Location | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
---|---|
Coordinates | 37°48′29″S144°57′55″E / 37.80806°S 144.96528°E |
Status | Museum |
Opened | 1 January 1845 |
Closed | July 1924 |
Managed by | National Trust of Australia |
Website | www |
Official name | Old Melbourne Gaol |
Type | State Registered Place |
Designated | 20 August 1982 |
Reference no. | H1553 [1] |
Heritage Overlay number | HO789 [1] |
The Old Melbourne Gaol is a former jail and current museum on Russell Street, in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It consists of a bluestone building and courtyard, and is located next to the old City Police Watch House and City Courts buildings, and opposite the Russell Street Police Headquarters. It was first constructed starting in 1839, and during its operation as a prison between 1845 and 1924, it held and executed some of Australia's most notorious criminals, including bushranger Ned Kelly and serial killer Frederick Bailey Deeming. In total, 133 people were executed by hanging. Though it was used briefly during World War II, it formally ceased operating as a prison in 1924; with parts of the jail being incorporated into the RMIT University, and the rest becoming a museum.
The three-storey museum displays information and memorabilia of the prisoners and staff, including death masks of the executed criminals. At one time the museum displayed what was believed at the time to be Ned Kelly's skull, before it was stolen in 1978; as well as the pencil used by wrongly convicted Colin Campbell Ross to protest his innocence in writing, before being executed.
An allotment of scrubland to the north-east of Melbourne was selected as Port Phillips first permanent gaol. On 1 January 1838, George Wintle was appointed to be gaoler at the prison at £100 a year; with the site becoming colloquially known as Wintle's Hotel. [2] Construction of the gaol started in 1839–1840 on Collins Street West, but it was considered too small at the time. A second gaol was then built between 1841 and 1844 at the corner of Russell and La Trobe Streets, adjoining the then Supreme Court. [3] The first cell block was opened for prisoners in 1845, but the facilities were considered inadequate; escapes occurring frequently. The gaol was already crowded by 1850. [4]
With the discovery of gold in 1851 (when the Port Phillip District became the new Colony of Victoria), and the resulting influx of population, law and order became more difficult to maintain. Subsequently, a new wing, with its own perimeter wall, was constructed between 1852 and 1854; the building using bluestone instead of sandstone. The design was based on that of British prison engineer Joshua Jebb, and especially the designs for the Pentonville Model Prison in London (which suited the current prison reform theories at the time). The new wing was extended in between 1857 and 1859, with the boundary wall also being extended during this time. In 1860, a new north wing was built; which included entrance buildings, a central hall and chapel. Between 1862 and 1864, a cell block was built for female prisoners on the western side – it was basically a replica of the present east block (until this time, female convicts were not kept apart from the male prisoners). [5] In 1864, the perimeter wall, and the gaol overall, was completed; [3] [6] making it a dominant feature of authority on the Melbourne skyline. [3]
At its completion, the prison occupied an entire city block, and included exercise yards, a hospital in one of the yards, a chapel, a bath house and staff accommodation. [4] A house for the chief warders was built on the corner of Franklin and Russell streets, and 17 homes were built for gaolers on Swanston Street in 1860. [3] Artefacts recovered from the area indicate that even the gaolers and their families lived within the gaol walls in the 1850s and 1860s. [7]
Much of daily life inside the gaol could be gleaned from sources such as diaries written by John Castieau, governor of the gaol between 1869 and 1884. [5] During its operation, the gaol was used to house short-term prisoners, lunatics and some of the colony's most notorious and hardened criminals. [8] It also housed up to twenty children at a time – including those imprisoned for petty theft or vagrancy, or simply those staying with a convicted parent. Babies under twelve months old were allowed to be with their mothers. [5] The youngest prisoner was recorded as three-year-old Michael Crimmins, who spent 6 months in the prison in 1857 for being idle and disorderly. In 1851, the 13 and 14-year-old O'Dowd sisters were imprisoned because they had nowhere else to go. [9]
