Harry Power

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Henry Johnson (Template:CircaTemplate:Circa 11 October 1891), better known by his alias Harry Power, was an Irish-born convict who became a bushranger in Australia. From 1869 to 1870, he was accompanied by a young Ned Kelly, who went on to become Australia's best known bushranger.

Power escaped from Pentridge Prison twice, in 1862 and 1869. He was known for his affable demeanour and sense of flair, as well as the fact that he never killed any of his targets.[1][2]

Early life

Henry Johnson,Template:Sfnm also known as JohnstonTemplate:Sfnm or Johnstone,Template:Sfnm was born in County Waterford, Ireland[3]Template:Sfn around 1820.[3] One source gives the exact date of 18 May 1819.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Johnson and his family moved to England in the 1830s. He worked as a piecer at the Woolen Mills in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire.[4] When he was only sixteen years of age his father had him apprenticed to the saddler trade.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". His education consisted chiefly of learning to horseback ride.Template:Sfn Later on he joined the peasants in their conflicts with the British troops. It was during this time that he received the sabre wounds on his face,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". which are described in the Victorian police records as, "scar over right eyebrow, scars on right cheek."Template:Sfn

Transportation

Johnson was convicted at Salford, Lancashire, on 31 AugustScript error: No such module "Unsubst". 1840 for stealing a pair of shoes, and was sentenced to transportation for seven years. He arrived in Hobart on the Isabella on 21 May 1842.[3]Template:Efn

Johnson received a ticket of leave in November 1847, and a certificate of freedom in September 1848. He subsequently moved to the Colony of Victoria and became a horse-dealer at Geelong.[3] Power was engaged driving cattle all over Victoria and New South Wales, and later joined a party led by Captain Joseph Denman in exploring and cutting a track across the ranges. He became skilled at navigating the bush.Template:Sfn

Prison

File:Harry Power the bushranger.jpg
Henry Johnson, photographed in the 1850s

1855 conviction

In March 1855, Johnson was stopped by two troopers at Daisy Hill, near Maryborough, on suspicion of horse-stealing. A conflict occurred and Johnson wounded one of the men.[3] Johnson claimed that he rightfully owned the horse, and that the two troopers, Germans, were drunk.Template:Sfn One week later he was arrested attempting to cross the Murray River.[3]<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

"I was going along quietly, when down came the two troopers, hooting and shouting. I saw they were drunk, and pulled on one side, but they stopped me. 'Whose horse is that?' says one. 'It's mine,' says I. 'Are you going to shout?' says the other. 'No,' says I, for I didn't like the Germans. 'I believe you stole that horse,' says the first.' 'You're a liar,' says I. ' You'll have to come along with us,' says the other. 'I won't do it,' says I, getting riled. On that one of them drew his hanger, and said he'd make me. 'You can't,' says I. He charged at me, and I'd only just time to draw my revolver, or he'd have cut me down. I shot him, and then the other fellow rode up and fired at me, and the powder singed my coat. I shot him, and then rode off. Now, if I had been sensible, I'd have ridden off to the nearest police station and given myself up. But I was frightened, and rode across the colony, thinking to go and stay in New South Wales till the row was over. At the Murray I was stopped. I did not deny my name or resist. They arrested and brought me down to Melbourne, and I got 10 years. The men were not hurt much, and it was proved they stopped me without cause, or I'd have got more."Template:Sfn

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". On 25 September 1855, Johnson was sentenced to thirteen years on the roads and confined to the prison hulk Success. Johnson was among those implicated in the murder of Owen Owens and John Turner on 22 October 1856, but was found not guilty.[5]

File:Success prison ship LOC ggbain 12287u.jpg
After his release in 1885, Power worked on the former prison hulk Success when it became a museum ship.

Escapes from Pentridge Prison

After two and a half years in the hulks, Johnson was transferred to Pentridge Prison. He escaped Pentridge in 1862[6] by hiding in a rubbish cart.[1] Johnson lived at Middle Creek in the Ovens District; there he was assisted by the Kelly, Quinn and Lloyd families. Johnson was later arrested for horse-stealing, and on 19 February 1864, he was sentenced at Beechworth to seven years on the roads.[6]

Johnson made his second escape from Pentridge Prison on 16 February 1869.Template:Sfn[7] Whilst helping a group of convicts build a wall, he noticed a grassy hollow in the wall and hid there when the guards escorted the group back to gaol.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He subsequently escaped in the direction of Merri CreekTemplate:Sfn and took refuge above the Glenmore homestead[8] with old mates.Template:Sfn

Bushranger

Johnson turned to highway robbery and became a bushranger.Template:Sfn By 1869 he was calling himself Harry Power.Template:Sfn

File:Ned Kelly aged 15.jpg
Power mentored Ned Kelly (photographed in 1871), who became Australia's best-known bushranger.

