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  • ...ine (not then constructed) which branches away from the main North Eastern railway many miles to the south. [[Wangaratta|Wangaratta]], [[Glenrowan|Glenrowan]] [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1803]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...and many other stations in the disturbed district, and on the main line of railway from Melbourne to Sydney. At the same time, after communication with the Ch [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1805]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...ugh Wangaratta during the night, and were seen next day crossing under the railway line at a place known as the One Mile Bridge, after which they disappeared ...ly from the fact that the One Mile Creek was running bank high beneath the railway bridge, and that no one without intimate knowledge of the place could possi
    4 KB (688 words) - 15:50, 20 November 2015
  • ...to Beechworth, had declared that the track taken under the One Mile Creek Railway Bridge near [[Wangaratta|Wangaratta]] could only had been ventured upon, in ...ing the railway beneath a bridge under a dangerously swollen creek, when a railway crossing quite near was available for anyone not supremely anxious to avoid
    5 KB (916 words) - 23:52, 20 November 2015
  • ..., and about five miles from [[Greta|Greta]], which lies to the east of the railway line connecting the two first named places. The informant was a platelayer [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1808]] [[Category:The True St
    4 KB (688 words) - 23:52, 20 November 2015
  • ...iderable extra police protection to Seymour and all other townships up the railway line as far as [[Avenel|Avenel]], beyond which the stations were under Mr N [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1809]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...tt neglected to make an exception of the police officers when he urged the railway men to preserve a calm and unconcerned demeanour to everybody. His own evid ...]] Creek, which lies in full view of and only a few hundred yards from the railway line. Watt came again along the footplate to Mr Wyatt, telling him it was i
    5 KB (890 words) - 23:52, 20 November 2015
  • ...e concerning the requisite aid and material very fully to Mr Gorman, the [[Railway Stations|stationmaster]], and informed him that the line was ‘down throug [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1809]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...ted, and between them, he and Mr Wyatt finding both the Government and the railway’s telegraph wires in a hopeless tangle, and satisfying themselves that th ...ion, Mr Wyatt told the stationmaster to say nothing to passengers or other people, but to telegraph to Melbourne that the line was down, which could be done
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  • ...l's]] Creek Station homestead, standing as it does in full sight of a main railway line and close to the old Sydney Road, less than four miles distant from a [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1810]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...d excited Mr [[Wyatt|Wyatt,]] and while thus engaged they encountered four railway gangers, who were arrested and added to the squad of prisoners in the store [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1810]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...s distant not more than forty yards, and the bank was also in sight of the railway station. It so happened that a large number of residents were absent from E [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1811]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...lvers and singing songs in praise of their gang. It was well for the towns people that no mischief happened to them after Ned Kelly and Byrne had gone, for t [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1813]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...em. The way to the hut where the Kellys were expected to be lay across the railway line; and there was the usual delay in opening the railways gates at the cr [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1815]] [[Category:The True St
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  • ...e assistant, and with all his faults he seems to have won regard from many people who knew him, while his wife and his old mother were overwhelmed by grief a ...were in addition the residences of the stationmaster and one or two other railway employees.
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  • ...eir conduct to the particular end in view. This was the destruction of the railway line at a point some distance on the Wangaratta side of [[Glenrowan|Glenrow ...el]]. This hotel, which stood among trees about two hundred yards from the railway platform, and facing it, was a weatherboard building, with a verandah in fr
    5 KB (821 words) - 23:52, 20 November 2015
  • ...red scarf, and matches which he had in readiness, and, rushing away to the railway line, ran as fast as he could between the rails in the direction of the app [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1819]] [[Category:Recollectio
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  • ...lla]] at 12.30, it had been delayed for half an hour by smashing through a railway gate and injuring the breaks—a delay which probably was the salvation of [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1819]] [[Category:Recollectio
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  • ...trongly dissuaded by the ladies, who had pluckily kept their places in the railway carriage, with bullets whistling past them, Mr Hare made an effort to go ba [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1819]] [[Category:Recollectio
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  • ...over for ever, he was presently stripped of his armour and carried to the railway station where a doctor attended to his wounds. [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1820]] [[Category:Recollectio
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  • ...but all this demonstration was a mere hoax which successfully deluded the people. The train in which [[Ned Kelly|Kelly]] travelled pulled up at North Melbou [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:CH Chomley]] [[Category:December 1821]] [[Category:Recollectio
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  • ...k-out amongst them - are invisible - they have not been seen for days, the people say. Clouds envelop them and roll heavily along their steep wooded slopes. ...emarks Joe, as we swish-swash through a partially submerged paddock. "People round here have a lot of respect for him. The way he looks after his mother
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  • ...ds fairs to go on living for ever. Over the firesides, on winter evenings, people listen to the winds howling in the lofty ranges, and talk of the wild happe ...f Kingdom Come, "there's more though here yet. This country's full of people, that thinks the other fellow's only belongs to him by accident. And most o
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  • ...te of that memorable battle on June 28, 1880. In front of the hotel is the railway station. Beyond that again is the new police camp. Part of the old battle g There is a street, now, along the railway frontage to the old battle ground, where once was nothing but open country.
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  • ...t away up the line towards Wangaratta. My daughter saw them pulling up the railway line, but I did not. ...ory:Documents]] [[Category:Newspapers]] [[Category:Sydney Sun]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:BW Cookson]] [[Category:September 1911]] [[Category:Cookson]]
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  • GLENROWAN AND ITS PEOPLE AS THEY ARE TODAY ...able [[Const Hugh Bracken|Bracken]] on the way. He was galloping along the railway line.
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  • Most of the people who took prominent part in the hunting and ultimate capture of the Kelly bu This arrest dates from the opening of the Beechworth railway. The story may as well be told by Ward himself, as he related it:-
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  • ...esumed Mr Ward, "[[Ned Kelly|Ned Kelly]] was lying under guard at the railway station. He said it was Jones's whisky that had killed them-that it would k ...ory:Documents]] [[Category:Newspapers]] [[Category:Sydney Sun]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:BW Cookson]] [[Category:September 1911]] [[Category:Cookson]]
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  • ...after the encounter. They were plainly seen passing under a culvert on the railway, and the report of the Royal Commission of Inquiry makes the fact of their ...estead of Mr [[Faithfull's Creek (2)|Younghisband]]'s station, assured the people there that they had nothing to fear, and asked for food for themselves and
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  • ...ff more wire than an ordinary repairer would carry with him. Three or four railway men who saw them at work endeavoured to ??? fere; but in a few minutes they It is a remarkable thing that all these stirring events happened without the people in the town knowing anything that was going on.