Prisoners convicted of serious crimes, such as murder, arson, burglary, rape and shooting, would begin their time on the ground floor with a time of solitary confinement. They were also forbidden from communicating with other prisoners, which was strictly enforced by the usage of a silence mask, or calico hood, when outside their cells. [10] They would only be given a single hour of solitary exercise a day, with the remaining 23 hours spent in their cells. Inside the cells, prisoners would be able to lie on a thin mattress over the slate floors. They could only bathe and change clothes once a week, and attend the chapel on Sundays (with a Bible provided to promote good behaviour). [4] [11] Prisoners might only have been allowed to finally socialise with other prisoners towards the end of their sentences. [10]
The routine for prisoners was regulated by a system of bells, and enforced by punishments; prisoners who obeyed the rules would be promoted to the second floor – whereby they would be allowed to work in the yards every day. [4] Male prisoners would perform hard labour – including breaking rocks, and other duties in the stone quarries, while women would sew, clean and cook. [10] Women would also make shirts and waistcoats for male prisoners, as well as act as domestic servants for the governor and his family. [5] Prisoners who had become trusted, those nearing the completion of their sentence, and debtors, were housed on the third floor communal cells. [4] These top level cells were large, and held up to six prisoners at time; and were mostly reserved to prisoners convicted of minor crimes such as drunkenness, vagrancy, prostitution or petty theft. [10]
During its operation, the gaol was the setting for 133 hangings. [12] The most infamous was that of bushranger Ned Kelly at the age of 25, on 11 November 1880. After a two-day trial, Kelly was convicted of killing a police officer. As stated by law at the time, executed prisoners were buried in unmarked graves in the gaol burial yard. Before burial, a death mask was produced from the executed prisoners head as part of the phrenological study of hanged felons. [10] Historian and associate professor of Wollongong University, John McQuilton, states that the lack of monitoring for burial processes was odd, given Victorian society's normally brilliant attention to detail. [13]
The gallows occupied several different sites within the gaol. A free-standing scaffold was used for early executions, initially outside the main gate and later in one of the yards; for a triple hanging in 1864 it was erected just inside the main gate complex. Diarist Charles Evans witnessed the aftermath of the 1853 triple hanging of bushrangers William Atkins, George Wilson and George Melville:
All went to Melbourne. Passed by the jail and saw the tightened ropes which supported the lifeless bodies of three wretches who had been executed a half an hour before. The bodies were hidden from view by a wooden erection, a contrivance which takes a little from the horror of the exhibition. To have the last awful grapple with death set up like curiosity for the edification of a gaping multitude is a sickening contrivance unworthy of an advanced country. [14]
After 1864 a fixed gallows was installed below the octagon across the main axis of the prison block, against the wall dividing the male block from the female block. It comprised a single-leaf trap cut into the metal walkway, with iron sockets in either wall above, into which the beam was placed for each hanging (a common design, used in other Victorian gaols at Ararat, Geelong, Beechworth, Ballarat, Bendigo, Castlemaine, Melbourne and Pentridge; and interstate at Adelaide and Long Bay, New South Wales). It was later moved a few metres to a side gallery below the octagon, where it remains today. [15]
The first hanging of a woman in Victoria, Elizabeth Scott, was performed in the prison on 11 November 1863 – along with her co-accused, Julian Cross and David Gedge. The last person to be executed was Angus Murray in 1924, the same year the gaol was closed. [16]
Edward "Ned" Kelly, born sometime between June 1854 and June 1855, was an Irish-Australian bushranger. He was seen by some as merely a cold-blooded killer, while to others he was a folk hero for his defiance of the colonial authorities. [17] As a youth he clashed with the Victoria Police, and after an incident at his home in 1878, police parties searched for him in the bush. He killed three policemen, and subsequently the colony proclaimed Kelly and his gang wanted outlaws. A final violent confrontation with police took place at Glenrowan on 28 June 1880. Kelly, dressed in a home-made plate metal armour and helmet, was captured and sent to gaol. He was hanged for murder at the Old Melbourne Gaol in November 1880. [18] His notoriety affirmed him as a polarising iconic figure in Australian history, folk lore, literature, art and film.
