Ned Kelly, part II
With his first shot Ned Kelly sent a rifle bullet through Hares wrist, but a bullet also struck Ned in the forearm. This was the most decisive shot in the whole battle, for
it prevented Ned from using his Spencer repeating rifle, which must be supported by the left arm. He was also struck in the upper part of the arm and also in the foot.
Most fatal of all, the heavy armour destroyed the outlaws freedom of movement.
Ned bleeding freely, hopped around to the north side of the hotel. The other three went through the front door into the hotel. It was not Neds idea that his gang should
take shelter behind the people imprisoned there. Then Ned decided on a bold stroke to draw the police away from the hotel. He staggered into the stockyard and tried
to mount a horse, but it was impossible in his armour, so he lurched away into the bush where his grey mare was tethered. There he sat down and tried to unfasten his
armour, but because of his injured hands he could not get the bolts undone. After much struggling, he eased the helmet off his head. Next he tried to load the rifle, but
could not do that, either. He decided to lie hidden in the bush for a while, so he untethered his mare and let her go. This was a bad decision, for Ned now had no way
of retreat.
Feeling very weak, he put on his helmet again. He lay, half fainting from loss of blood. Footsteps were coming towards him! Would he be found? But the policemen
were thinking of only surrounding the hotel, and did not look in the bushes where Ned lay hidden.
Kellys Courage
After lying encased in his armour on the frosty ground for three and a half hours, Ned came fully to his senses and decided to return to battle. Desperately wounded as
he was, weakened by loss of blood, his limbs frozen and encumbered by nearly a hundredweight of iron, he managed to stand up and walk not away from the fight,
in the direction of safety for himself, but back to the hotel to rescue his mates.
It was at that moment and by that decision, that Ned Kellys name was fixed in Australias lore as a symbol of reckless courage.
As game as Ned Kelly
This was the supreme moment of his life, and perhaps he knew it. It was one of the policemen who first noticed the seemingly gigantic figure lurching among the
saplings. In the mist and grey overcoat over the armour, and wearing the rounded helmet with a slit in it, appeared to be about nine feet tall. The police opened fire,
aiming at the head and chest. The bullets struck with a metallic clang. The tall figure staggered at each impact but continued to advance. A loud muffled voice came
from the slit in the helmet.
Fire away, you cant hurt me!
The police closed in rapidly, firing at the outlaws legs and arms, and a charge of gunshot fired from Sergeant Steele finally brought him crashing to the ground. The
police seized his wrist and wrenched the revolver from him. Then they pulled off his helmet.
Oh my God, its Ned!
They were more than sixty yards from the hotel where Dan and Hart could have fired upon them with deadly effect if they had chosen. But those two dazed and
drink-stupefied youths did not take this opportunity of helping Ned. And so the outlaw was carried to the railway station and placed on a mattress in the station
masters office. There the police tried to persuade Ned to make his mates surrender but he knew they never would, and there was nothing he could do.
At about 10a.m. after the police had been firing at the hotel for about seven hours, the order was given to cease fire. A strange silence settled on the scene. No shots
came from the hotel. Then a loud voice called from the police positions : we will give you ten minutes. All innocent person t come out.
After about three minutes the people who had been kept prisoner at the hotel came out. Everyone was identified, searched and questioned, and the police learnt for the
first time that Joe Burne was dead. The other two, still wearing their armour, were apparently quiet and miserable and talking together in low tones. They knew that
Ned was captured and that their own position was hopeless
The police now decided to set fire to the hotel and smoke them out. Under a heavy burst of fire, a policeman ran forward with a bundle of straw and placed it against
the weatherboard wall. The rifle-fire ceased. As the flames licked at the wall, fanned by the southerly breeze, a hush of awe fell on the spectators. Now or never the
outlaws must emerge.
Dean Gibney, a Roman Catholic priest, who happened to be on the train, and who had already spoken with Ned, now showed great personal heroism. May God
protect me, he said Im going into that house, to give those men a chance to have a little time to prepare themselves before they die.
And as the flames crackles and black smoke billowed, he walked forward alone to the burning building. In the name of God, he called out to the outlaws, I am a
Catholic priest, do not shoot me.
Inside he ran quickly from room to room. He saw the dead body of Joe Burne, and there in a little room at the back he saw two bodies lying side by side on the floor.
Their armour was off and laid beside them. They were Dan Kelly and Steve Hart. They had been dead for some time and it appeared that they had committed suicide.
The priest emerged and told the police what he had found. A few minutes later the hotel became a raging mass of flames.
So the Kelly Gang was ended in that strange battle which lasted for twelve and a half hours on Monday, 28th June 1880.
Neds Trail
Ned Kelly was taken by the police to the Melbourne Gaol hospital, and carefully nursed back to health. On 28th October 1880, he was put on trial. A jury was chosen,
evidence was heard, and the twelve good men and true gave their verdict guilty.
The judge, Sir Redmond Barry, asked the formal question, Prisoner at the bar, have you anything to say why sentence of death should not be passed upon you?
Ned looked at the judge thoughtfully.
Well, he said, it is rather too late for me to speak now. I wish I had insisted on examining the witnesses myself. I could have thrown a different light on the case
but I thought if I did so it would look like bravado and flashiness.
This interruption of the death sentence was something quite new. Ned continued to argue quietly and coolly with the judge. At last he said, A day will come, at a
bigger Court than this, when we shall see which is right and which is wrong. No matter how long a man lives, he has to come to judgement somewhere. If I had
examined the witnesses, I would have stopped a lot of the reward, I assure you!
After a few more exchanges, the judge decided the fantastic argument to a close. He looked at his notes, prepared in advance, and read in solemn tones a homily on
the miseries of an outlaws lot and on Neds misdeeds. He ended on pronouncing the sentence, You will be taken from here to the place from whence you came, and
thence to a place of execution, and there you will be hanged by the neck until you be dead, and may the Lord have mercy on your soul!
Ned looked fixedly at the ageing judge. I will add something to that, he said, as the court listened in awe-struck silence. I will see you where I am going!
Many people remembered these words when Sir Redmond Barry was suddenly taken ill two days after Ned was hanged, and died soon afterwards.
The date fixed on Neds execution was 11 November 1880. On the day before his brother and sisters were allowed to visit him, and after this, his mother. Her last
words to him were: Mind you die like a Kelly, Ned!.
The morning of Thursday, 11th November, dawned fine and clear. Ned was taken to the gallows. As the hangman adjusted the noose Ned looked round him
resignedly and said, Ah well, I suppose it had to come to this!.
A white cap was put over his head and face. As it was pulled down over his eyes Ned spoke three words, with a sigh:
Such is Life
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