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The pub and main street in
the tiny settlement of
Muttaburra
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Muttaburra
Tiny
township servicing the large properties which surround it.
Located 84 km north of Aramac and 119 km (mostly by dirt
road) from Longreach the small town of Muttaburra has two claims to
fame. It was the site of the discovery of the Muttaburrasaurus, one of
Australia's largest dinosaurs, and it was also the scene of one of the
most daring acts of cattleduffing ever performed in Australia. In fact
the Mount Cornish homestead was built as an outstation to the huge
Bowen Downs station to prevent any future cattleduffing.
The history of Muttaburra is really the history
of Harry Redford. His remarkable story - one of audacity, cunning,
chicanery and consummate bushmanship, all employed in the name of
criminal self-interest - formed the basis of Rolf Boldrewood's novel
Robbery Under Arms (considered the first significant Australian novel).
The admiration of the outback people for his actions is a fascinating
reflection of the Australian character.
Redford was born in the Hawkesbury River district
of New South Wales in 1842. It is likely that his father was the
convict, Thomas Redford, who had arrived in Australia in 1826. By the
time he was a teenager Redford was working as a drover and by 1870 he
was in central western Queensland working on the vast Bowen Downs
station which, at the time, covered 1.75 million acres. The area upon
which modern-day Muttaburra stands was at one end of this vast holding.
At the time Bowen Downs was running a herd of about
70 000 cattle and Redford felt that the station owners wouldn't even
know if they were a thousand short on muster. Redford knew that if he
stole the cattle (all of which were branded) he couldn't sell them in
Queensland or New South Wales. So he devised a plan to drove the cattle
down Cooper Creek into South Australia. To understand how daring this
plan was it is worth remembering that Burke and Wills had died
attempting to make a similar journey only nine years earlier.
Redford successfully drove the cattle 1300 km to the
Blanche Water station in northern South Australia where he sold them
for £5000. However the loss was noted and in February 1871 Redford
was arrested and taken to Roma to be tried. The charge was 'that
Redford, in March 1870, at Bowen Downs station, feloniously did steal
100 bullocks, 100 cows, 100 heifers, 100 steers, one white bull, the
property of Morehead and Young.'
From the outset the trial had the elements of an
entertainment rather than a serious investigation. Locals, captivated
by Redford's consummate bushcraft and daring, packed the courtroom. The
stolen white bull stood in a yard outside the courthouse. 41 of the 48
people called as possible jurors were dismissed as they were considered
prejudiced. The white bull took part in a line-up with 20 other bulls
and was immediately identified by its owner.
The evidence against Redford was overwhelming. The
defence offered no witnesses and complained that Redford had been
gaoled without trial.
The jury retired for an hour and then delivered their
verdict. The court transcript reads as follows:
Judge: What is your verdict?
Foreman of the Jury: We find the prisoner 'Not Guilty'.
Judge: What?
Foreman of the Jury: Not guilty.
Judge: I thank God, gentlemen, that the verdict is
yours, not mine!
On 5 April 1873 the governor of Queensland ordered that
the criminal jurisdiction of the District Court at Roma be withdrawn
for two years.
After his acquittal Harry Redford headed into northern
Australia. He worked as a drover on the Atherton Tableland and around
the Gulf country. In 1883 he moved the first herd of cattle from
Queensland to the Brunette Downs station where he was appointed
manager. For many years he oversaw the McArthur River station on the
Gulf of Carpentaria and was known around Burketown as the model for
Boldrewood's Captain Starlight, although he refused to acknowledge the
obvious similarities.
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Hotels
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The Exchange Hotel
Bruford St
Muttaburra
QLD
4732
Telephone: (07) 4658 7125
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Restaurants
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The Exchange Hotel
Bruford St
Muttaburra
QLD
4732
Telephone: (07) 4658 7125
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