A Hold Up with Guns pointed at you is a terrifying experience |
So lets stay with that first sentence and look at the notion that the Gang was on
a crusade to change their world for the better.
To start with, consider the story of
“the Gang”, a group of mates made up of Ned Kelly and his younger
brother Dan, along with Joe Byrne and Steve Hart, Dans best friend.
This
gang of four came into existence in the Wombat Ranges where Ned and Dan Kelly
had gone into hiding from the Police who had issued a warrant for their arrest
for attempted murder. Ned and Dans mother and two others were also wanted on
the same charges, and were arrested and sentenced but Dan and Ned remained
hidden in the Ranges and survived there with the support of their friends who
came and went bringing supplies and news. Joe and Steve joined them there and for nearly
six months, through a hard winter and
with the help of family and friends they survived by panning for gold and
distilling whiskey. Meanwhile the Police
search was slowly closing in, and eventually there was a confrontation in the
ranges, at Stringybark Creek. A Police search party of four was ambushed and three
Policemen were killed – this was the moment when the Kelly Gang was created,
born out of their participation in a multiple murder. Before that they were
mates in the bush, only two of whom were wanted by police but now they were a
gang with a price on their heads, wanted not for attempted murder but for mass
murder.
Eighteen
months later only Ned Kelly would still be alive, locked up in Melbourne
waiting to be hanged. The other three had all died at the Siege in Glenrowan,
the Gangs disastrous final act which brought an end to the gang and its “Crusade”. So what
is the evidence that during that eighteen months the gang was on a crusade to change their world for the better?
Already
its clear that the Gang didn’t form with these noble objectives in mind – the
Gang formed from their joint
participation in one of Autralias most notorious crimes: multiple police
killings. Prior to that, they had been
hiding out in the ranges distilling whisky, practicing their marksmanship by
shooting at targets on a tree, and building a reinforced dwelling far away from
mainstream society. There is no evidence or record or statement from anyone
anywhere that before the SBC murders the Gang was engaged in any sort of
Crusade to make their world a better place, unless of course this is merely a
reference to their own personal world, their own security and that of their
friends and family – but that is hardly the stuff of Crusades, looking after
yourself and your own family! And if that is all it was that is not the stuff
of legends.
But, in any case this is not
what was meant by the word “Crusade” and
the phrase “change the world for the better” What is meant by pro Kelly people
when they mention these ideas is a grand scheme to change the fundamentals
of their entire society, to bring justice
to the enemies of the downtrodden and the humble, to liberate from poverty the
entire underclass of exploited poor, to empower and give a voice to the
oppressed and the disempowered, to expose the corrupt Police. This is the vision that Kelly people want to
bring to mind when they talk about the Robin Hood of Australia, and about
changing the world for the better. It is no small vision but a huge and revolutionary
transformation that they are claiming as the Gangs vision. But it is clear that before the SBC killings, no endeavours of any kind were made along those lines - there is simply no evidence for such a crusade at that time.
Bu
what about after the SBC killings? Did
something happen AFTER the killings that supported the notion that the gang was
on “a crusade” during this time, that
Ned Kelly and his “gang” were the Robin Hood of Australia, taking from the rich
and helping the poor, fighting for a just society and against corruption and
scandal in high places?
What
happened, according to Bradley Webbs Promo was this : Over the next 18 months the Kelly Gang held up
two country towns and robbed their banks – without firing a single shot; wrote
numerous essays explaining their actions and became folk heroes to a generation
One would have to say as far as Grand Schemes and Crusdaes go, this description is somewhat underwhelming, but it is a version of events
that supports the Robin Hood theory, suggesting that a hold up at Gunpoint was somehow
not really all that bad because no shots were fired, and that their activities resulted in hero status. This fact that no shots
were fired is often cited by Pro Kelly writers as some sort of testimonial to
the decency of these Robin Hood characters. In fact, it really testifies to the
overwhelming terror and fear that the hostages were in after having been warned
in no uncertain terms they would be shot if they misbehaved. The hostages
already knew the gang had mercilessly killed three policemen, and no doubt the
hostages were in great fear of their lives. Rather than a testimony to the
decency of the gang, the fact no shots were fired is a testimony to the good
sense of the hostages and a pointer to the level of fear and intimidation that
the Gang projected to maintain control of them. For most people these holdups
would have been terrifying, intimidating and horrible. Such events in modern
times often result in years of Post Traumatic stress, depression and
suicide - it would have been no different then for most of them. The Truth is
that an erroneous implication has been drawn from the fact that that no shots
were fired, and this error has become part of the structure of the Robin Hood
myth about Ned Kelly – it doesn’t hold up to any realistic analysis.
This is how Ian Jones describes the beginning of
the hold-up at Jerilderie ( The Gang woke the two constables up in the
middle of the night pretending to be coming to get Police help to control a
drunken brawl at the local pub )
“…suddenly the mans horse was still. He drew a
revolver and spoke very calmly after all the yelling
“ Move and I’ll shoot you. I’m Kelly. Put up your
hands”
……
……
The gang quietly occupied the Police Station,
gathering up two revolvers two carbines and ammunition. Mrs Devine appeared,
hastily dressed and pleaded with Ned not to harm her husband for her sake and
that of her little children. Aiming his reply at Devine and Richards Ned
assured her that the two police were safe unless he saw “signs of hanky panky
work” when he would “shoot them without a moments hesitation” adding “So long
as they remain quiet, you and the children will be safe” Ned Kelly A Short Life pp225
Here, Ned was not only threatening to shoot two
more Policeman without hesitation if he saw signs of “hanky panky”, but was
also threatening harm to the wife and children of one of them should the
Policemen not “remain quiet” .
The Jerilderie robbery therefore began with
violent credible threats from a known Police killer, to kill more police and
harm women and children. This fact I am sure wont be highlighted in Brad Webbs
Pictorial History of the Kelly Gang, or discussed on any pro-kelly website –
the idea that Ned Kelly was a benign bushranger and a kind of Robin Hood can
only be sustained if this kind of unpleasant truth is airbrushed out of the
story.
And
that of course is exactly what the Pro Kelly people do. They do not want you to
know the whole story, the truth about Ned Kelly, the dark side of the story.
But I will tell it here
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1. Moderation is back on. I haven’t got time to be constantly monitoring what comments are made and deleting the mindless rubbish that Kelly sympathisers have been posting lately. Please post polite sensible comments, avoid personal abuse and please use the same name whenever you Post, even if its a made-up name.