Fallout from Ned Kelly's last stand haunted families for generations
When dawn broke at Glenrowan near Wangaratta in Victoria's north-east on June 28, 1880, four people laid dead.
And after a two-year manhunt, Australia's most infamous bushranger had been captured.
It's a story that became Aussie folklore, but for the descendants of those involved, the ripple effects of that frosty night 145 years ago would be felt for generations.
Indigenous readers are advised this story contains images of people who have died.
Glenrowan's schoolmaster Thomas Curnow was headed to Greta Swamp with his family on June 27, 1880 when the Kelly gang arrived.
Along with his wife and child, his sister, and his brother-in-law, Mr Curnow was marched at gunpoint to Ann Jones's inn.
As night fell, dozens of Glenrowan residents had become the Kelly gang's hostages.
By late that night, Mr Curnow had already tried once to escape.
When his brother-in-law, David Mortimer, started playing the concertina so that the hostages could dance, Curnow asked the gang to let him get his dancing boots from home.
When that failed, he convinced the gang that he was a Kelly gang sympathiser, and he wouldn't cause any trouble if allowed to take his pregnant wife, baby and sister home.
The gang allowed it.
But Mr Curnow was determined to alert police.
David Mortimer's great-granddaughter, and Thomas Curnow's great-great-niece, Judith Douthie, has spent years researching the lead-up to the siege.
Mrs Douthie described the 1870s in Glenrowan and Greta as a "pressure cooker", when the Kelly gang ran rampant.
Two years before the siege, the gang had murdered three policemen at Stringybark Creek, sparking a manhunt for the outlaws in the north-east of the state.
"It was a horrible point in time," Mrs Douthie said.
On June 27, 1880, when police learnt that the gang had murdered informant Aaron Sherritt at Beechworth, they sent a train full of reinforcements and trackers north to capture the bushrangers.
The gang tore up the train tracks beyond Glenrowan, then laid in wait for the trap to be sprung, the locomotive to derail and roll down a steep slope.
Hearing the pilot engine approaching Glenrowan about 2am, Mr Curnow hurried to the railway line — armed with a candle, a red scarf and matches to alert them of the danger.
The train stopped at the station, and police reinforcements disembarked to surround the inn.
The man in charge was Superintendent Francis Hare, who had been hunting the gang since the Stringybark murders.
Superintendent Hare's great-great-great-niece Sue Brown has been researching her relative and said he was "absolutely focused" on catching the gang.
"He was very keen to rid the state of bushrangers."
Superintendent Hare was shot in the wrist during the gunfight, and was taken to hospital, but his efforts to catch the gang had succeeded.
By dawn, the siege was over.
Dan Kelly, Joe Byrne and Steve Hart laid dead, Ned Kelly had been captured, and the inn had been burnt to the ground.
The Kelly gang's reign of terror was over, but for those left behind, difficult times endured.
Ann Jones, the owner of the inn, was left homeless with her children.
"They ended up camped, under a tarp, [hung] off the side of the burnt-out building," Mrs Douthie said of her research.
Mrs Jones's son, Jack, was killed in the fighting.
Thomas Curnow and his family swiftly returned to their home town of Ballarat, and though he was applauded by the police and government, his role in the Kelly gang's demise "ruined their lives".
Mrs Douthie said her great-grandfather David Mortimer told her that once Kelly sympathisers had told Mr Curnow to "watch his back" as they walked in a Ballarat park.
Mr Curnow's wife warned her grandchildren never to speak of his actions, or their connection to him, fearing for their safety.
The gang's relatives were also implicated, long after the bushrangers had died.
Anthony Griffiths is the great-grandson of Grace Kelly, Ned's younger sister.
He said the Kelly gang's violence cast a long shadow over the family, as recently as his father's generation.
"Speaking about it was not a done thing, and that's two or three generations afterwards," he said.
Today, the siege site sits on privately owned land.
Mr Griffiths says he's still floored by the events and the ripple effects, 145 years on.
"The impacts it had on the rest of the family, the women who were left behind … while the men were on the run or in jail," he said.
"Some of their friends and family supported them at terrific cost [and] personal risk to themselves."
