au/news/2003/pdf/Inaugural%2520Kerferd%2520Oration.pdf+%22Joe+Byrne%22+Jerilderie+Declaration&hl=en&client=firefox-a/ Speech by Victorian Chief Justice John Phillips, Chief Justice of Victoria, at La Trobe University on ''The North-Eastern Victoria Republic Movement: Myth or Reality'']{{Dead link|date=February 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
*[http://www.google.com.au/search?q=cache:g5qvjpz1qp0J:www.latrobe.edu.au/news/2003/pdf/Inaugural%2520Kerferd%2520Oration.pdf+%22Joe+Byrne%22+Jerilderie+Declaration&hl=en&client=firefox-a/ Speech by Victorian Chief Justice John Phillips, Chief Justice of Victoria, at La Trobe University on ''The North-Eastern Victoria Republic Movement: Myth or Reality'']{{Dead link|date=February 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}


{{Australian crime}}
{{Ned Kelly}}
{{Bushrangers |state=autocollapse}}
{{Bushrangers |state=autocollapse}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2011}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


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[[Category:Australian people of Irish descent]]
[[Category:Australian people of Irish descent]]
[[Category:People from Beechworth]]
[[Category:People from Beechworth]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Victoria (Australia)]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Victoria (state)]]
[[Category:People shot dead by law enforcement officers in Australia]]
[[Category:People shot dead by law enforcement officers in Australia]]
[[Category:People from the Colony of Victoria]]
[[Category:Ned Kelly]]

Latest revision as of 01:23, 23 November 2024

Joe Byrne
Born
Joseph Byrne

21 November 1856
Beechworth, Victoria, Australia
Died28 June 1880(1880-06-28) (aged 23)
Cause of deathGunshot wound to the femoral artery
NationalityAustralian
OccupationBushranger

Joseph Byrne (21 November 1856 – 28 June 1880)[1] was an Australian bushranger, outlaw and member of the Kelly gang, referred to as leader Ned Kelly's second in command.

Byrne was born in country Victoria with an Irish Catholic background. He was named after his paternal grandfather, an Irish rebel who was transported as a convict to Australia. Growing up near Chinese mining camps, Byrne became fluent in Cantonese and addicted to opium, and in later years was even mistakenly assumed to be part-Chinese. Through his childhood friend Aaron Sherritt, Byrne became an associate of the Greta Mob, a larrikin gang that counted brothers Ned and Dan Kelly among its members.

Byrne, the Kellys and Steve Hart were outlawed in 1878 for the murder of three policemen at Stringybark Creek. As a result of this and raids on Euroa and Jerilderie, bushranging's largest ever reward was placed on their heads. In 1880, Byrne, believing Sherritt had turned police informer, murdered him as part of a plot to derail a police train and raid Benalla, but the gang was cornered by the police at a hotel in Glenrowan. Despite wearing bulletproof armour in the ensuing shootout, Byrne was fatally shot while making a toast in the hotel bar, his final words being, "Many more years in the bush for the Kelly gang!"

Byrne was known for his literary talents, writing out the Jerilderie Letter and other documents on behalf of Ned, and composing bush ballads about the gang. He also had a reputation as a womaniser, and on screen has been portrayed by the likes of Orlando Bloom (Ned Kelly, 2003).

Early years and family

[edit]

Byrne was born in 1856 in Woolshed, on the Reedy Creek flat near Beechworth, Victoria, to Irish Catholic parents Patrick Byrne and Margaret (née White). Byrne was named after his paternal grandfather, Irish Whiteboy (agrarian rebel) and convict Joseph Byrne, who was transported to the penal colony of New South Wales in 1833 for "unlawful oaths". Patrick, born in 1831, followed his father to Australia in 1849. Margaret was born at Scariff, County Clare, Ireland. She was one of the "Irish Famine Girls" given free passage to Australia during the Great Famine.[citation needed] Margaret was an indentured servant for Nathaniel Stephen Powell, an Irish-born grazier and the local magistrate for Bungendore, near modern-day Canberra.[citation needed]

Growing up in Woolshed, Byrne received his education at the local Catholic school from 1862. He was considered one of the better students there and developed a reputation as a "flash writer". He also built a strong friendship with fellow student Aaron Sherritt. In 1869, Byrne's father died from heart disease, and Byrne, now the eldest male in the household, left school that year to assume the duties of his deceased father.[citation needed]

Byrne grew up near and frequented Chinese mining camps. As a result, he became fluent in Cantonese and acquired an addiction to opium.