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  • ...and, holding a light behind a red handkerchief, saved a couple of hundred people from almost certain destruction. It was a brave act, and it was cleverly pe ...ory:Documents]] [[Category:Newspapers]] [[Category:Sydney Sun]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:BW Cookson]] [[Category:September 1911]] [[Category:Cookson]]
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  • ...hin two hundred yards of one of the principal stations on the main line of railway between Melbourne and Sydney, as the last resource for the capture of four The first feeling that will arise in the minds of English people on reading this, will be one of wonder. How came it that four men should ha
    7 KB (1,223 words) - 23:52, 20 November 2015
  • When the [[Echuca|Echuca]] [[Railways|railway]] was being built the New South Wales Government claimed the [[Murray River [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1802]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...or two convincing proof was given that the four men seen passing under the railway were the bushrangers. An effort was then made to follow their tracks. This [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1805]] [[Category:Recollections
    5 KB (824 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...account of what took place is as follows:—"We had just reached the railway gates where there is a crossing to Mr. Younghusband's station, three of us [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1806]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...nger was immediately sent to me in breathless haste to come quickly to the railway station. I pretended to be very much surprised, but, of course, Aaron did n [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1808]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...mpathizers. You could tell them in a moment, they were to be seen on every railway station. It is not to be understood that all these men could communicate wi [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1809]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...lway gates]] at Glenrowan. We often found great difficulty in crossing the railway, for many of the gate keepers were in league with the friends of the Kelly [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1809]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...rails. He said, "We were at Beechworth last night, and killed several people. I expect a special train will be sent from Benalla with a number of police [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1810]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...a prison-house by the outlaws. By the evening they had captured sixty two people. Amongst those thus detained was Constable Bracken, an excellent ex constab ...He took the key from his boot, opened the front door, and ran towards the railway station. The first thing the Kellys did when they came out of the side room
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  • We sent to the railway station and ordered a special train to be ready in case the trackers were n It was decided by the railway authorities at Benalla that the engine that came from Melbourne should act
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  • ...ailway crossing, through which we intended to pass, we noticed a number of people about the hotel, and at the crossing. I said, 'Mrs Jones must be dead; she ...ng, and that the gang had forced Reardon and others to tear up part of the railway line beyond the station, for the purpose of wrecking a special train of pol
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  • "Ned Kelly and Byrne then went from the railway crossing to [[Jones' Glenrowan Inn|Mrs Jones's hotel]], preceded by the maj [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1810]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...t, and I told him that Mr Stanistreet possessed a loaded revolver from the railway department, and advised them for their safety to obtain it, as, some one mi [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1810]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...d yards, leaving the outlaws and their captives ready to start back to the railway station. As soon as we were out of hearing of the outlaws, I announced to m ..., candle, and matches, to go to Benalla, intending to keep as close to the railway line as I could, in case of the special coming before I could reach there.
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  • ...em to surround the hotel and see that no one escaped, whilst I went to the railway platform to have my arm bandaged. It was bleeding fearfully; a bullet had e [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1811]] [[Category:Recollections
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  • ...Hare, with one or two of the police, proceeded in the pilot engine to the railway station, closely followed by the special. On arriving at the station the ho ...isoner in the hotel, courageously made his escape, and running towards the railway station, quickly spread the information that the Kellys, with about forty p
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  • ...nwilling witnesses of the terrible scene. They retained their seats in the railway carriage, and the courage which they displayed, notwithstanding that the bu ...are frightened to come out for fear the police will kill them. Amongst the people who are in there are:— James and Michael Reardon, my husband and son, Cat
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  • ...SConst John Kelly|Senior constable Kelly]], with Mr [[Dowsett|Dowsett]] (a railway guard), fired on the ruffian. The contest became one which, from its remark ...pped of his armour, and then became quite submissive, and was borne to the railway station by Sergeant Steele, Constable Dwyer, and two representatives of the
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  • ...em to advance towards where they were located, but many of the unfortunate people were so terror stricken that they ran hither and thither screaming for merc ...hizers. They were accordingly handcuffed, and taken with the others to the railway station. Young Reardon, who with his father had been confined in the hotel,
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  • ...it, but did no damage. His armour was taken off, and he was carried to the railway-station, where he was searched, but only threepence was found on him, a sil [[Category:Documents]] [[Category:Books]] [[Category:People]] [[Category:Sup Hare]] [[Category:December 1813]] [[Category:Recollections
    6 KB (1,079 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...provided themselves with another set of horses on the opposite side of the railway, so that had they been obliged to cross the line in a hurry, they would hav ...the opposite side of the river, and it was their intention to blow up the railway bridge at Benalla, so as to stop the traffic on the line. I believe they ha
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  • ...nges , and were observed by some people while in this neighbourhood. These people reported to the police what they had seen. On this report the police organi ...e very comfortable, watching train loads of police passing up and down the railway line. Next day the owner of the crop happened along and suddenly came on th
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  • ...11 the Kellys were reported as having been seen on that date crossing the railway at Glenrowan, going from Greta to Warby Ranges.  Supt Nicolson met Supt Sa [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
    6 KB (1,096 words) - 15:46, 20 November 2015
  • ...ou are not seen here; do not go into the town, but get some hotel near the railway station.’ I gave him £2 for coming down to give this information.” [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
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  • ...  Mrs Skillion and her cousin blacksmith met the Glenrowan man at Benalla railway station and secured three first-class return tickets to Melbourne.  The th ...They waited till 11 o’clock in their cramped positions, but as country people are not always punctual, the police made allowances, and waited on and on,
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  • ...four outlaws would next get ready to capture the police train at Glenrowan railway station. [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
    6 KB (1,124 words) - 15:46, 20 November 2015
  • ...d at Glenrowan and went down to where the rails were to be lifted from the railway line.  They applied their own spanners and screw wrenches to the nuts, but ...amped in tents near the [[Stanistreet (2)|stationmaster]]’s house at the railway gates, as they suspected there were detectives amongst them.  They then ba
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  • ...e Queensland Chief Secretary agreed, and Mr O’Connor was at the Essendon railway station with his blacktrackers and equipment at 9.45 p.m. on Sunday, 27/6/1 ...on the railway station, and Mrs Jones’ hotel, on the western side of the railway station.  McDonald was a genuine friend of the Kellys, and therefore his p
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  • ...ken that the Kellys were in Jones’ hotel, and that the place was full of people bailed up there by the Kellys, he then called the men to let the horses go ...e house.”  Supt Hare then retired from the field.  He went over to the railway station and ordered the train back to Benalla so that he could receive medi
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  • ...d for a long time nobody spoke.  And then Guard Dowsett came out from the railway station, and, as I was not able to get there alone, he helped me to the sta [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
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  • == James Reardon - Railway line repairer == ...he horse of a friend, and I went down, and Sullivan was coming through the railway fence, and I said, ‘What is the matter?’ and he said, ‘I am taken pri
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  • ...ey were all in a state of great excitement, and Ned Kelly was taken to the railway station and examined by Dr John Nicholson.  t was now known that Joe Byrne ...ound, although serious, was not dangerous to life, I made all haste to the railway station and accompanied Mr Sadleir and party to Glenrowan.  Mr Sadleir ask
    6 KB (1,114 words) - 15:46, 20 November 2015
  • ...rer to him on his left, and Constables Dwyer, Arthur and Phillips near the railway fence in his rear.  There was also someone at the upper side, but I do not [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
    7 KB (1,173 words) - 15:46, 20 November 2015
  • ...you go in at the front door? — I was then close down to the gate at the railway crossing, and I started from there direct for the front of the house.  I t ...of numbers that way, but I thought there could not be less than 500 or 600 people.
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  • ...think you said you went in at the front door, that is the door facing the railway line? — Yes. [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
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  • ...? — Well, as I was passing along in the front of the house, along by the railway line like - was questioning myself afterwards about that - I think I saw so [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
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  • ...ned back from the room I first entered, because I was standing between the people and the blaze, and every movement of mine, I believe, they could see with t ...n my arrival there. I became aware of it soon - at least that the innocent people had been allowed to remove from the house some time about half-past nine or
    7 KB (1,411 words) - 15:46, 20 November 2015
  • ...left-hand side of the house looking at the house from the direction of the railway gate. I saw you there with a party of men, and then I sent Miss Kelly to go ...question is with regard to the woman that approached the building from the railway gates. — It does not matter if we both understand we mean the same person
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  • ...iven to cease firing and surround the house; you mean after they knew that people were in it?—It was considerably before I came there; but I remarked alrea ...ring upon the house when there were only two outlaws and a lot of innocent people in?—If there was one innocent life to be lost amongst them, I would say t
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  • ...of Dan Kelly and Steve Hart were plainly visible; they were removed to the railway platform, and Supt. Sadleir handed them over to Mrs [[Margaret Skillion|Ski [[Category:People]] [[Category:JJ Kenneally]] [[Category:The Complete Inner History of the Ke
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  • A very large number of people attended the funeral of these two youths, who were buried in the Greta Ceme ...He was taken from the train to the Melbourne Gaol, while a great crowd of people were anxiously waiting the arrival of the train at Spencer street.