Colin Campbell Ross, an Australian wine-bar owner, was wrongly convicted of the rape and murder of 12-year-old Alma Tirtschke in December 1921. The case, dubbed the Gun Alley Murder , was heavily influenced by public hysteria at the time, which ultimately served to condemn him. Despite his pleas of innocence (including an attempt whereby a letter was thrown over the gaol walls), he was executed by hanging in the gaol in April 1922 (only 115 days after the body was found). A new four-strand rope was used for the first time at the execution, and proved to be a failure; Ross slowly strangled for between 8 and 20 minutes before his death. A prison report later ruled that such a rope must never be used again. [19] He was posthumously pardoned on 27 May 2008. [20]
Frederick Bailey Deeming was born on 30 July 1853. At 16 years of age he ran away to sea, and thereafter, he began a long career of crime, largely thieving and obtaining money under false pretences. He was responsible for the murder of his first wife Marie, and his four children, at Rainhill, England, on or about 26 July 1891, and a second wife, Emily, at Windsor, Melbourne, on 24 December 1891. [21] Less than three months elapsed between the discovery of Emily Mather's body in Windsor, Melbourne, in March 1892, and Deeming's execution at the Old Melbourne Gaol for her murder in May 1892; a remarkably short time by comparison to modern western legal standards. After his execution, it was reported that over 12,000 people cheered on the streets outside, and there was public speculation that Deeming was in fact Jack the Ripper. [22] [23] [24]
"Tragically two of these (Aboriginal) men, Tunnerminnerwait (known as Jack) and Maulboyheenner (known as Bob, or sometimes called Timmy or Jimmy), became the first people executed in the Port Phillip District. This took place in 1842, a mere seven years after John Batman's fraudulent treaty with the Kuhn people, when the two Tasmanian Aboriginal men were publicly hanged for murder." [25] The Tunnerminnerwait and Maulboyheenner public marker Archived 3 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine exists at the place of execution. The website contains historical research and information on the artists commissioned for the marker, Artist Brook Andrew, along with Trent Walter.
"Two Tasmanian Aboriginal men, clad in white pyjamas, went to their deaths on a makeshift gallows in Melbourne in 1842. The contemporaneous executions were apparently quite a spectacle: one man, Maulboyheenner, twisting on the rope, strangled slowly in front of a crowd of 5000. They had been convicted of killing two whalers in Western Port. Both the Tasmanians and the whalers – one was called the Yankee – were a long way from home." [25] They were arrested at Powlett River.
Name | Year born | Execution date | Crime |
---|---|---|---|
Maulboyheenner (aka Bob) (Aboriginal) | 20 January 1842 (Age 27) | Murder | |
Tunnerminnerwait (aka Jack) (Aboriginal) | 20 January 1842 (Age 27) | Murder | |
Charles Ellis | 20 June 1842 (Age 18) | Shooting with intent to murder | |
Martin Fogarty | 20 June 1842 (Age 18) | Shooting with intent to murder | |
Daniel Jepps | 20 June 1842 (Age 27) | Shooting with intent to murder | |
Alkapareet (aka Roger) (Aboriginal) | 5 September 1842 (Age 25) | Murder [29] | |
Jeremiah Connell | 27 January 1847 (Age 27) | Murder | |
Bobby (Aboriginal) | 30 April 1847 (Age 25) | Murder | |
Ptolemy (Aboriginal) [30] | 30 April 1847 (Age 25) | Murder | |
John Healey | 29 November 1847 (Age 29) | Murder | |
Augustus Dancey (or Dauncey) | 1 August 1848 (Age 19) | Murder | |
Patrick Kennedy | 1 October 1851 (Age 30) | Murder | |
James Barlow | 22 May 1852 (Age 32) | Murder | |
John Riches | 3 November 1852 (Age 29) | Murder | |
George Pinkerton | 4 April 1853 (Age 19) | Murder | |
Aaron Durrant | 11 July 1853 (Age 38) | Robbery | |
John Smith | 23 August 1853 (Age 25) | Robbery | |
Henry Turner | 23 August 1853 (Age 25) | Robbery | |
William Atkins | 3 October 1853 (Age 29) | Robbery under arms [31] | |
George Wilson | 3 October 1853 | Robbery under arms [31] | |
George Melville | 3 October 1853 | Robbery under arms [31] | |
Patrick O'Connor | 24 October 1853 | Attempted murder [32] | |
Henry Bradley | 24 October 1853 | Attempted murder [33] | |
Michael Finnessy | 25 October 1853 | Murder | |
