Robbery
and Violence at Wombat and Harden 15
September 1950 The Braidwood Dispatch and Mining Journal |
This district had its share of excitement
in the days of the bushrangers, when Harden did not exist, and the country
was more thickly timbered than it is to-day, writes 'Scribbler' in the Harden
'Express.' In the year 1863 Mr. John Rogers was
shot dead by outlaw O'Meally on McKay's property at
Wallendbeen when on his way from Murrumburrah to his Cootamundra store. The body was taken to Yass for burial,
where about 1000 people attended the funeral. O'Meally fired after
Mr. Barnes refused to hand over his horse and tried to escape. At the time of the murder, John
Gilbert, the notorious bushranger, was with O'Meally.
At a later date Gilbert became the
murderer of Sergt. Parry, who died in the execution of his duty at Jugiong. Gilbert was later killed in an
exchange of shots with the police at Binalong. Many Harden-Murrumburrah people have
stood beside the grave or seen the little cross which marks the spot not far
from the road side, about a mile this side of Binalong, in the police
paddock. Mr. Barnes was the father of the T.
and G. Barnes, of Murrumburrah. He had met the robbers some time
previously, when they called at his Cootamundra store during the night, and
he served them with blankets, for which they refused to pay. The story claims he fired shots at
them as they made their escape. He must have kept cool to do this as
well as beat out the fire which the bush rangers started in order to keep him
occupied, when they spilled some kerosene on the floor and ignited it. During an epidemic of highway robbery
in 1862,a mail coach was robbed by armed men near
Murrumburrah. Wallendbeen was the scene of a lively gunfight between Ben
Hall's gang and police. Hall's gang raided Macansh's
woolshed store at Beggan Beggan
in 1865 and took 20 pounds of tobacco, some tea, sugar, and flour, three
blankets, camping gear, some cash and two revolvers, a double barrelled gun
and a large quantity of ammunition. Wombat also is the place where Harry Manns was arrested in connection with the Eugowra Escort
hold-up. The case of Manns
is significant because his end was a masterpiece of bungling in the history
of Australian execution. The unfortunate criminal for more than
10 minutes writhed and gasped before horrified spectators. The noose of the rope had slipped and
encircled the middle of his face and head, and eventually had to be
re-adjusted. In the bushranging days the town of
Young (then named Lambing Flat) was the centre of rich gold fields, which
extended well towards Murrumburrah. Hundreds of Chinamen, and a greater
number of whites, worked on the diggings on Demondrille
Creek, out Redbridge way. In the riots of 1861 from 1,000 to
1,500 Chinamen were hunted by the white diggers from the goldfields. Their dwellings were burned down and
some were assaulted and had their pigtails cut off as they fled to their camp
on Roberts' Currawong property. The Government had to pay Roberts more
than £2,000 to keep them fed. The complaint against the Chinese was
that "their living habits were filthy; they fouled the earth and the
water; they were heathens and aliens; they couldn't speak English; and -
worst of all - they were getting plenty of gold and sending it back to China. They lived in a special Chinese
quarter on the diggings, built temples, and installed images of the Sacred
Dragon - 'Joss houses' with 'idols' as the whites called them. They played fan-tan all through the
night, smoked opium and practised strange vices." We may rest assured the white men had
plenty of vices, too. To restore order among the 40,000 diggers
in the Young district, 200 soldiers, police and naval marines were marched
from Sydney with a 12 pounder cannon. The unhappy events which occurred on
our own Demondrille Creek gave birth to the White
Australia policy. |