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- Ned Kelly - Wikipedia
Edward Kelly (December 1854 [a] – 11 November 1880) was an Australian bushranger, outlaw, gang leader, bank robber 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
- Ned Kelly | Biography Facts | Britannica
Ned Kelly, most famous of the bushrangers, Australian rural outlaws of the 19th century He was the leader of the Kelly gang, who perpetrated a series of daring robberies in the Victoria-New South Wales borderland (1878–80) that captured the imagination of the public
- Ned Kelly information sheet - State Library Victoria
There's no denying that Ned Kelly was a notorious criminal, feared around Victoria and beyond as a robber and murderer However, while it is not known how many sympathisers Kelly had in his day, over time a national myth emerged that pitched Kelly as a victim of police harassment and an underdog with the courage to challenge the authorities
- Edward (Ned) Kelly - Australian Dictionary of Biography
Edward (Ned) Kelly (1855-1880), bushranger, was born in 1854 or 1855 at Beveridge, Victoria, the eldest son of John (Red) Kelly and his wife Ellen, née Quinn His father was born in Tipperary, Ireland, in 1820 and sentenced in 1841 to seven years' transportation for stealing two pigs
- Who Was Ned Kelly? - History Hit
Ned Kelly is the most infamous bushranger, and his known crimes include cow and horse theft, alongside assault and murder He became a bushranger under the mentoring of Harry Power, an absconding prisoner, in the late 1860s
- Key information - Ned Kelly - Research Guides at State Library of Victoria
Read on for information about Ned Kelly's life, including a brief background and timeline, plus information about his legendary suit of armour, key incidents and his trial and execution Catalogue Register
- Ned Kelly timeline - Australian Geographic
Ned Kelly is Australia’s most loved and infamous bushranger Many Aussies believe his last words before his 1880 hanging in a Melbourne jail were “such is life” That’s a myth, but it does represent the easygoing Aussie ethos
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