Alexander Ram | 25 October 1853 | Murder | |
John Smith | 23 November 1853 | Rape | |
Joseph West | 27 December 1853 | Rape | |
James Button | 28 March 1854 | Shooting with intent [34] | |
David Magee | 25 April 1854 | Murder [35] | |
William Thoroughgood | 23 May 1854 | Rape [36] | |
John Hughes | 25 September 1854 | Murder [37] [38] | |
James McAlister | 23 July 1855 | Murder [39] | |
James Condon (alias Arthur Somerville) | 24 November 1855 | Robbery [40] | |
John Dixon | 24 November 1855 | Robbery | |
Alfred Henry Jackson | 24 November 1855 | Robbery | |
William Twiggem | 1824 | 2 March 1857 | Murder |
Chu-a-Luk | 1827 | 2 March 1857 | Murder |
James Cornick | 16 March 1857 | Murder [41] | |
Frederick Turner | 27 April 1857 | Robbery [42] | |
Thomas Williams | 28 April 1857 | Murder [43] | |
Henry Smith (alias Brennan) | 28 April 1857 | Murder | |
Thomas Maloney | 28 April 1857 | Murder [44] | |
Francis Brannigan | 29 April 1857 | Murder | |
William Brown | 29 April 1857 | Murder | |
Richard Bryant | 29 April 1857 | Murder | |
John Chisley | 30 April 1857 | Murder [45] | |
James Woodlock | 1 June 1857 | Murder [46] [47] | |
Chong Sigh | 3 September 1857 | Murder | |
Hing Tzan | 3 September 1857 | Murder [48] | |
John Mason | 6 November 1857 | Murder [49] | |
Edward Brown | 1 March 1958 | Murder [50] | |
William Jones | 1 March 1958 | Murder [50] | |
Samuel Gibbs | 12 November 1858 | Murder | |
George Thompson | 12 November 1858 | Murder | |
Edward Hitchcock | 29 November 1858 | Murder [51] | |
Christian Von Sie (or Von See) | 29 November 1858 | Murder [52] | |
Thomas Ryan | 11 April 1859 | Murder | |
William ("Plaguey Billy") Armstrong | 11 April 1859 | Shooting with intent | |
George ("The Butcher") Chamberlain | 11 April 1859 | Shooting with intent [53] | |
Richard Rowley | 26 July 1859 | Violent Assault [54] | |
William Siddons | 7 November 1859 | Rape [55] | |
George Waines | 16 July 1860 | Murder [56] [57] | |
Edward Fenlow (alias Reynolds) | 20 August 1860 | Murder [58] | |
John McDonald | 30 September 1860 | Murder [59] [60] | |
William Smith | 22 April 1861 | Murder [61] | |
Henry Cooley | 11 July 1861 | Murder [62] | |
Nathaniel Horatio Ruby | 5 August 1861 | Murder [63] | |
Martin Rice | 30 September 1861 | Murder [64] [65] | |
Thomas Sanders | 31 October 1861 | Rape [66] | |
Samuel Pollett | 29 December 1862 | Rape [67] | |
Thomas McGee | 19 February 1863 | Murder [68] | |
Julian Cross | 11 November 1863 | Murder [69] [70] | |
David Gedge | 1844 | 11 November 1863 | Murder [69] [70] |
Elizabeth Scott | 1840 | 11 November 1863 | Murder [69] [70] |
James Barrett | 1 December 1863 | Murder | |
Christopher Harrison | 1809 | 3 August 1864 | Murder [71] [72] |
William Carver | 1824 | 3 August 1864 | Robbery under arms [71] [72] |
Samuel Woods | 1823 | 3 August 1864 | Robbery under arms [71] [72] |
John Stacey | 5 April 1865 | Murder | |
Joseph Brown | 5 May 1865 | Murder | |
Peter Dotsalaere | 6 July 1865 | Murder | |
Robert Bourke | 1841 | 29 November 1866 | Murder |
Bernard Cunningham | 31 March 1868 | Murder | |
Joseph Whelan | 31 March 1868 | Murder | |
Michael Flannigan | 1833 | 31 March 1869 | Murder |
James Ritson | 3 August 1869 | Murder | |
Patrick Smith | 4 August 1870 | Murder | |
James Cusack | 30 August 1870 | Murder | |
James Seery | 14 November 1870 | Murder | |
Patrick Geary | 4 December 1871 | Murder | |
Edward Feeney | 14 May 1872 | Murder | |
An Gaa | 30 August 1875 | Murder | |
Henry Howard | 4 October 1875 | Murder | |
John Taylor (aka Weechurch) | 1830 | 6 December 1875 | Attempted murder |
Basilo Bondietto | 11 December 1876 | Murder | |
William Hastings | 14 March 1877 | Murder | |
Ned Kelly | 1854 | 11 November 1880 | Murder |
James Hawthorn | 21 August 1884 | Murder | |
William O'Brien | 24 October 1884 | Murder | |
William Barnes | 15 May 1885 | Murder | |
Freeland Morell | 1847 | 6 January 1886 | Murder |
George Symes | 8 November 1888 | Murder | |
Filipe Castillo | 1869 | 16 September 1889 | Murder |
Robert Landells | 1837 | 16 October 1889 | Murder |
John Thomas Phelan | 1861 | 16 March 1891 | Murder |
John Wilson | 1868 | 23 March 1891 | Murder |
Frank Spearin (aka John Wilson) | 11 May 1891 | Rape | |
William Coulston | 24 August 1891 | Murder | |
Frederick Deeming | 23 May 1892 | Murder | |
John Conder | 28 August 1893 | Murder | |
