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MORANT IN MORE DETAIL
Born at Bridgwater, England on
9 December 1864, Morant, also known as Harry Harbord Morant or Edwin
Henry Murrant, left England on 1 April 1883 aboard the SS Waroonga from
Plymouth and arrived in Townsville, Queensland in 1883. His background
is still somewhat of a mystery. He often said that he was the son of
Admiral Sir George Digby Morant, or was he an illegitimate son who
disgraced himself at the Royal Naval College and was sent to Australia
to make a fresh start? In fact, as far as is known today, he was the son
of Edwin Murrant, master of the Union Workhouse and Catherine Riely,
school mistress.
Morant was a polished, well
educated English migrant and soon made his mark as a horseman, fighter,
thief, bush troubadour, poet, liar, loyal friend and courageous soldier.
This rolling stone also was a flamboyant, hard-drinking male chauvinist
and dare-devil. If there was a crowd to watch he would attempt the most
hair-raising stunts and his talent for breaking horses soon earned him
the name The Breaker. He was able to hold his own in any society and at
other times brawl with the roughest of the rough in the bush pubs where
he often drank to excess.
Shortly after his arrival he
gained a job with a travelling circus heading for Charters Towers, where
within a few weeks he married Daisy May O'Dwyer, better known as Daisy Bates,
governess at Fanning Downs. The marriage took place on 13 March 1884 at
the residence of James Hopgood Veal in Plant Street, Charters Towers.
Both Harry and Daisy stated their usual place of residence as Fanning
Downs. The marriage did not last very long though. After having failed
to pay for his wedding and being charged for stealing a few pigs and a
saddle his young wife kicked him out there and then.
During the next fifteen years
he 'worked' in and around Queensland and New South Wales mainly living
by his wits. Somehow he did find enough time to write some good poetry
and have verses and ballads published in the Sydney magazine The
Bulletin, under the pen-name of The Breaker. He was well known, and on
friendly terms with, William Ogilvie, Henry Lawson and Banjo Paterson.
He was popular among the bushmen who liked his poetry and his prowess as
a reckless devil-may-care horseman.
After many years of hard
riding, droving and drinking but little money and many unpaid bills, he
became homesick and in 1897 tried unsuccessfully to get a job as a
deckhand on the SS Oronsay, bound for England. The outbreak of the Boer
War in faraway South Africa provided some very good opportunities for
Morant. It would provide lots of adventure and travel but at the same
time also put a safe distance between him and some of the men and women
he had cheated. It could also provide a chance to make it back to
England. Whether motivated by patriotism or not, he lost No. time to head
for Adelaide and enlist in the Second Contingent of the South Australian
Mounted Rifles. After finishing his training in South Australia he was
promoted to Lance Corporal. Morant and his contingent sailed for South
Africa on 26 January 1900. More than two thousand South Australians
joined up for the Boer War among them six nurses.
Morant was certainly not one of
the first to depart for South Africa. The 1st Contingent of the South
Australian Mounted Rifles had already left on 1 November, 1899 and
arrived at Cape Town on 25 November. The South Australian Bushmen's left
on 27 February, 1900. They were followed by the South Australian
Imperial Bushmen on 1 May, 1900. Several other contingents left South
Australia during 1901 and 1902.
Many South Australian country
towns sent their volunteers. As many as thirty came from Jamestown.
Others came from Lyndoch, Macclesfield, Strathalbyn,
Meadows, Crystal Brook, Clarendon, Mount Gambier and Port Pirie to name
but a few. Among these volunteers were George Aiston
and Lieutenant John W. Powell.
Fifty-nine men died from wounds or illness. Among them were Albert
Arthur Vickery of Mintaro,
Francis George Matthews of Wirrabara,
William Reynolds Ewens of Port MacDonnell,
John Edgar Gluyas of Quorn
and Lieutenants Leonard Gordon of Strathalbyn and John W. Powell of
Mount Gambier.
Morant had a great time in
South Africa as chief horse and mule stealer. His outback experience
with horses, his riding and knowledge about how to pack them, soon
attracted the attention of his superiors. South Australian Colonel Jose
Maria Rafael Ramon Francisco Gabriel del Corazon de Jesus Jacobo Gordon
y Prendergast, better known as Joseph Gordon, recommended him as a
despatch rider to the war correspondent for the London Daily Telegraph.
