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Offline hardluckTopic starter
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« on: November 02, 2010, 02:47:55 am »
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Hello all

Fredrick Ward was a bushranger, known as 'CAPTAIN THUNDERBOLT', was born at Windsor, New South Wales in 1835. He was working as a drover and horse-breaker at a station on the Paterson River when arrested with James Garbutt for receiving seventy-five stolen horses at Maitland on 21 April 1856.  They were sentenced to ten years hard labour.

Released conditionally from Cockatoo Island on 31 July 1860, Ward worked as a horse-breaker at Cooyal near Mudgee until his ticket-of-leave was cancelled on 17 September 1861 for 'absence from Muster' and he was tried on 3 October for horse-stealing.

 Returned to Cockatoo Island to complete his original sentence with an additional three years, Ward escaped with Frederick Brittain about 11 September 1863, probably assisted by his wife Mary Ann (n?e Bugg?), a half-caste Aboriginal. She and Ward lived quietly on the Culgoa River near Bourke with two children until he adopted the name 'Captain Thunderbolt' in February 1865.

He carried out a series of armed robberies near Bourke with three associates, including a 16-year-old boy John Thomson, who was shot and captured by the police at Millie near Moree. Ward and two others robbed inns and mail-coaches in the Liverpool Plains District; in December 1865 at Caroll near Gunnedah they held up an inn and danced and drank until the police arrived. They wounded a policeman and escaped, abandoning three pack-horses. Ward separated from his companions and never again made a stand when the police approached.

Alone, with a reward of ?200 on his head, Ward held up mailmen and on 3 February 1867 was almost captured while drunk near Manilla. He took an accomplice Thomas Mason, a 16-year-old orphan, with whom he robbed the mails in the New England and Upper Hunter areas as well as the Liverpool Plains District. While hiding out in the Borah ranges they became separated, Mason was captured in August and convicted of highway robbery.

Mary Ann followed Ward whenever possible; at Stroud in March 1866 she had been sentenced to six months for vagrancy but was released in April, probably because she was pregnant. Her health was undermined by her rigorous life and, aged 28, she reputedly died of pneumonia on 24 November 1867 in a settler's home near Muswellbrook where Ward had taken her.

Ward's next companion was William Monckton, a 13-year-old runaway, with whom he robbed travellers and the mails in the New England area. In October 1868 Monckton abandoned Ward who then worked alone and less actively; on 25 May 1870 he was surprised while testing an inferior horse and was chased and shot by Constable Alexander Binney Walker at Kentucky Creek near Uralla. A Protestant, he was buried in Uralla cemetery without religious rites.

Ward was 5 ft 8 ? ins (173 cm) tall, slight, and of sallow complexion with hazel-grey eyes and light-brown curly hair. He undoubtedly had great nerve, endurance and unusual self-reliance and his success as a bushranger can be largely attributed to his horsemanship and splendid mounts, to popular sympathy inspired by his agreeable appearance and conversation, and to his gentlemanly behaviour and avoidance of violence; he also showed prudence in not robbing armed coaches, or towns where a policeman was stationed.

 The last of the professional bushrangers in New South Wales, Ward was the most successful. Much of his ill gotten gains has never been recovered. He was known to have been to have thrifty type of person preferring to live in the bush living off the land.

There are many areas in Northern N.S.W that are suspected haunts. One location known as Thunderbolts rocks and another location called Thunderbolts cave is near Tenterfeild.

There are many other locations that could possible if thoroughly searched could lead to hidden caches.

Maybe one day some lucky person will come across mementos of Fredrick wards Bushranging days.

Hardluck

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