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  • '''[[!!FIXME \home.html|!!MISSING]]''' '''[[people|people]]''' '''[[Places|places]]''' '''[[1833--events|events]]''' '''[[things inde ...ior constable Kelly; Constable Bracken; Sergeant Steele; Mr Jesse Dowsett, railway guard; and Senior constable Johnston (who set fire to Mrs Jones’ hotel, w
    8 KB (1,099 words) - 15:50, 20 November 2015
  • ...higher now than it was when the other loans were contracted; but the Ovens people had put forward no such plea when called upon to make those roads and railw ...he latter would cost the colony £12 10s. per mile per annum more than the railway. It was evident therefore that they ought not to "dilly-dally" an
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  • ...e, otherwise half the interests in the district would be ruined before the railway was carried out. Mr WITT wished to ask whether there was any report from the Railway League, because as tho conference had also brought one up, it was better, p
    5 KB (821 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...take independent action. They were not supposed to know anything about the Railway League. ...ves; they were there to organise such a powerful body that they must get a railway. (Hear, hear.)
    6 KB (998 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...he people in the Ovens or Gipps Land sought any particular line, the Ovens people ought to recommend the one that would benefit tho colony to the greatest ex ...at this meeting form an association, to be called the United North-Eastern Railway Association."
    5 KB (781 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...he part of the people of the Ovens and Murray districts, the North-Eastern Railway League should be reconstructed by the addition of twelve new committees, to ...bjection hitherto urged by the Government to the immediate carrying out of railway extension to the Ovens district has been shown not now to exist by the succ
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  • '''THE ALBURY-RAILWAY''' ...be open for traffic in three or four years. But although we are to have a railway, and that as quickly as possible, there is still a good deal to be done in
    5 KB (840 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ewhere are full of the surplus. This traffic can only be brought on to the railway by giving steam-boat owners facilities for loading and unloading, without t ...king their necks in the venture, is simply ridiculous. Why, if the Wodonga people only knew the effect of their own arguments, they must collapse at once.
    4 KB (751 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...sed railway, which will be used for goods and passenger traffic by all the people of Wood's Point, Gaffney's, Jamieson, Enoch's Point; Darlingford, Thornton,
    4 KB (584 words) - 20:59, 20 November 2015
  • ...asant enough; seeing that one can well get over six hours in a comfortable railway carriage if the party consists of genial spirits who don’t object to thei ...h ?) almost took the end of one's nose off. Our dozen was a regular motley-people of all countries, creeds, and professions; but nil got on well together and
    6 KB (1,019 words) - 21:00, 20 November 2015
  • ...sound. Goulburn didn't look lively in the morning; neither do I think the railway has benefited the city in this regard so much as was expected. Strolling al ...n in the time of starting the down-mail might be made, so as to enable the people to answer Sydney letters; and, as I am glad to see that the Works Minister
    7 KB (1,258 words) - 20:59, 20 November 2015
  • ...has become evident that the nearest point to the North-Eastern [[Railways|Railway]] was at [[Longwood|Longwood]]. Every effort must therefore be made make a ...;Shanks's pony," the saving of 10 miles was important in reaching the railway. Longwood can be easily reached in one day, whereas the road via [[Tallaroo
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  • '''A BRANCH RAILWAY TO BEECHWORTH''' ...be forgotten by these towns, although it left Beechworth unprouded with a railway, to the great detriment of its traders and property.
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  • ...cuous building was the Junction Hotel, ns badly off as any of the rest. No people bad remained in the township they were either in Echuca or on the high land ...to-day that the flood was subsiding, some men were told off to repair the railway line between the station and the wharf. The line proved the salvation of ma
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  • ...oard. As there is no quorum left, the business (?) is over. There are many people in the Broadford district who feel the importance of getting even a portion ...elds and pastures new; more open and other families wore going, and to the people remaining things were looking what is generally ?.
    4 KB (706 words) - 20:59, 20 November 2015
  • ...ot listen to the proposition for a transfer of the land, through which the railway would pass. ...ates the variations of the Riverina climate. It is either feast or famine. People who have visited it in other times tell of waving meadow-land for hundreds
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  • ...expense the corporation found that they could not legally enforce rates or people to take it. It is not compulsory now, though mains are laid on to the princ ...''Mr Shackles''', also the custom's offices, and the Echuca wharf, and the railway. stores. The stores, of galvanized iron, are 300 f long and 30 feet wide. T
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  • ...arks and recreation''' grounds there are treble the number that the Sydney people have. I do not know the area of the Melbourne reserves, but there is a very A private railway company run trains to the seven places just named, from the foot of Elizabe
    5 KB (702 words) - 20:59, 20 November 2015
  • ...le by pointing out Narrandera as the terminus for a southern trunk line of railway.
    5 KB (856 words) - 21:00, 20 November 2015
  • ...ll be ruined as soon as the railway passes through it, there are plenty of people who have faith in the resources of Benalla and believe there is a prosperou ...at credit on the enterprise of its owner. At the time it was projected the railway station was intended to be built on the south side of the river, but it wil
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  • ...rot for want of an occasional coat of paint; in the eyes of strangers and railway visitors we look indolent, dirty, shabby, and poverty stricken, and certain ...ogies for a Reading Room, which are offered as intellectual pabulum to the people of Benalla.
    4 KB (610 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...e|Melbourne]] would place them in a position to compete with places having railway communication with the centre.