Frances Lydia Alice Knorr | 1867 | 15 January 1894 | Murder |
Ernest Knox | 1873 | 19 March 1894 | Murder |
Frederick Jordan | 1864 | 20 August 1894 | Murder |
Martha Needle | 1864 | 22 October 1894 | Murder |
Arthur Buck | 1868 | 1 July 1895 | Murder |
Emma Williams | 4 November 1895 | Murder | |
Charles Strange | 1874 | 13 January 1896 | Murder |
Alfred Archer | 1866 | 21 November 1898 | Murder |
William Robert Jones | 26 March 1900 | Murder | |
Albert Edward McNamara | 14 April 1902 | Arson causing death | |
August Tisler | 20 October 1902 | Murder | |
James Coleman Williams | 1885 | 8 September 1904 | Murder |
Joseph Victor Pfeiffer | 29 April 1912 | Murder | |
John Jackson | 24 January 1916 | Murder | |
Antonio Picone | 18 September 1916 | Murder | |
Albert Budd | 29 January 1918 | Murder | |
Arthur Geoffrey Oldring | 15 April 1918 | Murder | |
George Farrow Blunderfield | 15 April 1918 | Murder | |
Colin Campbell Ross | 1892 | 24 April 1922 | Murder – pardoned in 2008 |
Angus Murray | 1882 | 14 April 1924 | Murder |
In 1870, a review of the penal system was conducted, with the recommendation being made to close the gaol and relocate prisoners to more suitable locations. The gaol gradually slowed its operations, and demolished portions of the original site between 1880 and 1924. In 1924, the gaol was finally closed. [3] [4] However, in March 1927, the Old Melbourne Gaol was integrated into part of the new Emily McPherson College and was used for educational purposes. This necessitated changes to the prison; in 1929, despite poor record keeping of prisoner burials, historical evidence suggested the remains of approximately 32 executed prisoners, including Ned Kelly, were exhumed from the Old Melbourne Gaol and buried at mass graves in a quarry at Pentridge. [73] In 1930, the women's cell block, walls and several other buildings were demolished, [10] and a further four coffins were believed to have been moved to Pentridge in 1937. [73] [74]
As the gaol was progressively decommissioned, the building's fabric, including bluestone grave markers of executed prisoners, was incorporated into a sea wall at Brighton in Victoria in the 1930s. The grave marker for Martha Needle, executed in 1894, was rediscovered after being buried by metres of sand. [75]
During World War II, the gaol was used as a military prison for soldiers found to be absent without leave. [4] A new wall was built in the eastern courtyard during this time, so that cell block inmates were separated from the college girls. After the end of the war, the section used for holding prisoners was then used only as a storage facility for the Victoria Police force, whose headquarters were nearby in Russell Street. [76]
In May 1974, the sections used by the school were remodelled by architects Eggleston, McDonald and Secomb, to act as the schools food and fashion departments. The Emily McPherson College was merged into RMIT University in 1979, bringing the gaol entrance gates, and other facilities alongside it. In 1990, RMIT performed work to restore the enclosed balcony to its former 1927 design. In 1994, RMIT performed further work to landscape the inner courtyard, and in 1995, removed the temporary war-time pavilion classrooms. As of 2010 [update] , the sections that RMIT owns are collectively known as the "RMIT Building 11. Architect: Colonial Government Architect", and include the entrance block and chapel; with the bath house and chapel serving as art studios. [6]
In 1957, the National Trust of Australia listed the Old Melbourne Gaol on its heritage register, [10] and a year later marked it as a site that needed to be preserved at all costs. [77] Furthermore, in 1965, the Melbourne Junior Chamber of Commerce floated the idea of converting it into a museum, for the purposes of tourism. [78] In 1972, the gaol was reopened as a public museum, under the management of the National Trust of Australia (Victoria). [4]
As of 2010 [update] , the gaol is recognised as Victoria's oldest surviving penal establishment, and attracts approximately 140,000 visitors per year. [79] The cells have been filled with information about individual prisoners, which also serve to illustrate the history of Melbourne itself. [80]
