Ned Kelly's childhood home is up for sale. Ned was born in Beveridge, 40 kms from Melbourne CBD. Ned's father John "Red" Kelly built the family's first home in 1859 with materials from the bush, like the local bluestone used for the chimney.
Ned lived in the house when he was a boy for about four years and it's also where his brothers Jim and Dan and sister Kate were born.
A modern 4 bedroom home shares the 1.4 hectare site with the Kelly house which carries a heritage order for its architectural and historical significance. It's the only remaining example of a home Ned lived in as a child.
4 bedroom home included in sale
The legend of Ned Kelly will never be forgotton. To this day, he is admired by some and considered a common criminal by others.
Here is a brief glimpse into the life of his mother, Ellen. When she visited Ned before he was hanged she said "Mind, you die like a Kelly son."
Kelly, Ellen
(1832–1923) by Jacqueline Zara
Wilson
Ellen
Kelly (c.1832–1923), matriarch and mother of Ned Kelly, was born in
County Antrim, Ireland, fourth of eleven children of James Quinn, farmer, and
his wife Mary, née McCluskey. Ellen had an adventurous spirit that rebelled
against any confinement and led her often to play truant from school and roam
the countryside—a practice that left her able to read but not to write, and
with a lifelong affinity for horses and the land. The Quinns, then numbering
ten, reached Port Phillip as assisted migrants in July 1841.
After
a period of menial work in Melbourne, James took the family north to rented
farmland at Brunswick, then in 1849 a further 30 miles (48.3 km) to Wallan. Lively
and slim with black hair and grey eyes, and an expert horsewoman, Ellen caught
the eye of 30-year-old John 'Red' Kelly, an Irishman who had been transported
to Van Diemen's Land for theft in 1841. Defying her father, Ellen took up with
Red, and fell pregnant to him in May 1850. They married on 18 November at St
Francis's Catholic Church, Melbourne, and moved into their own cottage on the
Quinns' Wallan property.
Their
first-born, a girl, survived only briefly. In 1853 Red set off alone to the
goldfields, where he made enough to buy a farm near Beveridge. Ellen had a
daughter Anne and in December 1854 a son, who was named Edward after Red's
brother. The extensive Quinn and Kelly clans tended to skirt the fringes of the
law, and for Ellen and Red financial difficulties, several moves, further
births and mounting police attention set a definitive pattern. Red began
drinking heavily. In 1865 he stole a calf and served four months in gaol. The
following year he died, an alcoholic, of oedema, leaving Ellen with seven
children aged from 18 months to 13 years.
As
she struggled to raise her children on inferior farmland, she became notorious
for her sometimes-violent temper, resulting in several court appearances. After
moving her family into the far north-east of Victoria to stay near relations,
she leased a selection of 88 acres (35.6 ha) there and sold 'sly grog' to make
ends meet. The bushranger Harry Power became a family friend,
introducing 14-year-old Ned to the life of a bandit. In 1869 Ellen took a
lover, Bill Frost, and became pregnant, he promising marriage. The baby—her
ninth—was born in March 1870, but Frost did not keep his word. Trouble with the
law increased, with several of Ellen's siblings and offspring suffering periods
of imprisonment.
Late
in 1872, with Ned in prison, she met George King, a 23-year-old Californian
horse-thief, and once more fell pregnant. On 19 February 1874 they married at
Benalla with Primitive Methodist forms. She had three children by King. Alice,
the last, was born in April 1878, six months after King abruptly deserted them,
and only days before Constable Fitzpatrick arrived at the Kelly home to arrest
Ellen's son Dan for horse-theft. Set upon by Ellen (wielding a spade) and
probably Ned, Fitzpatrick brought charges of attempted murder; she was
sentenced to three years in prison.
A
model prisoner, Ellen was allowed, after Dan's death and Ned's capture, to
visit Ned in the prison hospital and later in the cells, seeing him for the
last time on the eve of his execution. According to tradition, she said 'Mind
you die like a Kelly, son'. Released in February 1881, Ellen returned home to
scenes of incipient civil rebellion; the authorities feared a pro-Kelly
uprising. Constable Robert Graham, however, gained her confidence and persuaded
her to calm her sympathizers. She settled down to become, for the first time in
her life, a respectable community identity—although she was never able to rise
to even modest prosperity.
Her
daughters Maggie and Kate died in the late 1890s, leaving Ellen to raise three
of her grandchildren, helped by her son James. He continued to live with her,
caring for her in her old age. She died on 27 March 1923 at Greta West and was
buried in Greta cemetery with Catholic rites. Of her twelve children, a son and
daughter of her first marriage and a son and two daughters of her second
survived her.
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