Byrne and Sheritt found themselves in trouble with the law. Byrne made his first appearance in court in 1871 on the charge of illegally using a horse, and had to pay a fine of 20 shillings to avoid going to jail. Byrne and Sherritt were later convicted of stealing a bullock and served six months in HM Prison Beechworth. During this imprisonment, Byrne and Sherritt met Jim Kelly, the brother of Ned Kelly and Dan Kelly. Byrne met Ned in 1876 and the pair soon became firm friends.[citation needed]

Bushranging

[edit]

Dan Kelly had discovered an abandoned gold diggings at Bullock Creek, which was worked by the Kelly brothers, Byrne, Sherritt, and Steve Hart during the next couple of years. Byrne was likely present at the Kelly homestead on 15 April 1878 when Constable Fitzpatrick claimed that Ned Kelly shot him and Ellen Kelly, Ned's mother, hit him over the head with a shovel. Afterwards, Ned and Dan Kelly fled to Bullock Creek with a 100-pound bounty on their heads and Ellen Kelly was sentenced to three years hard labour for assaulting a police officer.

Joe Byrne was present at Stringybark Creek with the Kelly brothers and Steve Hart on 26 October 1878 when they surprised a patrol of four police officers on their trail, with three of them shot dead. The gang were declared as outlaws for this incident on 15 November 1878 and a price of £2000 (equivalent to approximately A$754,000 in 2008) was placed on their heads.

The Kelly Gang started developing a strategy with Byrne acting as Kelly's lieutenant, always being consulted about strategy. The Kelly Gang robbed the Euroa branch of the National Bank of Australia stealing over £2,000 which was the largest heist to that point. Joe Byrne drafted the Euroa letter (now known as the Cameron letter)[2] in red ink sent by Ned Kelly to Donald Cameron, a local MLC. claiming that justice had not been done in the case of his mother and himself. It concluded "For I need no lead or powder to revenge my cause, And if words be louder I will oppose your laws."

My name it is Ned Kelly, I'm known adversely well,
My ranks are free, my word is low, wherever I do dwell.
My friends are all united, my mates are lying near,
We sleep beneath shady trees, no danger do we fear.

Lines from one of Byrne's Kelly gang ballads.[3]

The police locked up over 20 alleged supporters of the Kelly gang between 3 January 1879 and 22 April 1879 under the Felons Apprehension Act 1878. This cemented public support for the gang especially in northeast Victoria. Joe Byrne was able to use this support to advantage by penning a number of bush ballads about the exploits of Kelly and his gang.

Joe Byrne frequently visited his mother at her house in Beechworth and was also seen carousing in bars in the town, despite having a price on his head. This was due to a combination of his skill and daring, the incompetence of the police and the support of local residents for the Kelly Gang. There was a Royal Commission into the Victorian Police in 1881 after the capture of the Kelly Gang because of the deficiencies exposed by the Gang.

Kelly and Byrne started planning their next raid at Jerilderie. On 10 February 1879, dressed as police officers, the gang raided the Bank of NSW branch at Jerilderie taking another £2,000. Prior to the raid, Byrne composed the Jerilderie Letter which supported the creation of a Republic of North-eastern Victoria. The proceeds of both the Euroa and Jerilderie robberies were distributed amongst the gang's family, friends and supporters. The Kelly gang shouted the bar at Jerilderie which further enhanced their reputation.

After the Jerilderie raid, the gang laid low for 16 months evading capture. This aided to their reputation and greatly embarrassed the government of Victoria and the police. The Victorian Government eventually increased the reward for capture of a member of the Kelly Gang to £8,000 (equivalent to two million Australian dollars in 2005).