Harry Power was assisted briefly by Ned Kelly,[7] the young teenage son of poor Irish immigrants.Template:Sfn The Kelly family sympathised with Power, and by May 1869 Ned Kelly had become his bushranging protégé.Template:Sfn

That month, the duo attempted to steal horses from the Mansfield property of squatter John Rowe as part of a plan to rob the Woods Point–Mansfield gold escort. They abandoned the idea after Rowe shot at them, and Kelly temporarily broke off his association with Power.Template:Sfn Power ultimately proved to be unsatisfied with Kelly and Power later worked solo.[7]

On 7 May, Power held up the mail-coach at Porepunkah. On 22 May, he held up yet another coach on Longwood-Mansfield Road. Power claimed to have committed over 600 robberies in 1869, with these robberies being the first.[7] Within four months of his escape, Power had stuck up a mail-coach three times. On the Saturday morning before 31 August, he stopped the Buckland coach on a public road, within five miles of the Ovens district, and for three hours stopped all travellers through that area. Power later boasted that, despite attempts by police to capture him, he visited Beechworth undetected and enjoyed a drink at a hotel.Template:Sfn

Power was not caught, despite his recognisable appearance; the third finger on his left hand was deformed, and he had trouble walking due to bunions on his feet which required oversized boots. Power would sometimes commit robberies a hundred miles apart in the span of a single day.Template:Sfn A major factor in why Power was not caught was due to the unorganised and small local police force.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Harry Power capture.jpg
Capture of Power, 1870

In September 1869, the Victorian government offered a reward of £200 for Power's arrest; the amount was soon increased to £500. Power subsequently moved to New South Wales.[9] There were claims that during these robberies Power had a young assistant who took care of the horses. Suspicion fell on Kelly.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". However he soon returned to Victoria.[9]

In March 1870, Power and Kelly held squatter and magistrate Robert McBean at gunpoint at his property Kilfera and forced him to turn over his watch.Template:Sfn

Power robbed both rich and poor alike. He held up stagecoaches, farmhouses, liquor stores, solo travellers and itinerant workers. He also set fire to a store in Gundagai, stole a young boy's comforter at gunpoint, and heavily beat a Chinese worker for not obeying him. Power boasted that he loved robbing from farmhouses and would visit them when the farmer had left for work and the wife was home alone.Template:Sfn

File:Powers lookout panorama.jpg
View from Power's Lookout.

Police efforts to capture him proved fruitless until he was arrested on 5 June 1870 by Superintendents Nicolson and Hare, who with Sergeant Montford and a black tracker, surprised Power in his hide-out (Power's Lookout) overlooking the Quinn property on the King River. The police were led there by James Quinn, who received the reward of £500. Power was sentenced at Beechworth to fifteen-years hard labour on three counts of bushranging and was again held at Pentridge.[9]

Power was captured on 5 June 1870Template:Sfn[9] by Superintendents Nicolson and Hare with Sergeant Montford and a black tracker. The group surprised Power in his hide-out (Power's Lookout) whilst he was sleeping. He was arrested while sleeping in a hut on the Glenmore Run which was squatted by the Quinn family, Ned Kelly's grandparents and uncles.Template:Sfn[8][9] The police were led to the hideout by James Quinn, who received the £500 reward.[9] Power believed Ned Kelly had betrayed him.Template:Sfn Power was sentenced at Beechworth to 15 years hard labour, on three counts of bushranging. He was once again imprisoned at Pentridge.[9]

Later life

By March 1877, Power was "sick nearly unto death" in prison. He was described as slight, weak and grey.Template:Sfn He was not released from prison until 9 February 1885, aged 66,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". on the application of several women, including socialite Janet Clarke. He worked on the Clarke property at Sunbury, then in 1891 he became a guide on the old Prison Hulk Success[10] (on which he had once served a sentence) which was by then a museum.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

In late 1891 Power fell into the Murray River and drowned at Swan Hill,[10] possibly while fishing.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". His corpse was discovered at Tyntynder. On 8 November (a few days after the discovery), the drowned man was identified as Harry Power.Template:Sfn It was determined that he died "on or about 11 October".[10] One contemporary newspaper alleged that Power had committed suicide, but this is considered unlikely.Template:Sfn[10]

Legacy

File:Russell Crowe at diff in 2015.jpg
Russell Crowe portrayed Power in the 2019 film True History of the Kelly Gang.

Power's Lookout Reserve near Whitfield, Victoria, is named after Harry Power.[11][12]Template:Sfn

Power's relationship with Kelly is depicted in the 1980 miniseries The Last Outlaw, where he was played by Gerard Kennedy.[13] The relationship is also depicted in Peter Carey's Booker Prize-winning novel True History of the Kelly Gang. In the 2019 film adaptation of the novel, Power was portrayed by Russell Crowe, opposite Orlando Schwerdt as a young Ned Kelly.[14][15]

References

Notes

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Citations

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Sources

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Newspapers

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Further reading

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External links

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