Black Bunny's Bushrangers (T) - Daniel (Mad Dog) Morgan Wangaratta, Victoria, Australia
By
Black Bunny on 07-Oct-18. Waypoint GA6018
Cache Details
Difficulty: | |
Terrain: | |
Type: | Traditional |
Container: | Regular |
Coordinates: | S36° 22.302' E146° 17.402' (WGS 84) |
55H 436313E 5974589N (UTM) | |
Elevation: | 151 m |
Local Government Area: | Wangaratta |
Description
Bushranger Series - Daniel (Mad Dog) Morgan
Daniel (Mad Dog) Morgan
In June of 1864, Morgan shot a bush worker near Albury, New South Wales. He asked another worker to ride for help, then, suspecting the man would ride to the police instead, shot him in the back. Months later, he shot dead a passing police officer just for saying "hello".
In April of 1865, Morgan held up the Peechelba Station near Wangaratta and demanded that the owner's wife play piano while he ate dinner. Upon leaving the station, he was shot by a stockman, and died the following day.
Daniel (Dan) Morgan (c.1830-1865), bushranger, was probably Jack Fuller, born at Appin, New South Wales, the illegitimate son of Mary Owen and George Fuller, and attended the Catholic school at Campbelltown. Although he was suspected of stock theft from the late 1840s, his known criminal record began when, under the name 'John Smith', occupation jockey, he was sentenced to twelve years hard labour for highway robbery at Castlemaine, Victoria, on 10 June 1854. Released from the hulk Success on a ticket-of-leave in June 1860 for good behaviour, he failed to report to the police in the Ovens police district.
Now known as 'Down-the-River Jack', he found work as a horse-breaker and station hand. In August that year he stole a prized horse belonging to the Evans family, who held the Whitfield run in the upper King River valley. Evan Evans, with fellow squatter Edmond Bond, tracked him to his camp. Jack was badly wounded but escaped into the eastern Riverina and western slopes of New South Wales. This would become his base, although he frequently crossed into north-eastern Victoria, a pattern common among those involved in the cross-border, stolen-stock trade.
From mid-1863 'Daniel Morgan, alias Billy the Native', was identified in several major episodes that involved robbery under arms and included the bailing up of Henry Baylis, a police magistrate, near Urana. A reward of £200 was posted for him, dead or alive, although he had yet to be firmly identified as a murderer. The turning point came during a raid on Round Hill station on 19 June 1864, when he shot the overseer John McLean who died three days later. On 24 June Morgan shot and killed Sergeant David Maginnity near Tumbarumba. The reward reached £1000. In September police searching for the bushranger were fired upon and Sergeant Smyth died of wounds. Morgan later claimed that he had shot the sergeant.
Morgan frequently targeted the region's squatters, especially those who were believed to be hard masters, and delighted in humiliating them. During raids, he insisted that employees be fed and given drink. At Burrumbuttock the owner Thomas Gibson was forced to write cheques for his employees totalling some £400. Erratic, Morgan was often nervous and his moods could swing rapidly from an almost courtly treatment of prisoners to threats, rage and violence—hence his sobriquet, 'Mad Dan'. Although he was sometimes assisted by companions during his hold-ups, accomplices differed from robbery to robbery and he often worked alone. An imposing man, over 5 ft 10 ins (178 cm) in height, Morgan had dark hair worn in ringlets, a full, dark beard, hazel eyes and a long, hooked nose which some claimed made him look like a ferocious bird of prey.
Between January and March 1865 Morgan seemed ubiquitous. He was credited with no less than six major robberies of coaches and pastoral stations and the attempted murder of a stock-keeper at Wallandbool. In March the government of New South Wales introduced the Felons Apprehension Act, which made him an outlaw. Next month Morgan crossed the Murray to settle his old score with Evans and Bond. Reaching Whitfield on 7 April, he bailed up the head station. Evans was not there. Morgan headed north and held up traffic on the Sydney Road between Benalla and Glenrowan. On the evening of 8 April he bailed up the Macpherson homestead at Peechelba, north of Wangaratta, unaware that the station's co-owner George Rutherford lived less than a quarter of a mile (0.4 km) away. Alice Keenan, the Macpherson’s nurse, carried news to Rutherford, who rounded up his workforce, selected and armed five trustworthy men and sent them to watch at Peechelba homestead. Police and armed vigilantes augmented the party.
