Categories
History The Glenrowan Archives The Kelly Gang

The Flying Scud (27/07/1880)

“No mention having been made in any of the official reports of the horses that took such an active part in fulfilling the frightful tragedy at Sherritt’s, where the murder took place, and Glenrowan, at the destruction of the Kelly gang, it is a matter of public interest to know what became of them, and to see the animals that could carry a heavy man incased in armor, weighing 97lbs.”

Categories
History The Glenrowan Archives The Kellys

Local and General News (23/11/1880)

“The exhibition of Kate Kelly and friends is exciting much indignation along respectable people on the one hand, and drawing large crowds of people of the lower order on the other. Arrangements are being made for showing the horses on which Ned Kelly and Kate Kelly distinguished themselves. A good deal of money has already been taken.”

Categories
Civilians Glenrowan History The Glenrowan Archives

A Seemingly Hard Case (22/04/1882)

“The case of Mrs Ann Jones, of Glenrowan appears to be an exceptionally hard one.”

Categories
First Hand Accounts History The Glenrowan Archives

The Kellys at Glenrowan – Mr. Fitchett Corrected (28/01/1910)

A letter to the editor from Ann Jones.

Categories
Glenrowan History The Glenrowan Archives

School picnic on the Glenrowan battlefield (24/09/1881)

On Friday, September 9, a large gathering of Benalla state school children was conveyed from Benalla to Glenrowan in two special trains, for the purpose of spending the day in a picnic on the ground rendered memorable by the fight which took place upwards of a year ago between the Kelly gang and the police.

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Edward (Ned) Kelly History Sub-Inspector O'Connor and the Queensland native police Superintendent Sadleir The Glenrowan Archives The Inner Circle The Kelly Gang The Police The Sympathisers

The Kelly Tragedy (10/07/80)

“Speaking about the black trackers reminds me of a humorous incident which occurred during the attack on Jones’s hotel to one of these gentlemen. Constable Milne and Constable Gascoigne were standing behind a tree in front of the house keeping a steady fire directed towards it, when a black boy of O’Connor’s, standing under cover a few yards off, called out at he wanted to light his pipe, and asked the constables for a match, Milne thereupon placed a few matches in a blank cartridge, and plugging the end with a piece of paper, threw it towards the tracker. The cartridge, however, did not fall within three or four yards of the tracker, and for a moment the latter was puzzled how to reach it without exposing himself to the fire of the outlaws. At last, after glancing earnestly towards Jones’s hotel, he called out, ‘Ned you —— ; don’t shoot me till I get the matches,’ and sprang forward at the same instant as one of the outlaws sent a bullet within an inch of his head as he stooped, and which would have gone through his body if he had been standing straight. In return for this salute — as soon as the tracker got back to his shelter — he delivered the contents of his rifle into the house, with the remark, ‘Take that Mr, Kelly, and put it in your pipe.'”

Categories
History News Reports The Glenrowan Archives

Untold Reminiscences of Ned Kelly’s gang (27/06/1920)

“To-morrow will be the fortieth anniversary of the capture of Ned Kelly, the notorious bushranger, at Glenrowan. The accompanying pictures and narrative have been supplied to us by Mr. W. R. Wilson, of Sydney, who has a wonderful store of knowledge of the doings of the gang. At Wangaratta Mr. Wilson was a school-fellow of Ned Kelly and two of the other outlaws, and he was present at the capture of the chief ‘ranger. So much romance has been woven round the career of the Kelly gang that Mr. Wilson feels impelled to tell the true story as he knows it.”

Categories
Edward (Ned) Kelly First Hand Accounts Glenrowan History Sergeant Steele The Glenrowan Archives The Police The Railway

The Kelly Bushrangers (03/07/1880)

The following description of what took place at Glenrowan is taken from the Melbourne Age of June 29, and although going over the same ground as the telegrams already published, contains fuller information…

Categories
First Hand Accounts News Reports The Glenrowan Archives

Charge of Harbouring the Kelly Gang (26/11/1880)

Anne Jones, late of the Glenrowan Hotel, was charged before the Wangaratta Bench this morning, under the 275th clause of the Criminal Offences Statute, with harbouring a felon.

Categories
First Hand Accounts History Sergeant Steele The Glenrowan Archives

The Kelly Gang. New Light on an Old Tragedy (23/09/1911)

A compilation of interviews conducted by Brian Cookson of Ann Jones, Arthur Steele and Paddy Allen.