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Royal Commission report 14/6/1881

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Story of the KellyGang - the Royal Commission 14/6/1881

[[Royal Commission report 9/6/1881|day before]] [[Royal Commission report 15/6/1881|next day]]

{| class="wikitable"

| Summary of the evidence on day 29 of the hearings

|-

| Question number

| Date

| Witness

|-

| 11432 - 11540

| '''14/6/1881'''

| '''[[#oC|Insp O'Connor]]'''

|-

|  

|  

|  

|-

| [[Royal Commission report 29/3/1881|1066 - 1103]]

[[Royal Commission report 30/3/1881|1104 - 1234]]

[[Royal Commission report 31/3/1881|1235 - 1237]]

[[Royal Commission report 15/6/1881|11541 - 11543]]

[[Royal Commission report 15/6/1881|11764 - 11865]]

[[Royal Commission report 16/6/1881|11980 -11996]]

| 29/3/1881

30/3/1881

31/3/1881

15/6/1881

15/6/1881

16/6/1881

| See these dates for other evidence given by Insp O'Connor

|-

|}

{| class="wikitable"

| Appendix

| Title

|-

| 20

| Minutes of Proceedings at Meetings Held by the Royal Commission

|-

|  

|  

|-

|}

'''Summary of the evidence on day 29 of the hearings'''

== 14/6/1881 Insp O'Connor continued his evidence - some brief highlights ==

The Commission was concerned to know Insp O'Connor's position before he took up a position with the Victorian police. He was a Sun Inspector of native police in Queensland. He explained how the native police system worked there.

In mid June it was decided that the Queensland trackers would return home. The Royal Commission examined the politics surrounding that decision in some detail.

O'Connor clashed with Standish. See the text of O'Connor's letter of 7 September 1880.

At about this time he also had problems with the Queensland Government and police. He could not get the papers he wanted to defend himself before the Royal Commission.

"I consider, in a disciplined force, that is a most disgraceful course to adopt, actually to go behind me and induce one of my men to leave, and my Government thought so also. There is some mystery connected with it."

O'Connor did not want any redress at all from the Royal Commission. He only wanted it to be plainly seen by the public and everybody else that Captain Standish, from the time he refused O'Connor to go out to the hut business, treated him, officially, most discourteously, up to the time of the Glenrowan business.

"O'Connor, I could not make out what was the matter-Standish was writing to us wanting to take the men under his own command, and dispense with you-that was what we inferred from it, and we did not know what you had done."

What happened when O'Connor got back to Brisbane after Glenrowan?

What did O'Connor think of Sup Hare's Glenrowan statement?

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'''The [[Royal Commission report 9/6/1881|day before]] . . . the [[Royal Commission report 15/6/1881|next day]] . . . Royal Commission [[Royal Commission Index|index]]'''

[[Category:Royal Commission]] [[Category:November 1614]] [[Category:Royal Commission]] [[Category:O'Connor]] [[Category:history]]

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