Australian Bush Rangers
In the early years of the European settlement of Australia, a
Bushranger meant simply a person with the survival skills needed to live
in the Australian 'bush'. It inevitably evolved into a term used to refer
to those men (and women) who in the 19th-century abandoned all social
rights and privileges to take up "Robbery under Arms" as a way
of life, using the bush as their base. Many of these bushrangers gained
considerable notoriety in their own short life-times, some even achieving
the status of folk heroes, and the term has become overlaid with an aura
of glamour from the songs, legends and films that have grown up around the
name. Depending on one's point of view (and economic/social status!), they
were either unfortunate victims of hard economic times with an
understandable contempt for authority, or glorified highway robbers who
took to the roads as an easy way to exist.
The Early Years
The early bushrangers were generally British convicts
who had escaped from assigned service in the penal colonies of New South
Wales (from 1788) and Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania; from 1804). They
had no respect for the rights of others and nothing to lose for their
robbery and murder, depriving travellers and farms alike of money, horses,
food, guns and clothing. Though greatly feared, many escapees had little
chance of surviving in the bush and few lived long in freedom. If they
didn't die of starvation, sickness or exposure, they were either killed by
the police and landowners .
The Second Wave
The glorious heyday of "bushranging" came
after the discovery of gold in the 1850s. Many began ambushing gold
shipments and raiding those wealthy squatters with properties near the
gold towns. The police of the time (those that hadn't already resigned the
force to go after gold themselves) were frankly incompetent and corrupt,
and had little hope of keeping things under control.
This second wave of bushrangers was considerably more
at home in the bush than their escaped convict predecessors. They were
generally native-born, bush-bred young men, often the sons of free poor
settlers, who combined a contempt for authority with a spirit of reckless
adventure. No one knows exactly how many there were, but at any time there
were probably several hundred active bushrangers. Some of them were
motivated by social injustice, and some were simply eager to acquire
notoriety, though very few ever achieved the riches to enable them to
escape their circumstances. Some like 'Mad' Dan Morgan were ruthless and
vicious murderers, but others were almost admired for their reckless
daring and gallant treatment of women, adopting such romanticized names as
"Captain Moonlight" or "Captain Thunderbolt."
The Ending
By the 1880s the last of the bushrangers had vanished.
Most of them died by violence at an early age; those who were not shot by
the police were usually hanged. The most notorious names that stand out
from the crowd include Frank Gardiner, Ben Hall, Fred Ward, and of
course... Ned Kelly, who went on to become Australia's unofficial (?) folk
hero.
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