    4 KB (661 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...dent they will receive, the vigilant care and patient consideration of the people of Victoria and of its representatives in the colonial Parliament generally The main line of the North-Eastern Railway, of which the new line to Beechworth is a branch and feeder, has already pr
    5 KB (762 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...em. He believed he might say that the people of Beechworth, having secured railway communication after many difficulties, were now perfectly satisfied. The to ...among you on the interesting occasion of the opening of the branch line of railway which was to put you in communication with Melbourne and the rest of Victor
    5 KB (736 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...ge loan had already been authorised, and it was their intention to push on railway communication to other parts of the colony. (Cheers. ) By so doing they wou ...ne lines. He could inform them that, with one exception on the Mount Cenis Railway, there was no gradient so steep as that over which they bad passed that day
    5 KB (851 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...rom the top of one of these piers. Too much of the material, consisting of railway iron and bluestone, was taken off one side, and the cylinder canted over, a ...ight be dealt with on the spot. The principal objection, by the well to do people in Echuca, against the establishment of a local hospital is that it would b
    3 KB (553 words) - 21:00, 20 November 2015
  • ..., provided that mining exemptions were removed from the land. The proposed railway from [[Tallarook|Tallarook]] via [[Yea|Yea]], Molesworth. and [[Doon|Doon]] ...merous industries had sprung up, giving employment to tens of thousands of people, and promising continual employment to the sons and daughters of the indust
    3 KB (522 words) - 21:00, 20 November 2015
  • ...ed out of office to make room for Sir James M Culloch and 'is Hobson's Bay Railway swindle. They must not imagine that the grand Education Act was absolutely ...er was considered as good. and useful a man as the clergyman, and, by some people, even more valuable. The one supplied reading, writing, and arithmetic - us
    3 KB (498 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • The people here cannot understand why all the police and the head-quarters are at Bena ...on, that they should manage to clear out the bank and make prisoners of 14 people, and drive them through the town ship into the bush is almost beyond belief
    6 KB (1,125 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ror. They bolted as hard as they could run, making in the direction of the railway, with the view of stopping the train going to Euroa, and to be carried out All sorts of rumours are afloat here about the Kelly gang. Most people expect them every day. Several suspicious looking characters have been seen
    6 KB (997 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...e towns, and not bind them down too closely to Melbourne instructions. The people here have a better idea how to act than can possibly be had by the staff in ...g in a jocular manner. Whilst driving out of the town, they met numbers of people, the town being exceptionally full, owing to a funeral, and to its being li
    7 KB (1,261 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...as he was going to the station for maintenance. They also imprisoned four railway repairers who came to work near there. They decamped about 9 last night lea ...ank at Euroa is in town and has been interviewed. The bank is close to the railway station,and is only divided from the other buildings in the main street of
    7 KB (1,227 words) - 15:41, 20 November 2015
  • ...on, that they should manage to clear out the bank and make prisoners of 14 people, and drive them through the [[Euroa|township]] into the bush is almost beyo
    4 KB (665 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...e towns, and not bind them down too closely to Melbourne instructions. The people here have a better idea how to act than can possibly be had by the staff in ...bank is situated in the busiest part of [[Euroa|town]], 50 yards from the railway station, and 20 [[Charles De Boos' Seven Creeks hotel|Mr C L]]
    5 KB (807 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ers they expected to take, only to find the whole was a hoax. When the old people were awakened they were astonished to learn what had brought the troopers o ...een placed at different stations along the line, while a great many of the railway employés carry arms, and may be seen utilising their spare time by practic
    7 KB (1,099 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ssue, and closed for two or three days, until further notice. The business people are greatly distressed for want of circulating medium.” With reference to ...akes a number of horrible threats, the principle, of which are against the Railway department, and declares that he will carry them but if justice is not done
    5 KB (750 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...d it not been that there were some dead horses lying there, which deterred people from visiting the spot. Detective Wilson is of opinion that there is no con
    3 KB (479 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...ed in any other country, justice was both delayed and denied to these men. People might talk about popes and priests, and tyrants, but what could be more mon ...remand the accused. He had undertaken to perform Mr Foster’s duty on the railway line, and wished to know to what day it would suit the lawyers engaged for
    9 KB (1,637 words) - 15:39, 20 November 2015
  • ...t nearly across, and see that the road is clear. This whistling is to warn people about to cross to wait till the train has gone over, as no horse could stan ...huca on Thursday, 20th, and found the new bridge quite fit for opening for railway traffic. As the temporary bridge had become very shaky, not positively dang
    5 KB (754 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...law to spend a day with him at his country seat Footscray election. A free railway pass came by return post, which secured civility from the guard, and took m ...g of building a brick house and taking out a license to sell grog, so many people pass this way now.”
    11 KB (2,045 words) - 15:40, 20 November 2015
  • ...s Hall, [[Wangaratta|Wangaratta,]] this evening. There were close upon 200 people present and Mr Wm Orr, the mayor of the borough, occupied the chair. The pr ...eral legislation there should be some definite term when the wishes of the people of the country should by carried out in spite of the opinions of the Upper
    5 KB (910 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...employment, but they also pointed out that while he was working for other people he could not be doing much to improve his own land. For all that, he was pr ...ksmith's shop constitute an average township. On the Murray, and along the railway, the villages may contain a number of houses, but in the midst of the selec
    7 KB (1,227 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ding to the latest telegram, to fire upon the police. The hotel is full of people, who have been rounded up and driven into it by the outlaws, who seem to ha Subsequently Captain Standish received another telegram stating that the people of the township who were bailed up in the hotel by the outlawed gang have b
    6 KB (979 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...he Glenrowan railway station. It is said that Byrne shot the publican. The people who were detained in the hotel by the gang have since been released. Dan Ke
    6 KB (930 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...are frightened to come out for fear the police will kill them. Amongst the people who are in there are:— James and Michael [[Reardon|Reardon]], my husband
    4 KB (696 words) - 15:43, 20 November 2015
  • ...SConst John Kelly|Senior constable Kelly]], with Mr [[Dowsett|Dowsett]] (a railway guard), fired on the ruffian. The contest became one which, from its remark ...pped of his armour, and then became quite submissive, and was borne to the railway station by Sergeant Steele, Constable Dwyer, and two representatives of the
    6 KB (1,052 words) - 15:27, 20 November 2015
  • ...em to advance towards where they were located, but many of the unfortunate people were so terror stricken that they ran hither and thither screaming for merc ...hizers. They were accordingly handcuffed, and taken with the others to the railway station. Young Reardon, who with his father had been confined in the hotel,
    5 KB (868 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...has been most tragic of any in the bushranging annals of the colony. Most people will say that it is high time too, for the murders of the police near Mansf ...equence of the smoke. In a few minutes Superintendent Hare returned to the railway station with a shattered wrist. The first shot fired by the gang had passed
    9 KB (1,564 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...he police to come.’ Inspector Sadleir. –‘You wanted then to kill the people on the train? Kelly.- ‘Yes, of course I did; God help them, but they woul ...,' and I completed my dress ing and followed him out of the house o On the railway line . I found there were seven or eight men standing at the gate looking o
    10 KB (1,888 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...er, living at present with Mr [[Reynolds|Reynolds]] states:- I came to the railway station with Mr. Reynolds’s brother at about 8 o'clock on Sunday night to ...day) morning I came out with my infant child, and got refuge in one of the railway carriages.’
    8 KB (1,484 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...ter’s house, which is close to the railway gates. Then I took him to the railway station, and subsequently, at Mr Hare’s request, I got some ammunition an ...quietly went to the front door, unlocked it, and rushed out. I ran to the railway station, found the train had arrived and the police on the platform; told t
    5 KB (935 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...Mr Berry or Mr Service mentioned. The fight that was going on was all that people cared about, and persons of all conditions, from the highest to the lowest ...Castieau has no immediate need. Shortly after 12 o'clock the crowd at the railway station commenced to increase to such an extent that the traffic manager, M
    4 KB (657 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...alla at the various stations. At all of these through the night numbers of people congregated, and the details of news brought through by a goods train, alth ...ruins of the hotel. The bodies of the three men were at once taken to the railway station.
