Talk:Bushranger

Latest comment: 1 year ago by 67.247.227.132 in topic Lacks explanation making a confusing statement

Bushrangers are only in Australia

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Bushrangers are only in Australia because the woods as they would say in America in Australia they call it bush and rangers where bad people that either that got hanged or shot in prison and that is that why they call them bushrangers

"they are held in some esteem in some quarters, due to the harshness, pro-squatter outlook and anti-Catholicism of the colonial authorities whom they embarrassed and the romanticism of the lawlessness they represented."

Is this supposed to mean due to the harshness of the bush, the pro-squatter outlook of people who hold bushrangers in esteem, and that the colonial authorities were catholic (or anti-catholic)? --Nectarflowed 09:55, 11 Nov 2004 (UTC)

It's meaning the colonial authorities were harsh, supported squatters (menaing if you bought land you couldn't guarantee you'd get to keep it), and were anti-Catholic (and anti-Irish). I think. The only thing I'm sure of is about the anti-catholicism of (primarily British/royalist) authorities--ZayZayEM 12:09, 17 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
It would be useful to cross-link this section to Social Bandit, which covers the broader thing of crims being made into local heroes. Obviously there are a few big edits in the works so I leave it to you guys to do it best; plus, I'm lazy. 19:56, 10 March 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.242.50.195 (talk)

ACOTF

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OK, so it's been selected. Anyone got any guidance for what this article needs to become? personally, I think it should not be dominated by a list, but I'm all for List of Bushrangers being created with a very brief summary of what a bushranger is at the top, and some pictures of some of them.Garrie 04:55, 17 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

I think the history section need some expansion, with a better picture provided of the historical context which is too vague for a reader unfamiliar with the subject. Some more solid data regarding prevalence, laws, punishments etc would also be useful. I think it is very important that there is more thorough analysis of the public attitude towards them, the sympathy and the romanticisation as this remains a part of australian culture to this day. The current passage which deals with this has no citations and contains weasel words. The entertainment section should include some further analysis of how this image has been sustained. baby_ifritah 03:49, 19 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
List needs to be booted out soon.--ZayZayEM 05:54, 20 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Is this better?

Notable bushrangers
Name Lived Area of activity Fate
Mary Ann Bugg1834–1867Hunter Valley-Tamworth-New EnglandPneumonia
Joe Byrne, one of the Kelly Gang1857 - 1880North East VictoriaShot by police
Martin Cashc. 1808–1877TasmaniaPrison sentence, released after 13 years
John Caesar1764–1796Sydney areaShot
John Donohue, known as Bold Jack Donohuec. 1806–1830Sydney areaShot by police
John Dunn1846–1866Western New South WalesHanged
John Francisc. 1825–?Victoria Gold Fields (1853)Released after giving Queen's Evidence
John Fuller, known as Dan Mad Dog Morganc. 1830–1865New South WalesShot
Frank Gardinerc. 1829–c. 1904Western New South WalesPrison sentence, then moved to California
John Gilbert1842–1865Western New South WalesShot by police
Ben Hall1837–1865Western New South WalesShot by police
Steve Hart, one of the Kelly GangNorth East VictoriaShot by police
Joseph Bolitho Johns, known as Moondyne Joec. 1828–1900Western AustraliaNumerous Prison sentences and died a free man
Henry Johnson, known as Harry Power1819–1891North East VictoriaPrison sentence, released
Dan Kelly, brother of Nedc. 1854-1880North East VictoriaShot by police
Ned Kellyc. 1854–1880North East VictoriaHanged
James Alpin McPherson, known as The Wild Scotchman1842-1895Gin Gin, QueenslandDied a free man
George Melville1822–1853Hanged
Musquitoc. 1780–1825TasmaniaHanged
Johnny O'Meally1843–1864Western New South WalesShot by farmer
John Paid, known as Wolloo Jackfrom Stanwell Park terrorised Sydney area in the 1820s
Frank Pearson, known as Captain Starlight1837-1899New South walesAccidental(?) poisoning (while working as a WA public servant)
Sam Poo?–1865Coonabarabran, New South WalesHanged
Billy Roberts (probably), known as Jack the RammerSouth Eastern New South Wales (1834)
Codrington RevingstoneSouth-West Victoria (1850)
Andrew George Scott, known as Captain Moonlite1842-1880near Gundagai, New South WalesHanged
Owen Suffolk1829 - ?VictoriaDied in prison?
Frederick Ward, known as Captain Thunderbolt1833–1870Hunter Valley-Tamworth-New England (1864–1870)Shot by police
William Westwood, known as Jackey Jackey1820–1846Hanged
Jimmy Governor1875–1901New South WalesHanged

