Wednesday

Benjamin Hall - the gentleman bushranger

Benjamin Hall the bushranger
Portrait of Benjamin Hall

commissioned
 
by Edgar Penzig
Benjamin Hall (1837 - 1865)

But with all his crimes, I believe he has never been accused of being bloodthirsty, nor did he directly kill any of the victims he robbed.
It is claimed by his relatives and those who knew him best that he was affectionate and generous.


See also:

A book about Ben Hall
 Ben Hall The Bushranger

Saturday

Aboriginal guides

black trackers
Portrait of 'John Piper', an Aboriginal tracker
who accompanied Major Thomas Mitchell in his expedition across the Great Dividing Range.

Aboriginal guides, or black trackers, as they became known, were used to track down bushrangers. A group assisted the Victorian Police in tracking down Ned Kelly in 1878 and 1880.
"The volunteer 'black trackers' from Fraser Island and Cape York, employees of the Queensland Native Police who tracked Ned Kelly, were lured by a promise of a cut in £8,000 reward offered for Kelly's capture. After the Glenrowan showdown with Kelly and his gang in 1880, Jack Noble (Wannamutta) and Gary Owens (Werannabe)25, along with 92 others, applied for the reward. Sums were set aside for Noble and Owens and paid to the Queensland Government, but despite repeated requests the men never received their money. The men were placed in confinement camps with their families because they could not show visible means of support when they retired." From the Australian Government site

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