    4 KB (626 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...erviewed Mrs [[McDonnell's Railway Taven|MacDonnell]], the landlady of the Railway Tavern, at Glenrowan this morning. She stated :- Early on Sunday morning I ...d is God-fearing man. I believe he is too, but he was driven to crime. The people came up in hundreds to the station, and crowded round to see the dead bodie
    7 KB (1,240 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...d Wright|Wild Wright]] stayed at [[McDonnell's Railway Taven|McDonnell’s Railway Tavern]] last night, and seemed much affected by the fearful tragedy that h ...and the ultimate annihilation of the latter. The streets were crowded with people anxious for the latest items of news in connection with the tragedy and eac
    5 KB (722 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...created no small “hubbub” amongst a crowd who followed in the trail to railway station. The news that the hotel had been fired, and Dan Kelly and Hart con
    7 KB (1,172 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...ress, and I completed my dress and followed him out of the house on to the railway line. I found seven or eight men standing at the gate looking over the line ...ed out. We left Dan Kelly and Hart and Byrne in the back room. Some of the people said that Byrne was lying dead in one of the back rooms. ''''''
    10 KB (1,814 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...put the key in the door, unnoticed by the crowd, and ran away, jumping the railway fence, and arriving on the station platform just as Superintendent Hare and ...the special train at 1.30am , and on arriving at Glenrowan, started to the railway gates on the rush being made with Superintendent Hare and party. On getting
    7 KB (1,307 words) - 15:27, 20 November 2015
  • ...but it did no damage. We took his armour off, and and on taking him to the railway station, and searching him, he only had threepence, a silver geneva watch, ...on. We only found one revolver with him. Just as I seized him, the rush of people knocked Kelly and I over, and I received a rather awkward thrust, and his a
    14 KB (2,621 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...sary bloodshed by firing into the public-house, which is full of the towns-people. ...rowan Railway Station. It is said that Byrne shot Jones, the publican. The people who were detained in the hotel by the gang have since been released. Dan Ke
    6 KB (1,031 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...aining outlaws are still in the hut, and said to be dangerously wounded. A railway employee, who was unable to leave the house, was shot by the police. The fi Byrne lies dead in one of the rooms at the railway-station.
    8 KB (1,398 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...reet was thronged with people up to a late hour. Many are collected at the railway station, expecting the arrival of Ned Kelly. He will probably arrive during The news respecting the Kellys is causing great excitement. Lots of people are to be seen at every street corner discussing the news. There is a gener
    9 KB (1,404 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...most convenient place for taking him out of the train, several hundreds of people had assembled to await the arrival of the train from Wodonga. ...was in the van of the train. Despite all the efforts of the police and the railway officials who had been extremely reticent and had adopted every precaution
    9 KB (1,539 words) - 15:30, 20 November 2015
  • ...found the ''debris'' of Jones’s Hotel still smouldering, and a crowd of people fossicking among the ruins for mementoes of the gang. Two brick chimneys we ..., post office, and state school of Glenrowan are about a mile south of the railway station, and the same side as Jones’s Hotel. On the east rise the Greta R
    10 KB (1,740 words) - 15:42, 20 November 2015
  • ...e seemed to flock from the gum trees. There were some of the worst looking people there I ever saw in my life. The two bodies were carried into Mrs [[Margare AMIDST THE WAILING AND GROANING of over 200 people. They were laid down on the table side-by-side - a dreadful sight. Their fr
    9 KB (1,618 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...to the railway station; just after I had seized him the rush of the other people knocked Kelly and me over, and I received a rather awkward twist, and his a
    5 KB (982 words) - 21:03, 20 November 2015
  • ...e [[KellyGang|gang]] stabled at [[McDonnell's Railway Taven|Macdonnell]]'s Railway Hotel, which stands on the east side of the line opposite the scene of the ...of [[Jones' Glenrowan Inn|Jones hotel]] still smouldering, and a crowd of people fossicking among the ruins for mementoes of the gang. Two brick chimneys ar
    7 KB (1,150 words) - 21:03, 20 November 2015
  • ...Plains. She was stolen from him, with other horses found in [[McDonnell's Railway Taven|McDonald's]] stables on Tuesday morning, about a fortnight ago. The m ...athisers a lesson. It is believed they do not intend to go there until the people have recovered from the efforts of the drink they have taken.
    6 KB (1,017 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...to the outlaws were brought into the barracks to-day, and great numbers of people assembled to view them.The horses they had were also examined to discover b ...so against Constable Bracken, who escaped from the hotel; and Dowsett, the railway guard, who is acknowledged by officers and men to have behaved most pluckil
    5 KB (782 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...y Sergeant STEELE and Senior-constable KELLY—Constable MONTEFORD, HEALY, railway-guard DOWSETT, and others, running up at the same time—KELLY asked STEELE ..., it is a matter of astonishment; that the attacking party, the numbers of people in the besieged house, and crowd of spectators, escaped with so few casuali
    9 KB (1,517 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...ne of the most tragic of any in the bushranging annals of the colony. Most people will say that it is high time, too, for the murders of the police near Mans ...equence of the smoke. In a few minutes Superintendent Hare returned to the railway-station with a shattered wrist. The first shot fired by the gang had passed
    9 KB (1,572 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...his armour. Having been divested of his armour he was carried down to the railway station, and placed in a guard’s van. Subsequently he was removed to the ...hen made such rapid progress on the western side of the house that the few people who followed close on the rev. gentleman’s heels dared not attempt to res
    9 KB (1,573 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...police to come.” Inspector Sadleir. — “You wanted, then, to kill the people in the train?” Kelly. — “Yes, of course I did; God help them, but the ...ess;’ and I completed my dress, and followed him out of the house on the railway line. I found seven or eight men standing at the gate looking over the line
    9 KB (1,714 words) - 15:36, 20 November 2015
  • ...as ultimately ascertained that the plan they adopted was to ride up to the railway fence, say, and then dismount, hand over their horses to sympathizers and c ...to make a raid on one the banks in Benalla had their plan succeeded in the railway train. When Ned Kelly was asked whether he intended to rob the Colonial Ban
    12 KB (2,148 words) - 15:32, 20 November 2015
  • ...memento of the notorious outlaws may be imagined when I saw to day several people trying to scrape up a portion of the earth with some drops of his blood on ...r else they would be shot, and he with the rest of them rushed down to the railway station.
    6 KB (1,103 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...olice were absolutely ignorant of the fact that there a number of innocent people in the hotel; but after Mr [[Hare|Hare]] gave the order to stop firing they ...hat it was necessary to the wound bound up. He came to the platform at the railway station, and he remained there for a few minutes during such time a handker
    6 KB (957 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...y. Every two persons you meet in the street are speaking of the Kellys; in railway carriages the conversation is entirely Kelly; the children prattle to each ...spoke to a gentleman travelling through these colonies, and he told me the people in England, or at least those who condescended to trouble themselves with o
    4 KB (717 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...en reticent in the extreme with regard to their movements, but a number of people learnt not only that the notorious outlaw was on his way to Melbourne, but ...hey were unable to leave Glenrowan because they had to keep guard over the railway officials in order to ensure, as they thought, the success of the scheme. 
    5 KB (876 words) - 15:40, 20 November 2015
  • <span id="_Toc43994061">[[#_Toc43994061|]]</span> [[../../people/peH_J/harePsup.html|'''Superintendent Hare's Report''']] ...lerks know anything about it, so I presume it must have been sent from the railway telegraph office, as Mr. Sadleir knew nothing whatever about it. ...