Next morning, as the bushranger walked towards the stockyards to select a horse to continue his flight, he was shot from behind by John Wendlan. Morgan died at about 1.45 p.m. on 9 April 1865. Locks were cut from his hair, his body was publicly displayed at Wangaratta, his beard was flayed from his face as a souvenir and his head severed, to be forwarded to the professor of anatomy at the University of Melbourne. He was buried on 14 April in Wangaratta cemetery.
Morgan's time at large owed much to his bush skills, an inept and undermanned police force and an effective 'telegraph' of sympathizers and supporters among the shepherds and stockmen in the region. There was also an element of fear: he had no hesitation in shooting two men he believed were police informants. He passed into folklore, however, as the 'travellers' friend'.
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/morgan-daniel-dan-13109
Bushrangers.
Over 2,000 bushrangers are estimated to have roamed the Australian countryside, beginning with the convict bolters and drawing to a close after Ned Kelly's last stand at Glenrowan.
Bushrangers were originally escaped convicts who had the survival skills necessary to use the Australian bush as a refuge to hide from the authorities. By the 1820s, the term "bushranger" had evolved to refer to those who abandoned social rights and privileges to take up "robbery under arms" as a way of life, using the bush as their base.
Bushranging thrived during the gold rush years of the 1850s and 1860s when the likes of Ben Hall, Frank Gardiner and John Gilbert led notorious gangs in the country districts of New South Wales. These Wild Colonial Boys typically robbed small-town banks and coach services.
In other infamous cases, such as that of Dan Morgan, the Clarke brothers, and Australia's best-known bushranger, Ned Kelly, numerous policemen were murdered.
The number of bushrangers declined due to better policing and improvements in rail transport and communication technology, such as telegraphy. Kelly's capture and execution in 1880 effectively represented the end of the bushranging era.
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushranger
Hints
Cvar gerr |
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Decode |
Logs
This one was a little search effort.
Round and round we went with no luck.
Once the search was widened the cache was found quickly.
TFTC
The satellites were definitely playing games with us here but persistence prevailed.
Sadly YOF has found the wrong cache. If he just read a little higher on the log book he'd see it wasn't the GCA cache. I found it by error myself when widening my search.
When I was unsuccessful I checked the online logs and saw YOF's photo. I went back to see if it was the same as the yet-to-be-identified GC one and unfortunately it was. I took a photo with the bit saying it wasn't the GCA one. I knew when I opened the log book it wasn't - so many unfamiliar names.
A nice surprise find today - considering double points on offer.
Thanks Black Bunny !
We happened upon this one whilst searching for the end of a nearby GC. Glad to be able to knock off another in this series.
Thanks for a quick find here and all the others we have done in the last 6 weeks.
We are looking forward to grabbing more on our next caching trip north.
dalerious located it while I was looking in the peppercorn tree, where the cache wasn’t
Thanks for the history lesson Black Bunny, I’m loving your Bushranger series.
Another one in the Black Bunny's Bushranger series ticked off.
Many thanks Black Bunny for publishing this cache and adding to our geocaching experience.
Tassie Trekkers are now a locationless geocache we have published a 'Geocacher cache' - Travelling Trekkers GA10932 - so if you spot us in your area sign our log book and receive a code word to earn yourself a
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First stop was this cache that I've driven past many, many times in a bus. Today it was a quick stop and a chance to drop off a moveable cache nearby.
Thanks BB.....enjoying the series.
The container and contents were in good order.
Thanks for another cache in the Black Bunny's Bushrangers series Black Bunny. We enjoyed visiting Morgan's grave
Morgan's grave is nearby, and from the plaque on it I find his killer's name was John Wendian. I wonder where his grave is, and if any visit it and leave flowers as some have for Morgan. I'll have to see if I can find out!
An easy find, and all in good Nick.
TFTC Black Bunny. I'm enjoying your Bushranger series.
We know this corner of the cemetery well due a couple of long archived caches here.
Good to see some new GCA caches up here in the north east.
Cheers