C1866

Recapture of Dunn the Bushranger.

Rare colonial bushranger image of John Dunn born  1846? at Murrumburrah near Yass, New South Wales. He was associated with other notorious bushrangers, Ben Hall and John Gilbert. On 26 January 1865, Hall, Gilbert and Dunn were at Collector, near … Read Full Description

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S/N: AA-1866-IAN-0623–198402
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Details

Full Title:

Recapture of Dunn the Bushranger.

Date:

C1866

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Engraving.

Image Size: 

230mm 
x 205mm
AUTHENTICITY
Recapture of Dunn the Bushranger. - Antique Print from 1866

Genuine antique
dated:

1866

Description:

Rare colonial bushranger image of John Dunn born  1846? at Murrumburrah near Yass, New South Wales. He was associated with other notorious bushrangers, Ben Hall and John Gilbert.

On 26 January 1865, Hall, Gilbert and Dunn were at Collector, near Lake George, whereby Dunn shot the local police officer, Constable Samuel Nelson, while Hall and Gilbert held up the hotel.

He was captured on 26 December 1865 and hanged at the Darlinghurst gaol in March 1866 and buried in the old Devonshire Street cemetery in Sydney.

From the original edition of the Illustrated Australian News. 

Samuel Calvert (1828 - 1913)

British born in England in 1828, Calvert trained in the demanding craft of wood engraving, a medium essential to nineteenth-century illustrated books and newspapers.

He emigrated to Australia during the great period of colonial expansion and settled in Melbourne, where a growing press and publishing industry created strong demand for skilled reproductive artists capable of translating drawings into printable blocks.

By the 1850s and 1860s Calvert had established himself as a leading engraver in Victoria. He worked for major colonial publications, most notably the Illustrated Australian News and other illustrated papers that documented civic ceremonies, public buildings, exhibitions, shipping, exploration, and social life. His engravings helped shape the visual record of early Melbourne and the Australian colonies, rendering architecture, landscapes, and historical events with clarity and technical assurance.

Calvert was particularly associated with large commemorative and documentary projects, including views connected with Melbourne’s international exhibitions and other displays of colonial progress. His work bridged art and reportage: while based on artists’ drawings, his engravings required interpretive skill to convey depth, texture, and atmosphere within the linear language of the wood block. Through this process he played a central role in transforming colonial events into widely circulated images.

In addition to his professional practice, Calvert was active in artistic circles in Victoria and contributed to the establishment of professional standards in the graphic arts. He also trained or influenced younger engravers, helping to localise a craft that had previously depended heavily on British production.

Samuel Calvert died in 1913, leaving a substantial body of work that today serves as an important visual archive of nineteenth-century Australia. His engravings are represented in major Australian libraries and collections and remain valued for both their artistic quality and their documentary significance.

View other items by Samuel Calvert

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