It gave him ample opportunity to visit the nearby hospital, not to see
the injured but to make love to the nurses and break their hearts. After
this first stint, he managed to return to England, leaving again a few
unpaid bills, and become engaged to the sister of his friend Captain
Frederick Percy Hunt.
On his return to Africa in
April 1901, Lieutenant Morant enlisted with the newly formed Bushveldt
Carbineers, a mainly Australian force raised in South Africa, to fight
the Boers in Northern Transvaal on their own terms. No unit was more
feared by the Boers than the Bushveldt Carbineers. On August 5, 1901,
Capt. Hunt and 17 Carbineers rushed a Boer farmhouse and were surprised
to find four times as many Boers as expected. During the attack both Captain
Hunt and Sergeant Eland were killed
According to a witness and
corroborated by others, Hunt, who was only wounded, was killed and
mutilated, his neck broken, his face stamped upon with hob-nailed boots
and his legs slashed with a knife. His body had also been stripped
completely of clothes. An enraged and grieving Morant exacted his
revenge by executing Visser, a Boer found wearing Hunt's clothes, and
some other Boer prisoners. A German missionary named Hesse was also
killed after Morant had suspicions about his motives in speaking with
Boer prisoners.
Seven Carbineers, including
Lieutenants Morant, thirty years old Peter Joseph Handcock and
twenty-five years old George Ramsdale Witton, were charged with shooting
Boer prisoners and the German missionary. Major Thomas, an inexperienced
Australian lawyer from Tenterfield, New South Wales, was appointed to
defend the Australians. The court-martial began in January 1902. Morant
showed nothing but contempt for his judges and accusers. He freely
admitted shooting the Boers and justified his actions on the ground that
Kitchener himself had given instructions that "no prisoners were to be
taken".
During the court proceedings, the Boers attacked Pietersburg
where the trial was being held. The accused men fought bravely and the
Boer attack was defeated. It made no difference to the outcome of the
trial. The three Australians were found guilty of the murders of the
Boers but were acquitted of the murder of the German missionary. Morant
and Handcock's death sentences were signed by Lord Kitchener on 4
February 1902. Witton's death sentence was reduced to life in prison.
Game to the last, Morant and
Hancock refused to be blindfolded and went before the firing squad at
the old Pretoria gaol, Pietersburg in the early morning of 27 February
1902. Hancock's wife, who lived in Bathurst with her three children,
only found out from the newspapers that her husband had been shot.
Kitchener later admitted, in writing, that he had issued orders to kill
Boers wearing English uniforms! George Witton went to prison on the
Isle of Wight (some claim Lewes Prison in Sussex, then transferred to
Portland prison, Dorset), and after serving nearly three years his life sentence
was overturned by the British House of Commons on August 11, 1905.
In
1907, Witton published his book, Scapegoats of the Empire. Although two
editions have been published, very few copies exist today. According to
one story, the Australian Government considered that its contents could
implicate Lord Kitchener and had all copies seized.
General Kitchener, during a
visit to Australia in 1910 was asked to unveil a memorial to the Boar
War Dead at Bathurst. He refused unless the name of Lieutenant Peter
Handcock was removed from the roll. It was removed but replaced in 1964.
The graves of Morant and Handcock later became very popular with
Australian visitors, particularly after the 1980 release of Bruce
Beresford's movie Breaker Morant.
Although history suggests that
the primary evidence against the officers came from their own men,
disgusted at some of the actions they had been ordered to perform, the
executions caused much disquiet in Australia. The court martial was
conducted hurriedly and in secret, contrary to regulations, and the
transcripts conveniently went missing soon afterwards. A summary of the
trial appeared in the London Times on 18 April 1902. Many Australians
also wondered why the two British Officers, who were among the seven
originally implicated, both escaped with mere dishonourable discharges,
while the Australian Officers were gaoled or executed.
The Zimbabwe Archives in Harare holds letters,
from Daisy Bates to Australian born Frederick Ramon de Bertodano Lopez,
later 8th Marquis del Moral, written in 1945 on the subject of
Aborigines. The ironic part is that de Bertodano was the intelligence
officer in Pretoria who played a major part in convicting Morant.
Another interesting fact is that Daisy Bates mother's maiden name was
Hunt which of course was the name of Morant's great friend.
Partly copied from http://www.picknowl.com.au/homepages/rkfadol/breakermorant.htm
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