Garrie 05:52, 24 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Sources

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I think some of the internal links should be reconsidered as they are not specifically relevant. A couple of suggestions - move convicts link to convictism in australia, move railways to History of rail transport in Australia. thoughts on this??? baby_ifritah 04:06, 19 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Good work on pointing those links to more specific articles. The more specific a link can be the better usually.
What would help, is if someone could provide a reference for the heyday being the gold rush - I know it's obvious as someone who knows about Australian history, but would it be obvious to someone trying to learn about Australian history?Garrie 03:04, 20 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Entertainment

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Just wanted to let everyone know that I am currently reworking the Entertainment section to give it a bit more depth and some chronological structure. This will take me a few days but I will keep an eye on it so I incorporate any new additions others make. I haven't worked on a collaborative effort before so I'm not sure if it is usual to mention this but I thought it might be useful information for any editors who can't decide where they would like to focus their improvements. xx baby_ifritah 13:48, 19 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

good on you for mentioning it here before you do anything major. During collaborations like this sometimes different ideas clash.
I don't particulalry think I did a good first effort at mentioning the concept and I don't think Entertainment is the best section heading, but Bushrangers were widespread inspiration for novels, poetry, songs, and film. This is covered in reasonable depth but it needs a thorough rewrite to be more inspirational.
I really think that without too much trouble we could end up with Bushrangers in Australian film and literature as a seperate article.Garrie 03:00, 20 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
I was thinking of renaming the heading "Bushrangers and Australian culture" Maybe too broad, but covers folklore, films, novels, songs, theme parks like Glenrowan, sporting team usage e.g. Victorian Bushrangers and the lasting effect the "cult" of the Bushranger had on Australian culture.--Mattinbgn/ talk 03:18, 20 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree with that name, and not being a cricket-tragic, hadn't even thought of the use in sporting team names ;)
WTF is Glenrowan? I hope it's not in New South Wales or I'm really showing my ignorance!
Ned Kelly is a pretty widespread tattoo image. Dunno how we go about referencing that one though.Garrie 04:03, 21 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
Should have wikilinked Glenrowan, Victoria, Kelly Country. --Mattinbgn/ talk 08:04, 21 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
Apologies for delay. Stupidly lost my work but I am currently working on it in a sandbox and it will be fairly comprehensive. I will have it ready to post asap. xx baby_ifritah 14:40, 26 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Evolution

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I'm currently lookuing at a 1975 book published on the history of bushranging. Hopefully I'll be able to input some stuff.

It seems to me that the term bushranger went through a bit of evolution, and first (and probably properly) refers to a concept far different from the modern day association with the Kellys.

  • first bushrangers were "bandits", escaped convicts, or "released" convicts escaping from the slave conditions they were released into. And forced to live of the land. The most villainous were, unsuprisingly in Tasmania (where the worst convicts were sent, and most harshly treated). Many died due to the wilderness of Australia, and blame was also placed on Aborigines.
  • as more colonisation occured, with the development of things such as regular mail carts, travelling salesmen, farm plots - bushrangers hadmore of a chance of survival and thrived in this period (1820-40s). There was now enough people in the bush to rob, but not enough to stop them. The urbanisation that led to them thriving also destroyed them.
  • as the article already mentions, urbanisation, particularly railways, of the bush led to bushranger demise. Police force was becoming more prevalent outside of the cities (perhaps due to ranger activities). This lead to the transformation from lone desparados, or small bands of villains - to the formation of coordinated gangs and organised crime and pseudo-revolutionaries, which is where the Kelly's probably fit in.


The later part of this mirrors highwayman pretty much. Improved roads + increased commercial traffic -> greater demands that roads be policed -> end of the Bushranger / highwayman / western USA "outlaw" era.
The earlier part is, Bushrangers were "just" escapees who were more thieves than robbers (in that they most likely were opportunistic enough to steal without force being threatened or used). Garrie 02:50, 20 April 2007 (UTC)Reply
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Captain Starlight wasn't Harry Re[a]dford

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Captain Starlight is best known as the fictional character, which included exploits of Harry Redford and others. There was a real bushranger Frank Pearson who may have called himself Captain Starlight and maybe that is who should be listed in the table. Kerry (talk) 03:54, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

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Lacks explanation making a confusing statement

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What is this supposed to mean? How does naming a concept slow their careers? And what careers?

“…the concept of outlawry was introduced to curtail the careers of the Gardiner–Hall gang, Dan Morgan, and the Clarke gang, among others.” 67.247.227.132 (talk) 18:09, 8 December 2024 (UTC)Reply