C1867

Bushranging in New South Wales. – …

Rare c.19th engraving relating to the bushrangers known as the Clarke gang who operated in New South Wales in the 1860’s. The Jinden murders of 9 January 1867 were among the most notorious episodes of bushranging violence in colonial New … Read Full Description

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Details

Full Title:

Bushranging in New South Wales. – The Jinden murders

Date:

C1867

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Engraving.

Image Size: 

24mm 
x 162mm

Paper Size: 

264mm 
x 185mm
AUTHENTICITY
Bushranging in New South Wales. - The Jinden murders - Antique View from 1867

Genuine antique
dated:

1867

Description:

Rare c.19th engraving relating to the bushrangers known as the Clarke gang who operated in New South Wales in the 1860’s.

The Jinden murders of 9 January 1867 were among the most notorious episodes of bushranging violence in colonial New South Wales and remain the largest mass killing of police officers in Australian history. The victims, special constables John Carroll, Patrick Kennagh, Eneas McDonnell and John Phegan, had been sworn in to pursue the Clarke gang, a band of bushrangers operating throughout the Braidwood district during the 1860s. The gang was led by brothers Thomas Clarke and John Clarke, whose activities included armed robberies, mail coach hold-ups and violent attacks across southern New South Wales. The rugged country around Jinden and Jingera, where the gang enjoyed considerable local sympathy, made police operations difficult and allowed the bushrangers to evade capture for extended periods.

Carroll and his companions travelled in disguise as surveyors while searching for the Clarkes in the dense bush near Jinden Station, south of Braidwood. During the night of 8–9 January 1867 they were ambushed near a place known as Duck Pond. Contemporary reports differ on the precise circumstances of the killings, though accounts state that the four constables were either tied to a tree and shot or killed at close range during a sudden confrontation. A bloodstained one-pound note was reportedly pinned to Carroll’s body as a warning to others pursuing the gang.

The murders intensified efforts to suppress bushranging in the district. In April 1867 the Clarke brothers were captured after a shootout at Berry’s Hut on Jinden Creek. Following their trial in Sydney, both men were convicted of murder and executed at Darlinghurst Gaol on 25 June 1867. In 2017, on the 150th anniversary of the killings, a memorial plaque commemorating the four special constables was unveiled near the site of the murders.

Collections:
State Library Victoria: Record ID 9910433933607636
National Library Australia: Bib ID: 6451121
State Library New South Wales: Record Identifier 74VvD5Wg6Xp3

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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