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Greenwood hero Ned Kelly's legendary life Australia, the British colonies. By the mid-19th century, Ned Kelly lived in the northeastern part of Victoria in this small country, filled with poverty and misery. His family, Irish, was exiled because his father violated English law and was forced to emigrate to Australia, life to be imagined. However, Kelly hoped that the dream of living an honest life with her own sweat had also been dashed. A police officer attempted to rape his sister Kate, and Kelly had no choice but to beat the policeman. After this incident, Kelly was forced to exile. He and his brother and two good friends, Steve Hart and Joe Bath organized Kelly's gang, together against the police and the government. The government offered a reward of £ 100 to capture Kelly Brothers and also took Kelly's family in jail and his mother was sentenced to three years in prison. Kelly and the police started a fiercer battle, in which Kelly killed three of the four police officers who had arrested him, including Sergeant Kennedy and two police officers, Siken and Ronnigan, police officers McKinsey escaped luckily. He immediately became famous, the authorities also stepped up the siege of Kelly, threatening Kelly to earn 500 pounds. Because of the disparity in power, Kelly helped have to hide in the pack of Bear Mountain. In June 1880, Kelly heard that someone had betrayed them and the police had already chased them by train. He decided to hiding passively in the mountains with it, it is better to go out to fight. Out of the mountains, Kelly helped Victoria's Green Grove town, all the more than 60 people into the hotel hostage, and the demolition of the tracks. Here, Ned Kelly enthusiastically dictates a long letter of more than 7,000 words in which he cites the unfairness of his laws, the government's persecution of him and all Irish Catholics, and the circumstances under which he was forced into action. He also mentioned the need to force the rich to give money to the widows and orphans and the poor and take revenge on the authorities: the British Empire provided me with an endless list of potential followers, among whom some were overruled Was put in jail, while others witnessed the loss of their hard-earned land by the farmer, who had never been guilty of anything but my friend. The letter caused a huge sensation, both for the common people and for the government Very big. Kelly helped host the villagers hostage to lead the police to the police, and then half-way with the police to defeat the police encircling them. Regrettably, Kelly, out of mercy, promised a request from a village teacher to send a sick wife home, with the exception that the man ran to inform the police. The police immediately flocked from place to place and fierce gun battles broke out between Greenery Lodge Hotel, a group of Kelly and the besieged police, from night to dawn. In the end, ammunition was exhausted, Ned was cut to death, Kelly to help the other three died in this battle. Kelly was jailed and six months later, Kelly, 25, was hanged in Melbourne.
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