    6 KB (1,006 words) - 15:40, 20 November 2015
  • <span id="_Toc43994061">[[#_Toc43994061|]]</span> [[../../people/peH_J/harePsup.html|'''Superintendent Hare's Report''']] continued “At 1 o'clock I went to the railway station, had the horses put in the trucks, and waited the arrival of the sp
    7 KB (1,233 words) - 15:28, 20 November 2015
  • <span id="_Toc43994061">[[#_Toc43994061|]]</span> [[../../people/peH_J/harePsup.html|'''Superintendent Hare's Report''']] continued ...atform I was staggering, and the gentlemen of the press assisted me into a railway carriage. I intended to run down to Benalla to have my arm dressed, and to
    6 KB (1,088 words) - 15:39, 20 November 2015
  • ...id was to give me his revolver, as I was unarmed, and went with him to the railway gate-house, where Mr Stanistreet, the station-master, lived.  When we reac We all made straight for the railway gate, going out in front of the hotel; through this gate some four or five
    9 KB (1,582 words) - 15:39, 20 November 2015
  • ...ople about the railway station that he was going to feed the horses in the railway paddock. He accordingly went down in that direction, entered the bush, and
    6 KB (1,052 words) - 15:43, 20 November 2015
  • ...a little ahead. The prisoner Kelly came to us just as we were nearing the railway gate, and, presenting a revolver, said “The station is bailed up,“ Pris ...erald''' reporter met me at the railway station. Of course, in these cases people are not always ready to wait for intelligence. Other reporters came over to
    5 KB (961 words) - 15:45, 20 November 2015
  • ...ople about the railway station that he was going to feed the horses in the railway paddock; he accordingly went down in that direction, entered the bush, and
    7 KB (1,193 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...g. Superintendent [[Hare|Hare]] being in charge of the party. We heard the railway line had been torn up. The special train in which we were stopped at Benall '''Mr Gaunson''': So you fired into the house where there were innocent people.
    8 KB (1,338 words) - 21:19, 20 November 2015
  • ...’s station, and Mr Tennant, who was on horseback, went ahead to open the railway gates. The prisoner at this moment rode up to us, presented a revolver, and ...I could not swear that I heard him mention any particular constable. Other people were asking him as to the shooting of the police, and he said that the gun
    5 KB (926 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...ward was descended direct from the King of the Cannibal Islands. There are people in the world—aye, plenty of them—who would believe such things if they ...ategory:Newspaper]] [[Category:press report]] [[Category:1880]] [[Category:railway]] [[Category:travel from Beechworth to Melbourne]] [[Category:history]]
    6 KB (1,029 words) - 15:36, 20 November 2015
  • ...rowan. I arrived at Glenrowan on the Monday afternoon. Saw prisoner at the railway station, and recognised him. ...ender.” He said that Lonigan was struck in the head and killed. He said, People called it murder, but he had never murdered anyone in his life. I said,...
    7 KB (1,308 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...and they then hastened off before daylight to Glenrowan, a lonely wayside railway station, for the purpose of wrecking a special train with police which they ...all the people there, and imprisoned them in Jones’s Hotel, tore up the railway line, and awaited the passing of the suspected train.  They also clad them
    4 KB (660 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...Kelly.”  He took them to the railway station, where there were several people.  Mrs Jones and another woman and the station-master were there.  Ned Kel ...me the one you have, as it is the key of the bar.”  Mrs Jones kept the people from going away by locking the door.  When the police came, Mrs Jones call
    5 KB (882 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • By inserting this in the columns of your valuable paper the attention of the railway authorities may be drawn to this inconvenient coach monopoly, and much irri ...trary to the genius of Victoria to permit even free trade among coaches at railway stations.
    6 KB (876 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...he board on the transactions between Messrs BRAIN and SONS and Mr RG FORD, railway en0meer Tho Service Government showed how to do justice to the country A co The evidence taken by the commission will no doubt be valuable, but people will have to sift it for themselves. Neither the police nor the public can
    6 KB (1,071 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • The women immediately afterwards passed out. Challenged the people passing out to see none of them were the outlaws. Mr. Hare also states he l ...me. Subsequently, at half past 10 am , he sent for me. Went to him at the railway station. We had a long conversation. Ned Kelly had then been taken prisoner
    8 KB (1,459 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • Benalla Railway Station, June 2, 1880. .... Ned Kelly frequently spoke of me as if he had a down on me. He told many people he would have me and the black trackers. After I returned to Benalla I was
    7 KB (1,209 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...ceived, and Mr Woods, then Minister of Railways, took steps to protect the railway, setting men to watch it. The cause of the stoppage of telegraphic communic ...hoolmaster of Glenrowan, who had informed him the outlaws had taken up the railway line, and had possession of Glenrowan, and were &quot;going to catch the in
    7 KB (1,347 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...res. He did not know of any want of co-operation between the telegraph and railway officials. The telegraph officers were at first unaware of the nature of th Witness – That it was better to proceed quietly, and lull the people into a sense of security than to make rushes or raids.
    6 KB (1,047 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...to come out, or they would be shot. This warning was thrice given, and the people came out in great confusion. There was no firing at this time. Not a shot w
    7 KB (1,157 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...64 prisoners with death if they tried to escape. Heard prisoner say to the people about 2 o'clock on the Monday morning that no one should leave until Ned Ke Another railway employé corroborated this evidence in great part. '''Mrs Reardon''' said t
    5 KB (817 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...n the north side. It was a revolving rifle. The blood was quite fresh. Saw people passing in and out from the kitchen into the main building. Heard Mrs Jones
    7 KB (1,255 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...el. Heard what he thought was Mr O'Connor's voice, calling on any innocent people to come out of the hotel, and witness repeated the summons. Witness conside ...fired low at him, just as he was taking aim at some people standing at the railway station, and hit him on the leg, and witness's second shot hit him on the h
    7 KB (1,161 words) - 21:03, 20 November 2015
  • ...en firing into it. Messrs. Sadleir and O'Connor called out to the innocent people to throw them- selves flat on the ground. At half past 6 o'clock a.m. it wa ...mmediately after Ned's capture that he had kicked Ned. Witness went to the railway station to put on Ned's armour, with the object of rushing the hotel. But h
    7 KB (1,221 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...ld. The country was difficult to search, principally owing to the class of people living there. Bushrangers could not stay very long in the ranges without co ...itness understood from a remark made when the boy Jones came out, that the people in the hotel were armed. Witness and Edward Kelly had several shots at each
    8 KB (1,368 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...leir go into the field towards the railway gate. Saw him afterwards at the railway station when Ned Kelly was captured, endeavouring to get from Ned a sign wh ...t might not be made known amongst the people who were now assembled at the railway station. When the prisoners came out of the hotel, it was feared that the r
    5 KB (914 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...was a bright, clear, moonlight morning. Heard some of the shots strike the railway fence. When they returned to the hotel she was the only woman in the house. ...her life, as she was but a woman. Ultimately Guard Dowsett took her to the railway station. The shot which struck her son had not been extracted yet, and her
    7 KB (1,333 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...men should be sent out to make themselves acquainted with the district and people. Believed Aaron Sherritt was not faithful to the police. Saw Steele fire at ...e first rush for the hotel, witness did not see Mr O'Connor go outside the railway fence. A shot was fired from the hotel after 2pm . The bodies of Dan Kelly
    6 KB (1,085 words) - 21:05, 20 November 2015
  • ...uot; the great majority of the residents &quot;are respectable law abiding people.&quot; Altogether, the picture drawn is charming. So far from the inhabitan ...says that the residents in the Kelly country are respectable, law abiding people, but if this is the case, how was it that four ruffians were able to live a
    7 KB (1,130 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...nst Police Sergeant [[Steele|Steele]] of recklessly firing at defenceless, people: - She did so and went in the direction of the railway, when immediately two shots were fired, as she states at her. At this time
    5 KB (885 words) - 21:06, 20 November 2015
  • ...River, and what the farmers there are now most interested in is obtaining railway facilities for the conveyance of their produce to market. At the invitation of the [[Moyhu|Moyhu]] Railway League Mr Graves M L A started on Saturday for a three days trip to the Upp
    8 KB (1,303 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • 87 You say he did not warn the railway telegraph people, and so a splendid chance was lost to capture the Kellys?- Yes.