In addition to historical information, it also includes various memorabilia; including death masks, an iron mask, and a pair of leather gloves designed to prevent inmates from practising self-abuse. [80] Notably, it still includes Ned Kelly's death mask, pistol and replica of his suit of armour. [81] [82] In addition, the gaol had previously displayed the pencil used by Colin Ross to write a letter protesting his innocence, which he threw over the prison walls. [83]
Operators also run several features, including the candlelit Hangman's Night Tour (with actors portraying prolific and brutal hangman Michael Gateley), [84] and the daily Watch House Experience; an interactive performance in which visitors are treated as the prisoners would have been during its operation. [81] In 2010, the Old Melbourne Gaol Crime and Justice Experience won the heritage and cultural tourism category at the Qantas Australian Tourism Awards in Hobart. [85]
A skull, long believed to be Ned Kelly's, was on display in the museum until it was stolen from a glass cabinet in 1978. Efforts have been taken by scientists and the government to determine the location of the skull, and whether it was authentic to begin with. It was reported that members of the public may have the remains of bones and teeth taken as souvenirs when graves were exhumed in 1929 for reburial at Pentridge Prison. A skull from a skeleton buried under the initials "E.K." was taken, with the apparent assumption that this stood for Edward Kelly. Special interest was directed to finding a photograph of former South Melbourne councillor Alex Talbot holding skull purported to be Ned Kelly's, and information on grave exhume contractor Lee of Lee and Dunn, or his family, who was tasked with delivering Kelly's skull to the governor. [24] [86]
In 2009, West Australian farmer Tom Baxter handed a skull to authorities, arguing that it was the one stolen from the gaol – while refusing to explain how he obtained it. [86] Further examination confirmed that the Baxter skull was indeed the same one previously on display at the Gaol museum, however DNA testing in 2011 showed that it had not been Kelly's after all. [87] Instead, it was suggested that it may have been that of executed murderer Ernest Knox, who was hanged 14 years after Kelly and also had the initials "E.K." [88]
Former Pentridge Prison chaplain Father Peter Norden has stated that he believed the skull handed in could not belong to Kelly, and that it probably belonged to a woman, [89] however later DNA testing showed that the skull was from a male. In 2010, there was further speculation that the skull actually belonged to Frederick Bailey Deeming, with the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine claiming that the skull is similar to both Kelly's and Deeming's death masks. [24]
Ned Kelly's actual remains were later located in the grounds of Pentridge Prison, and confirmed by DNA comparison to living relatives, including a piece of his skull. This skull fragment showed saw marks, showing that Kelly's cranium had been sawn open and the brain removed for research after death.
The films and TV productions Ned Kelly (1970) , Trial of Ned Kelly (1977), The Last Outlaw (1980), Besieged: The Ned Kelly Story (2004), Ned's Head (2011) and True History of the Kelly Gang (2019) all used the interior of Old Melbourne Jail as a set for the scene of Kelly's hanging. The scenes were filmed either at the actual location of Kelly's execution or, in the 2019 movie, nearby. [90]
Edward Kelly was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader and convicted police-murderer. One of the last bushrangers, he is known for wearing a suit of bulletproof armour during his final shootout with the police.
Sir Redmond Barry, was an Irish-born judge in the Australian colony of Victoria. A major figure in the early civic life of Melbourne, Barry was instrumental in founding several key institutions in the city, including the University of Melbourne and State Library Victoria, outside of which a statue of him stands. He is also well known for presiding over the trial of the Eureka rebels, as well as having sentenced the bushranger and outlaw Ned Kelly to death.
HM Prison Pentridge, better known as Pentridge Prison, was an Australian prison established in 1851 in Coburg, Victoria. The first convicts arrived at the gaol in 1851. The facility closed on 1 May 1997, although some of the heritage-listed buildings still stand.
