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Australian
Bushrangers
WILLIAM
BROOKMAN

William
was born at Tumut, New South Wales, in 1851. He is believed to have come from a
respective family but on the 24 November 1867, he in the company of John Payne,
John Williams and Edward Kelly (no relation to Ned), held up a race meeting at
William Whittacker's store, Mossgiel Station, near Willandra. They took a
considerable amount from about fifty spectators and while Payne and Kelly left,
Brookman and Williams went over to the store. Constable McNamara, who was
stationed at Booligal was on the verandah and when the two men bailed him up he
made a rush at Brookman. As they struggled Brookman's revolver went off,
shattering the constables wrist while another shot hit him in the back of the
head. But two men Peerman, the Mossgiel overseer, and a Edward Crombie came to
the constable's assistance and helped overpower the two bushrangers.. Placing
them in a hut under guard, the police went into pursuit of Kelly and Payne.
Payne was soon located and he led the police to Kelly's camp where he lay
wounded from an earlier encounter with the law.
On 16 January
1868, the four men were tried, whereupon Payne received twenty years gaol, Kelly
thirty years, and Brookman and Williams were sentenced to death. The death
penalty was later remitted to fifteen years on the road. On 3 July 1874, the
Legislative Assembly of New South Wales carried out a lengthy debate on
bushrangers, and it was recommended that Brookman be released on 8 July 1874.
But his prison record shows that he received remittance of sentence on 8 March
1875, and he was never heard of again.
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