    4 KB (764 words) - 21:02, 20 November 2015
  • ...ening. I found that evening the town of Benalla, and even people along the railway line, in a state of great excitement. When I reached the station Mr. Sadlei
    4 KB (664 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...he would or not. I know we always met with every facility from the railway people. ...or night?- Yes, at all hours. There were certain times fixed at which the Railway Department's lines were at our disposal-extra hours
    5 KB (819 words) - 21:02, 20 November 2015
  • ...on the River Murray at Baumgarten's and the first positive citing; at the railway bridge in Wangaratta. The lack of an adequate police response. ...help the police in their search for the '''KellyGang'''. He also discussed people who were engaged as agents and his contact with members of the Kelly family
    8 KB (1,329 words) - 15:32, 20 November 2015
  • ...ce farmers and others to assist; and the men were doing the same, inducing people to see me, or making engagements to come and meet me. I always found them a ...a Robbery|December the 12th 1878]], the day I was relieved. The [[Railways|railway]] charges were £703 15s. 7d. -that was on account of the first reinforceme
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  • ...eived throughout, economy was enforced in every direction. Not one special railway train has been used; and in view of the search being protracted, every effo ...given by the outlaws, the skill of the police, and the disposition of the people to aid the police.
    14 KB (2,279 words) - 21:03, 20 November 2015
  • ...a threshing machine pulled down the telegraph wires in passing across the railway line. After this appearance of activity on the part of the police, informat
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  • ...mention in my evidence yesterday-I said in my evidence I was to be at the railway station at [[Essendon|Essendon]] at ten o'clock. I arrived there at a quart ...ing him; in fact, I saw none to speak to, none of the women, or any of the people that came out at all, to my knowledge, to speak to the whole time. I only k
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  • 12 KB (2,272 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...outlaws are there, and I have just escaped from them they have a number of people in the hotel.” I called upon the men; I said, “Come along, men, here we
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  • ...lly]]'s voice” Suddenly the firing cessed, and I imagined that I saw the people going into the house. I am not quite certain of that; I imagine that; that ...I never moved from the spot until the firing had ceased. I returned to the railway station, and on my way there I saw Mr. [[O'Connor|O'Connor]] coming up, run
    7 KB (1,305 words) - 21:04, 20 November 2015
  • ...remain as I was. About July of the year 1864, just at the time the Echuca railway was being opened (I was at the time an inspector of police in Melbourne), I ...at the New South Wales people did not take away the boats of the Victorian people. I was to go and protect the boats against being seized by the New South Wa
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  • ...e and I were leaving. We got to the [[Benalla|Benalla]] [[Railway Stations|railway]] station at about eight o'clock in the evening, and were getting our ticke ...nd enquired if anything was known to be wrong along the line—that is the railway line. I found passengers who had come all the way from Melbourne . At most
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  • ...uld explain how; and this was at the time when dynamite for blowing up the railway was first talked of. On the next day we heard authentic information that, o
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.,''']] sworn and examined . ...h wires, and took them up with him. On arriving at the [[Benalla|Benalla]] railway station Mr. Wyatt met Mr. Nicolson and Mr. [[Sadleir|Sadleir]].” The stat
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.,''']] '''sworn and examined''' ...l inspected by the [[KellyGang|Kellys]], from the place where they had the people stuck up at the time, and it appears that Watt a few minutes after that was
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.''']] '''giving evidence''' ...round the curve then?— Yes, and without an upset, and I came back to the railway station. When there, the first question I asked Mr. Gorman was, “Is Watt
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.''']] '''giving evidence''' ...e line is cut, all five wires; four of the Government wires and one of the railway line are cut, not broken. The Kellys are about. Now you know as much as I k
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] ...ow Mr. [[Nicolson|Nicolson]] personally, and I had expressly cautioned the railway guard, the driver, and the engineman to give no information as to what they
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.''']] '''giving evidence''' ...n]], got down and examined. Found all wires (4 of Government line and I of railway line) cut through with powerful nippers, and both lines dismounted, one for
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.''']] '''giving evidence''' ...putting horses into the trucks; the other was a blunder on the part of the railway authorities. They brought up the trucks in such a manner that it made it ex
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] ...yGang|Kellys]]) are upon grass-fed horses”—I had learned that from the people of the station— “and only one of them is shod; on the other hand, your
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  • When Mr Wyatt arrived at the Benalla railway station he had a conversation with Nicolson in the ladies waiting room why? ...n and saw that the telegraph wires had been torn down on both sides of the railway line near Faithfull's Creek Station.
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M.''']] '''giving evidence''' ...at. I have been lately informed that Mr. John Woods, the Commissioner of [[Railway Stations|Railways]] at that time, when he heard of the breakage of the line
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] ...wire and the ordinary wire work from the same station in town?— No; the railway wire was set up in Mr. John Woods' time—they are separate services, and w
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] <span id="rc2318">[[#rc2318|2318]]</span> It would be with regard to the railway line, there being no station between those two?— I know, as a matter of f
    6 KB (1,021 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] ...r did not take the steps necessary at the time of your meeting them at the railway?— No. I have stated that Captain Standish is wrong in saying that.
    7 KB (1,190 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wyattMag.htm|'''Alfred Wyatt, P.M. '''giving evidence'''''']] <span id="rc2432">[[#rc2432|2432]]</span> ''By Mr. Sadleir''. —Was there a railway [[Telegraph|telegraph]] office at [[Violet Town|Violet Town]] at the time o
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  • ...to rush yet; stand back and keep your ground.” At this time the crowd of people near the platform were urging the police to make a rush, and remarking upon ...all attention to that of Mr. Jesse [[Dowsett|Dowsett]], an employee on the railway, who, armed with a revolver only, stood manfully to his ground in the captu
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  • ...member a number of them saying they would take down the hoardings from the railway station, and go up to the place as if they were armed?— I never heard of ...objection was lest the fire should not take, and we should have those two people, who were innocent, as a further difficulty in our final rush. My determina
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  • ...ct has been most beneficial to the public peace. I had the thanks of those people since, both for that and for following a fair moderate course towards them; ...field altogether—he found it too hot and went away to Mr. [[McDonnell's Railway Taven|McDonnell]]'s, and I wish to add further that I do not know him and h
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  • ..., and made arrangements to return back to Mount Blowhard to interview some people that we were of opinion would give information, and could if they only plea ...ased several boxes of sardines, and some horse-feed, and crossed under the railway in the Blind Bridge, between Everton and [[Beechworth|Beechworth]], going i
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  • ...ut twelve o'clock at night when I first received the intelligence from the railway porter—he came and knocked me up—I was in bed. I was very cautious in o ...at time at night?— Different hours, because there was sometimes a lot of people knocking about the road, going backwards and forwards to a bit of a shanty
    6 KB (1,076 words) - 21:00, 20 November 2015
  • ...pan> How many rounds of ammunition did you fire?— I fired more after the people came out than before. <span id="rc3927">[[#rc3927|3927]]</span> In which direction from the railway station?— As you go up the line this way towards Beechworth. Here is Jone
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  • <span id="rc3959">[[#rc3959|3959]]</span> Did you hear him call upon the people in the house to come out?— Yes. ...ease firing, and the men did cease firing for a considerable time, and the people all came out in a body.
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  • ...been stationed at [[Glenrowan|Glenrowan]] three months as a porter on the railway, they told me. They called me all the names they could, and said I would ha <span id="rc4538">[[#rc4538|4538]]</span> Are there always a lot of people stopping at Lloyd's?— Yes, strangers.
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  • [[../../people/peU_Z/wilsonJacobFA.html|'''Jacob Wilson''']] '''giving evidence''' ...are that [[Stephens|Stephens]] was a man very well known as working at the railway?— Yes, but I did not know that then.
