Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ned Kelly's armour on display in the State Library of Victoria. The helmet, breastplate, backplate and shoulder plates show 18 bullet marks. Also on display are Kelly's Snider Enfield rifle and one of his boots. In 1879, Australian bushranger and outlaw Ned Kelly devised a plan to create bulletproof armour and wear it during shootouts with the ...
Edward Kelly (December 1854 [a] – 11 November 1880) 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.
The museum held the backplate of the armour of the bushranger Ned Kelly, until 2002 when it donated the piece to the State Library of Victoria to make a complete set of Kelly's armour along with other pieces from Melbourne Museum and Scienceworks.
The Last Outlaw is a 1963 British radio serial by Rex Rienits about Ned Kelly. [1] It is not to be confused with the 1980 Australian mini series about Kelly, which has the same name . The serial was one of a number of dramatisations of Australian historical figures by Rienits.
Actor portraying Ned Kelly in an authentic suit of the Kelly gang's armour, which was loaned to the filmmakers and used in the film. Ned Kelly's capture. Film historian Ina Bertrand suggests that the tone of The Story of the Kelly Gang is "one of sorrow, depicting Ned Kelly and his gang as the last of the bushrangers." Bertrand identifies ...
Hands Up, or Ned Kelly and His Gang is a 1900 Australian play by Edward Irham Cole about Ned Kelly. It appeared to make its debut in 1900. [ 1 ] The play was one of a large number of dramas about Ned Kelly that followed from the success of The Kelly Gang in 1898.
The painting depicts the figure of Ned Kelly in solid black armour, Nolan's most recognisable motif, firing a rifle against the Australian landscape. The title refers to an incident that took place in Victoria's Stringybark Creek , when Kelly and his gang were practising their marksmanship, firing hundreds of rounds at surrounding trees from a ...
Ned Kelly is a 1959 Australian television play adapted from the radio play of the same name. It focused on two main events – the robbery at Jerilderie and the siege at the Glenrowan Hotel. [1] It was different from a later TV play about Ned Kelly, Ballad for One Gun. [2]