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Famed Irish Australian rebel Ned Kelly’s remains returned to his family

Kelly’s body will be now returned to Ireland for a private burial says family


Ned Kelly
Ned Kelly
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The remains of famed folk hero and rebel Ned Kelly will be returned to his family in Ireland  for a proper private burial, 132 years after his execution in Australia.

The Irish Independent reports on the conclusion of the long standing fight by Kelly’s descendants to see his remains returned for a proper burial.

Ned Kelly is remembered by some as a Robin Hood type character in 1800s Australia, while to others, he is seen as a cold blooded cop killer. Kelly, son of an Irish convict from Tipperary was an iconic figure who led a gang of bank robbers in Australia's southern Victoria state in the 19th century.

In 1878, a robbery and shootout helped Kelly and his cohorts become infamous for having the-then largest ever reward placed upon them at 8,000 pounds apiece.

After two years of robbing banks, Kelly was wounded in a gun battle in Glenrowan. Donning a homemade plate metal armor, he was finally arrested.

That same year in 1880, Kelly was hanged for his crimes outside Old Melbourne Gaol. He was buried in an unmarked mass grave outside where his body would be lost among the others. In 1929, the bodies were exhumed and transferred to Pentridge Prison.

During the transfer to Pentridge Prison, it is believed that someone from a mob of onlookers snatched Kelly’s skull. The skull was found again and put on display at the Old Melbourne Gaol, only to be stolen again in 1978. It has yet to be recovered.

In 2009, the bodies were exhumed yet again and Kelly’s remains, a skeleton missing the skull, were formally identified in 2011.

A battle between Kelly’s family and developers at Pentridge Prison for ownership to the remains soon ensued. His family wanted the remains returned to Ireland for a proper burial, while the Prison wanted to keep the skeleton.

However, on Thursday, Victoria Attorney General Robert Clark that the remains would be turned over to Kelly's family.

Ellen Hollow, great-granddaughter of Ned Kelly's sister Kate Kelly, said in a statement: "The Kelly family will now make arrangements for Ned's final burial. We also appeal to the person who has the skull in their possession to return it to (forensic officials), so that when the time comes for Ned to be laid to rest his remains can be complete."

Ned Kelly’s legacy still lives on today via two films made about the infamous hero, as well as a book published in 2000. Mick Jagger and Heath Ledger played him in two Hollywood films.


Nster.com


12 Comments

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He's been buried in Northern Victoria with his ancestors.
ned kelly was not a thug, he was a hero. thank God he can at last be buried in ireland.God bless
Nicopernicus your remark about Kelly is ill-judged and silly, you need to read a little more about the subject.
mr kelly should be given the full military honour of a military funeral,he was as much a patriot as anyone who ever took up arms against tyranny and injustice.he wanted to establish a republic,anethema to the the british crown,aspecially as he was a focal point for POPULAR RESISTANCE,IT TOOK OVERWHELMING FORCE TO DO IT.Hopefully Australia fair will soon become a proper republic.
A thug is thug is a thug no matter where he is buried.
The most historically reliable 'film' account of the Ned Kelly story was a TV series of 4 episodes called THE LAST OUTLAW made by Australian 7 Network in the 70s - still available on DVD. This gives some understanding of the privations of pioneer NE Victoria of the time and the events which lead up to the last and culminating twelve months of the Kelly story. This is the ONLY time they were known as a gang, or wanted for shooting policemen and robbing two banks and as Outlaws. MsO'Shea's short hand account of the story perpetuates an erroneous take of the Kelly outbreak and the historical socio-economic conditions which replicated Ireland of the same time: colonisation where the only productive land was taken by another Ascendency class. Read 'Ned Kelly - A Short Life' by Ian Jones or 'Australia Son - the story of Ned Kelly' by Max Brown. The Kelly Outbreak is history before it is legend, but it became legend because of the human drama of injustice, courage, frontier toughness, a son's love for his mother, folly, death, loyality and betrayal topped off with a fantastical plan of heroic imagination. Read the real story. Get the full picture, it's greater than the legend. It's another Irish story and its tentacles reach right down to the present day for all the descendents of the families brutally affected.
Ned is not returning to Ireland (he was not Irish) he is to be buried in northern Victoria with his ancestors. Kelly was a polarising figure. Some see him as a bank robber who killed police officers (some of them Irish). Others read his Jerilderie letter and call him a revolutionary (he wanted to establish the "republic of Northern Victoria".
I'm glad that he's being returned to Ireland for a proper burial. Now if someone would just please mail his skull to his family back home. Let's get a head count, pleasssseeee.
I'm a little surprised the Aussies gave up on ol' Ned so easily! Several of my friends from Oz were talking about Ned Kelly just the other day, he's still the topic of conversation among many in Australia even now. Anyway it's best that the family has Ned interred in Ireland, for sure..
It is best.
Perhaps it might be an idea to offer the 8,000 pounds reward for Ned's Head.
Colin Farrell played a member of the kelly gand in his first stage appearence in Sydney Austlailia at age 17.
 




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