Murder of Sherritt, Glenrowan siege and death

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Byrne shooting Sherritt

Short of funds, the gang made plans to raid Benalla in 1880. During this time, they became increasingly concerned that Aaron Sherritt's allegiance had swayed to the police. Byrne wrote letters to Sherritt, inviting him to join the gang, but grew increasingly wary of his former friend, and murdered him at his hut in the Woolshed Valley on 26 June 1880. A four-man police watch party was then occupying the hut, and hid in one of the rooms. Byrne shoot into the room and threatened to burn the hut down before riding off with Dan Kelly to meet the other gang members at Glenrowan.

That night, the gang took over Glenrowan, first tearing up the railway line in anticipation of a special trainload of police being sent to capture them after news of Sherritt's murder spread. The outlaws held over 60 people hostage in the town. Thomas Curnow, the schoolmaster of the local school who had won Kelly's trust, escaped and warned the train crew who in turn told the police. This enabled 34 police to surround the Glenrowan Hotel and engage in a gunfight with the gang. In the ensuing blaze of light and smoke, the hotel was riddled with bullets, and several hostages were killed or wounded. Byrne received a gunshot wound to the calf.

At around 5:30 a.m., Byrne entered the hotel bar and, after pouring himself a whiskey, made the toast, "Many more years in the bush for the Kelly Gang!" Moments later, a stray bullet entered a gap in his armour, severing his femoral artery. Byrne slumped on top of hostages crouching in fear on the floor, and bled out within minutes.

This image of Byrne's body propped against the wall of the lockup of the Benalla police station has been called Australia's first ever press photograph.[4] The badly wounded Ned Kelly was at the time confined to the lockup. Artist Julian Ashton, standing second from left, sketched Byrne's body the previous night.

After Ned Kelly's last stand and capture, the police set fire to the Glenrowan Inn and retrieved Byrne's body before the hotel was consumed by flames. In Byrne's coat pockets were found a prayer book, cartridges and a brown paper bag containing poison. Later that day, his body and the seriously wounded Ned Kelly were conveyed on the same train to Benalla, where they were kept in neighbouring cells in the lockup. The night of their arrival, artist Julian Ashton sketched Byrne's body by candlelight; in later years Ashton called it "the most miserable assignment I have ever had". The next day Byrne's body was strung up "like a puppet" on the door of the lockup and photographed by the press. Max Kreitmayer, owner of Melbourne's Waxworks Museum, made a death mask and other casts of Byrne and, within days, a wax figure of the outlaw was put on exhibition inside the museum's Chamber of Horrors, attracting large crowds. The wax figure had on Byrne's boots from the siege, which were still stained with his blood and initially displayed in the windows of the museum on Bourke Street.[5]

His family did not claim the body, and the police refused to hand it over to sympathisers, fearing a funeral would become a rallying point for the simmering rebellion. He was buried on the same day as Aaron Sherritt. Dan Kelly and Steve Hart also died on the day of the siege in a suspect suicide pact, while Ned Kelly was captured and tried in Melbourne. Ned Kelly was hanged at Old Melbourne Gaol on 11 November 1880.

Cultural references

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In Douglas Stewart's 1942 verse drama Ned Kelly, Byrne is depicted as a poet-philosopher whose function is to articulate what Ned Kelly, a man of action and lawlessness, stands for.

A number of film actors have portrayed Byrne, including Mark McManus in Ned Kelly (1970) and Orlando Bloom in Ned Kelly (2003).

References

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  1. ^ "Byrne, Joseph (Joe) (1856–1880)". Obituaries Australia. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  2. ^ Kelly, Ned (14 December 1878), The Cameron Letter
  3. ^ Jones, Ian (1992). The Friendship that Destroyed Ned Kelly: Joe Byrne & Aaron Sherritt. Lothian Pub., ISBN 9780850915181. p. 101
  4. ^ Powell, Rose (20 March 2015). "First Australian press photo shows body of Kelly Gang member Joe Byrne", The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  5. ^ Gilmour, Joanna (2015). Sideshow Alley: Infamy, the Macabre & the Portrait. National Portrait Gallery. p. 110, 119, 132. ISBN 9780975103067.
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