One
of the (Three) Bushranging Periods 24
May 1947 Townsville Daily Bulletin (Qld.) |
There were three distinct phases in
the history of Australian bush-ranging. In the first the bushrangers were
escaped convicts; in the second they were adventurers who had adopted what
was widely known as a 'manly method of taking property'; and in the third
phase they were simply lawless gangsters. One of the most famous bushrangers of
the second period - the 1860s - was Ben Hall, who as a young hardworking
settler, had bought a small station near Forbes, N.S.W where he was known as
a steady citizen. He had no thought of taking to the
bush until unwarranted persecution by the police literally forced him to join
a bushranging gang whose leader he became at the age of 29. In those days bandits did not need to
have ferocious manners to do profit-able 'trade.' On one occasion (October 1863), Hall's
gang took pos-session of an hotel at Canowindra, captured 14 bullock drivers
and a number of travellers, all of whom they relieved of their valuables, and
then settled down to a couple of days of jollification. Their prisoners became their guests at
this party, the bush ranger paying the hotelkeeper for all food and drink
consumed, and spending far more money than they had taken from their
captives. To make the incident even more
bizarre. Hall sent for the local constable,
armed him with a musket, and ordered him to march up and down outside the
hotel as a sentry. The contempt in which the police were
held at this time is indicated by a paragraph in a Sydney publication, which
read:— Narrow
Escape Of The Police 'Last evening three bushrangers espied
a large body of troopers and immediately gave chase. The darkness favoured the escape of
the troopers and baffled the bushrangers. The appetites of the two police
superintendents continue in undiminished vigour.' For nearly three years Hall's gang
found the police almost harmless, and, except for one occasion, when three
members of the gang and two police men exchanged shots at 40 yards, hit-ting
nothing between them but a hat ad a bar room; and another occasion, when a
half-hearted battle took place at Jugiong, the bushrangers were able to roam
N.S.W. at ease. In the Jugiong affair the gang
stationed themselves at the side of the road and captured more than 60
prisoners! When the mail coach arrived with a
police escort, one bushranger guarded the 60 captives (among whom were
several police), while the others chased the escort away after firing a few
shots. Life for the bandits was so quiet that
many of them grew careless of human life and began killing recklessly. The police quickly retaliated, and
nearly every man engaged in the bushranging business died by violence. Ben
Hall was eventually shot down without mercy by a posse of troopers, and his
death marked the end of the 'romantic' adventurers of the bush. |