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  • Who worked under cover at the Glenrowan railway station? ...ommission]] [[Category:May 1505]] [[Category:KellyGang aims to map all the people places events and things]] [[Category:Royal Commission]] [[Category:O'Conno
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  • ...rwards during the day?— I saw him several times going up and down to the railway station. ...ee different places to the west—that would be on the opposite end to the railway station.
    7 KB (1,085 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...of the outlaws at the house?— It was one of them that came out after the people surrendered—I believe it was after; he came out in the back yard at the w ...945|4945]]</span> Whom did you got your ammunition from?— We went to the railway station; Mr. Sadleir told us where to go.
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  • <span id="rc5000">[[#rc5000|5000]]</span> How long after the [[Sympathizers|people]] left the [[Jones' Glenrowan Inn|hotel]]?— I am not positive whether it ...—From your position, could you see the front door—that door facing the railway?— Yes.
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  • [[../../people/peD_G/faulkinerAPmc.html|'''Constable Alfred John Faulkiner '''giving evide ...Ranges|Warby ranges]]. This information I believe was given by one of the railway officials to Constable Twomey, who was stationed at Wangaratta. He came to
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  • What happened to the '''KellyGang''' after they crossed under the railway bridge in Wangaratta on 3/11/1878 and what happened to the police hunt for ...mission]] [[Category:April 1511]] [[Category:KellyGang aims to map all the people places events and things]] [[Category:Royal Commission]] [[Category:O'Conno
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  • ...the place that is unprotected.” We then extended in file in front of the railway gate and in front of the house—[[Jones' Glenrowan Inn|Jones's house]]—a ...from the outlaws supposed to be, because there were no others in after the people got out.
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  • ...rrounding land between the front of the hotel and the railway line and the railway platform?— Yes, except there is a creek or gully. You could not see into 6079 And also you could see the railway platform?— Yes, the station-house.
    5 KB (880 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...d received from parties who had been robbed?— He said he heard it at the railway station; and I said, “You have very little information;” and he said he ...="rc6222">[[#rc6222|6222]]</span> Would you be surprised to learn that the people at Euroa had informed him early in the evening that seeing no lights in the
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  • ...dy calling upon the Kellys' prisoners to come out?— Yes, I heard several people calling on them to come out. ...id="rc6706">[[#rc6706|6706]]</span> Where did you go from there?— To the railway station
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  • ...ss?— No, I did not see much of them after that. I saw Mr. Sadleir on the railway station, sending telegrams away and so forth. ...ou said you saw him when the people came out of the house; did you see the people coming out?— Yes.
    6 KB (957 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • .../span> You had been three quarters of an hour there before you went to the railway station, you remained there half an hour or more, now just see if you remem ...]</span> How long was it from the first volley fired until you came to the railway station for ammunition?— Perhaps half an hour or three quarters of an hou
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  • <span id="rc7048">[[#rc7048|7048]]</span> Which side of the fence from the railway station?— The Benalla side. ...you hear anybody call out to them to cease firing?— I heard two or three people call out to cease firing.
    6 KB (944 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • <span id="rc7749">[[#rc7749|7749]]</span> How did you people employ your time?— We passed our time very miserably, I assure you. ...say that?— To the best of my belief I did. I told Bracken also that the railway line was broken.
    6 KB (1,064 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...was taken out of his bed by the '''KellyGang''' to assist in breaking the railway line. ...e horse of a friend, and he went down, and Sullivan was coming through the railway fence. After a conversation with Sullivan Ned Kelly came up and put a revol
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  • ''Mr.'' ''Sadleir'' — I brought a rope from the [[Benalla|Benalla]] railway station on purpose, with that object in view, but when we looked we saw the ...attempt was made by the captives to escape from the house, were any of the people fired on by the police?— Not that I am aware of. They escaped on the end
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  • ...top of the house, to let them see we were round there at that side. We saw people passing in and out from the kitchen to the hotel, and heard Mrs. Jones talk ...Constable [[Const W Phillips|Phillips]] came round to the front from the railway station, like from that direction [''pointing to map''].
    6 KB (1,004 words) - 21:02, 20 November 2015
  • ...ng terms, 'More in front of the house. I was above the corner, west of the railway-west-in a line with the front of the house, because they fell back to the w Mrs Stainstreet was within range of the people at the Inn. She did not want to go to McDonald's. Where was OConnor in rela
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  • ...s Mr. Sadleir was coming down, calling out– “If there are any innocent people inside come out, and you will not be fired on.” I repeated that several t ...|9025]]</span> When you did that you would be the nearest constable to the people inside?— Certainly.
    8 KB (1,422 words) - 21:02, 20 November 2015
  • ...of them.” He was then on sideways to me, and he was taking an aim at the railway station when I fired the first shot at him. ...="rc9037">[[#rc9037|9037]]</span> Was he firing at the railway station?— People collected about at the fence.
    6 KB (1,101 words) - 21:03, 20 November 2015
  • ...288]]</span> Where were the people that were looking at the capture at the railway station?— Here– [''pointing to the plan''].....
    6 KB (966 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...and missed him, was there a probability of his shooting the people at the railway station?— No, certainly not. It would have gone more towards the point of <span id="rc9298">[[#rc9298|9298]]</span> Had you not to carry him to the railway station?— Yes; he was shot in the leg and groin with buck-shot. He was wa
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  • ...olice astray and was a sympathizer with the Kellys, and I questioned those people, and they gave me the reasons. ...en fired from the house, I had heard. We ran to the house, and down to the railway station.....
    7 KB (1,188 words) - 21:02, 20 November 2015
  • ...07">[[#rc9407|9407]]</span> Where were you then?— On the platform of the railway station. The whole of us walked down the platform–the reporters of the pr <span id="rc9412">[[#rc9412|9412]]</span> Nearer the railway station?— Yes; he was in the open. I got up on the road leading through t
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  • ...I told him the words Mr. Sadleir had given me, and not to fire low, as the people were lying flat on the ground. ...did you know that?— I heard Mr. Sadleir calling out “All you innocent people throw yourselves flat on the ground, and you will not be shot”–that was
    6 KB (975 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • ...h out of the front with their hands up, crying out, “We are all innocent people; we are innocent–we are prisoners.” ...of it then that I would do so. I ran down to do so; and when I went to the railway station, Mr. Craven, of the Commercial hotel, Benalla, and Mr. [[Benalla|Ba
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  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' ...dark shade, under the verandah. The police now took cover, some behind the railway fence, others behind trees, &amp;c., as near the hotel as they could find i
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  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' ...only two, Constable Canny, and Jimmy, the black tracker. I remained at the railway crossing until the train arrived at the station. The newly-arrived police c
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  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' <span id="rc9688">[[#rc9688|9688]]</span> Is that almost in a line with the railway gates, crossing from one side to the other?— No, it is the wicket-gate ne
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  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' ...a large amount of firing from the immediate front of the hotel–from the railway side, towards the hotel?— There was at the first shooting a lot of shots.
    6 KB (921 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' ..., because I had just run a cartridge out of my rifle on account of so many people being about; and some fellow said, “Do not be so smart unloading your rid
    6 KB (988 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015
  • [[../../people/peD_G/gascoignePmc.html|'''Const Charles Gascoigne''']] '''giving evidence' ...— I believe he was at the Wangaratta side, more towards that side on the railway side. I could not say whether he was on the Wangaratta side, over the fence
    6 KB (948 words) - 21:01, 20 November 2015

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