HM Prison Beechworth, now known as Beechworth Gaol, was a medium security Australian prison located in Beechworth, Victoria, Australia.
HM Prison Bendigo was a medium security prison facility located in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia. Constructed in the early 1863, the prison officially closed in 2004, and has since been converted into Ulumbarra Theatre, one of the city's largest performing arts venues. Construction on the prison began in the late 1850s and was originally housed both male and female inmates before they were relocated in 1896. In 1942, the prison was handed over to the Commonwealth Government for use as a military prison, though this arrangement ended in 1947. In 1950, the facility underwent refurbishment to be reopened as a state government prison again.
Joseph Theodore Leslie "Squizzy" Taylor was an Australian gangster from Melbourne. He appeared repeatedly and sometimes prominently in Melbourne news media because of suspicions, formal accusations and some convictions related to a 1919 gang war, to his absconding from bail and hiding from the police in 1921–22, and to his involvement in a robbery where a bank manager was murdered in 1923.
J Ward originally the Ararat County Gaol, was an Australian prison, of the latter a psychiatric facility to house the criminally insane, located in Ararat, Victoria, Australia.
Father Charles Adolphus O'Hea OSA (1814–1903) was an Irish Australian Catholic Priest. He began his ministry in Ireland before travelling to Melbourne, Australia where he lived until his death. He is best known for establishing a number of churches north of Melbourne and for both baptizing and administering last rites to the bushranger Ned Kelly.
Henry Johnson, better known by his alias Harry Power, was an Irish-born convict who became a bushranger in Australia. From 1869 to 1870, he was accompanied by a young Ned Kelly, who went on to become Australia's best known bushranger.
Capital punishment in Australia has been abolished in all jurisdictions since 1985. Queensland abolished the death penalty in 1922. Tasmania did the same in 1968. The Commonwealth abolished the death penalty in 1973, with application also in the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory. Victoria did so in 1975, South Australia in 1976, and Western Australia in 1984. New South Wales abolished the death penalty for murder in 1955, and for all crimes in 1985. In 2010, the Commonwealth Parliament passed legislation prohibiting the re-establishment of capital punishment by any state or territory. Australian law prohibits the extradition or deportation of a prisoner to another jurisdiction if they could be sentenced to death for any crime.
The Ballarat Gaol, a former maximum security prison for males, females and children, is located in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. Replacing temporary structures including prison hulks in the Bay of Port Phillip and holding yards in Ballarat, the gaol operated between 1862 and 1965.
The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) is an Australian public university, founded by Francis Ormond MLA in 1887, in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
The Melbourne City campus of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology is located in the city centre of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia. It is sometimes referred to as "RMIT City" and the "RMIT Quarter" of the city in the media.
Tunnerminnerwait (c.1812–1842) was an Australian Aboriginal resistance fighter and Parperloihener clansman from Tasmania. He was also known by several other names including Pevay, Jack of Cape Grim, Tunninerpareway and renamed Jack Napoleon Tarraparrura by George Robinson.
Robert Francis Burns was an Irish Australian murderer and probable serial killer. He was hanged at Ararat Gaol in September 1883, convicted of the murder of Michael Quinlivan near Wickliffe in western Victoria. After Burns's death the hangman made a sensational claim that the prisoner had stated to him, prior to the execution, that he had murdered eight people in total, five in Victoria and three in New South Wales. The revelation prompted speculation in the colonial press, attempting to identify other murder victims with whom Burns had been associated.
Thomas William Johnson murdered two residents of a boarding house in the delicensed Windsor Castle Hotel in Dunolly, Victoria, in October 1938. He was an itinerant labourer with a record of violence and petty crime. Johnson confessed to the brutal killings, but at his trial he pleaded not guilty for reason of insanity. He was convicted and executed at Pentridge Prison in January 1939. Johnson was the fourth of eleven people to be hanged at Pentridge Prison after the closure of Melbourne Gaol in 1924.
Alfred Bye, was convicted of a stabbing murder behind Parliament House, Melbourne, Victoria. He was executed at Pentridge Prison, Victoria in 1941. Bye was the sixth of eleven people to be hanged at Pentridge Prison after the closure of Melbourne Gaol in 1924.
Ernest Knox was an Australian man executed for the murder of Isaac Crawcour, whom he shot during a bungled burglary in Williamstown. He is known for possibly being the source of a skull previously thought to be that of bushranger Ned Kelly.
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