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One councillor. Countless fights. How Big Rob's beefs are shaping Lismore, a city in recovery
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But this citizen journalism came with complications. "[The police] used to threaten me with arrest. They've grabbed me many times. They've put hands on me, pushed me," he claims. Recently at a school fire, an officer "got right up in my face trying to make me move back … yelling at me like I'm doing something wrong". Police say they were clearing the area around a declared crime scene and that the public complied with their directions. Locals didn't love seeing their faces on North Coast Crime at their worst, before they'd had their day at court. In one instance, he was charged with two counts of publishing the names of minors involved in a fight, allegedly violating the Children Criminal Proceedings Act . The charges were later dismissed. Big Rob says his mission is civic-minded — he wants crime taken seriously in Lismore and he wants the police to step up. In 2016, Big Rob walked into the Lismore police station. He'd had an altercation with a woman at a local sushi shop and talked about it on his radio show and social media. The woman reported the incident to police and they asked him to come in. Big Rob live-streamed himself driving to the station and going inside. He was arrested and charged for common assault and four counts of stalking and intimidation. Big Rob uploaded the video to his North Coast Crime page. Only this time, he was the subject of the story. The footage is of a low resolution. His decision to record inside is clearly designed for maximum reach online. It shows the way he handles himself when under threat, the live streaming, the confidence, his appetite for conflict and his willingness to challenge authority. It's these qualities on display in the recording that Big Rob has used to grow his profile. A year after the incident, a judge dismissed all the charges. 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When Big Rob couldn't succeed in blocking the funding of the festival in council, he took matters into his own hands. "We became aware that Big Rob had registered the Lismore Lantern Parade … as his business," Jackson says . The parade, which had been running since 1994, had never registered it as a business name — it was simply the name of their community event . "I got phone calls from contractors, subcontractors, and sponsors," she says. "They had been told that they weren't allowed to use the name Lismore Lantern Parade." "It's like throwing a little grenade into the community and waiting for people who like to be keyboard warriors to jump on it and make a fuss," she said. Jyllie asked Big Rob to quit claiming the business name as his own, to no avail. Big Rob maintains he was right to oppose the move and register the business name. When local councillor Elly Bird talks about her experience with Big Rob, she struggles to fight back tears. The councillor has spent eight years in local government and many more in paid and volunteer positions in community organisations. She's also the executive director of Resilient Lismore, an organisation dedicated to helping flood affected community members repair their homes. The organisation receives significant funding from government bodies, which Big Rob takes issue with. 'Resilient Lismore should be shut down. No more grant funding and no one should listen to them." Rob says. He's consistently criticised her organisation's operations, questioning the work it does, the wage Elly receives as an executive director and often uses the hashtag #DisasterCapitalism. Elly and her organisation have been mentioned by Big Rob's pages more than 100 times in the last five years. In 2022, as Lismore was in the grip of another devastating flooding event, Big Rob's influence became acutely apparent to her. "As I arrived at the evacuation center to help, some guy called out to me and said, 'Oh, it's Rate Rise Elly, what are you doing here?'" she recalls, her voice catching. "At the time of my community's highest need." The nickname was one of two Big Rob uses for her regularly on social media — Elly 'Angry' Bird and Rate Rise Elly. Elly is not the first councillor to be given a name by Big Rob. Former mayor was Isaac 'Simple' Smith, the former GM was 'the Dictator', a young political up-and-comer became 'Silly' Sally Flannery. Later in the year Big Rob posted other claims about Elly. "I went and bought myself a Toyota Hiace van because I needed to be able to move furniture around this community with my own money. After the disaster, there was a suggestion that 'she's gone off and bought herself a new car out of all the funds'. "What a load of rubbish." Elly has tried to respond to criticism in the past, but says she's one of thousands of people that is blocked from Rob's pages. Big Rob estimates that he's blocked over 30,000 people. Financial documents filed with the Australian Charities and Not-For-Profit Commission indicate that Resilient Lismore's 2024 revenue was $2,891,980. The organisation's 2022-24 impact report says it completed over 4,000 general repair jobs, and 657 significant repair jobs over that time. "We have successfully attracted grant funding to be able to deliver the work that we do. We have employed … 26 individuals over the last three years," the Executive Director said. Resilient Lismore's annual report shows that the organisation's 2024 expenditure on contractors — mostly skilled labourers — was $1,081,432, employee salaries were $1,014,513 and material purchases for home repairs was $369,675. Elly Bird finds the criticism bewildering, saying her organisation is employing "local people to help local people". "You gotta pay people to do work. It's fundamental to our society." "I'm paid according to award rates for the work that I do, same as everybody else in this organisation, same as everybody else in the community … I work above and beyond what I'm being paid to do." An independent auditor's report found no fault in the organisation's financial statements and that they satisfy the requirements of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Act 2012. Elly says Big Rob's sustained attention was a factor in her deciding not to run for a third term in 2024. "It's very difficult to have your motivations challenged, particularly when I give so much of myself for this community, and no opportunity to defend myself," she said. "I just had to weigh up all the things in my life and the places and spaces where I can be effective. "I want it to stop." Elly says she's had conversations with people who would make good councillors but don't run because of the level of scrutiny and impact it might have on their businesses and their families. "I think it's a really sad state of affairs, our community deserves good leadership from good people who are committed to seeing the best possible outcomes for this community and people who have those qualities decide not to put themselves forward, to not take up that role," she said. Mayor Steve Krieg says the first time he ever spoke to Big Rob was very late at night, in 2021. Counsellor Krieg was about to run for council and for mayor. The staff of his cafe were having a party, when they saw Big Rob across the road. "I walked across the road and introduced myself … I'd had a few beers and he chewed my ear off for about two hours, about everything that I was gonna do wrong and how stupid I was for doing it," he said. "My wife ended up coming out and saying, 'what are you doing?'" The Mayor says he has since come to enjoy working with the provocateur, though he doesn't agree with many of his methods. "He's very switched-on as far as process and procedure goes and that's an important thing in council. "But he also has a very short fuse and cracks the sads when things don't go his way as well. So he needs to learn to control his emotions a little bit." Big Rob's approach to local politics has come with significant costs — both personal and financial. To date, he has breached the council code of conduct multiple times. In 2022, Big Rob was formally censured after an investigation found he breached the code of conduct over a social media post about transgender athletes. The following year, a complaint from Elly Bird was investigated which found that Big Rob in ten instances had been disparaging or belittling of the then-councillor online and on email. The council considered the code of conduct breach but on that occasion, voted against censuring Big Rob. That same year, Rob was censured twice: once for inflammatory comments about then-General Manager John Walker, and again for suggesting he might sue a pensioner for her house to satisfy a defamation claim. Most recently, Rob was censured for insensitive remarks about an Aboriginal elder, who he criticised for accepting payment to deliver Acknowledgements of Country. The matter was referred to the Office of Local Government, which declined to comment. Each investigation in council requires hiring an external investigator. Council sources estimate the total cost of dealing with complaints against Big Rob may be nearing $100,000 — money that could otherwise be spent on community services. Big Rob himself takes issue with the wasted cost involved, posting about one censure: "Another censure to add to the collection, and a considerable cost to ratepayers as attempts to control me using a very broken process continue." His response to each censure has been to challenge the process and publish the confidential council investigations on his website and Facebook page. "There is absolutely no procedural fairness in the code of conduct procedures and no appeal rights," he declared after one censure. Councillor Krieg finds himself trying to manage a council where one member publicly criticises private citizens within the community he represents. "Sadly, every day I get some form of correspondence or complaint," Councillor Krieg says about Big Rob's online behaviour. Big Rob's battles go beyond what happened to Jyllie Jackson , Elly Bird and Isaac Smith — his rants also take in an antique owner who displays his wares on the streets and people who park their cars in the wrong spot. "It's not my job to go and tell someone to get their shit off the footpath and it's not my job to tell someone that they're parking illegally," Mayor Krieg said. "That's what we employ rangers to do, and that's what the police are for. He tends to think that it is his role and he gets into trouble for it and he can't accept the fact that he gets into trouble for it because he thinks he's doing the right thing." Councillor Krieg identifies what he sees as Big Rob's fundamental flaw: "It's his way or no way … if he deems that someone's wronged him or is doing the wrong thing by the council, it's all or nothing in his head."

ABC News
2 hours ago
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Townsville remembers Jennifer Board, four years on from tragic death
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