词条 | Jessie Hickman |
释义 |
| name = Jessie Hickman | birth_name = Elizabeth Jessie Hunt | image_name = Jessie Hickman nee Hunt alias McIntyre.png | image_caption = Prison photograph taken 15 August 1913 | birth_date = 6 September 1890 | death_date = 1936 | resting_place = Sandgate Cemetery | occupation = {{hlist|circus roughrider|bushranger|duffer}} | conviction_penalty = | conviction_status = | conviction = }} Elizabeth Jessie Hickman (nee Hunt; 6 September 1890 – 1936) was an Australian bushranger. She had multiple aliases but is often referred to as The Lady Bushranger. In the 1920s she established herself as leader of a gang of cattle thieves in the area that is now Wollemi National Park. Forgotten for several decades after her death, she has been the subject of two recent books: The Untold by Courtney Collins, and Out of the Mists: The Hidden History of Elizabeth Jessie Hickman. Early lifeJessie Hickman was born in either Burraga or Carcoar, New South Wales. At the age of eight she was sent to live with a travelling circus, attaining a reputation as a skilled roughrider – she was named Australian Ladies Roughriding Champion in 1905 and 1906.[1][2] CareerHickman eventually became the ringmistress of Martini's Buckjumping Show, and may have been married to its one-time owner Martin Breheny (known as James Martini).[1] In 1913 she had a son with Benjamin Hickman; the two married in 1920 and separated in 1924.[1] She is rumored to have been married to an abusive third man, John Fitzgerald (known as "Fitzy"), whom she is alleged to have killed in self-defense.[3][4] Jessie Hickman was jailed twice in the 1910s for thefts.[1] In the 1920s she established herself as leader of a gang of cattle thieves in the area that is now Wollemi National Park.[2] She was charged with cattle rustling in 1918 and 1928, but was acquitted on both occasions.[1] Her legendary exploits included "escap[ing] from custody while in a locked toilet aboard a moving train" and "steal[ing] cattle in a police holding yard".[3][11] Death and legacyHickman died of a brain tumour in 1936 and was interred in an unmarked grave in Sandgate Cemetery.[3] Although she was largely forgotten for several decades, she has recently been the subject of several books, including The Burial by Courtney Collins and Out of the Mists: The Hidden History of Elizabeth Jessie Hickman by Hickman's granddaughter Di Moore.[5] References1. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite web|url=https://www.openwriting.com/archives/2009/05/elizabeth_jessi_1.php|work=Open Writing|title=Elizabeth Jessie Hickman - My Bushranger Grandmother|author=Di Moore|year=2009}} {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Hickman, Jessie}}2. ^1 {{cite book|last1=Drake|first1=Jack|title=The wild west in Australia and America|date=2012|publisher=Boolarong Press|isbn=9781921920479|pages=135–136}} 3. ^1 2 {{cite web|url=https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/nejbjw/the-lady-bushranger-remembering-australias-forgotten-female-outlaw|author=Emma Nobel|title=The Lady Bushranger: Remembering Australia's Forgotten Female Outlaw|date=5 January 2017|work=Broadly}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/local/photos/2014/12/03/4141124.htm|publisher=ABC|title=Australia's lady bushranger: the life of Jessie Hickman sparks film industry interest|author=Margaret Burin|date=3 December 2014}} 5. ^1 {{cite web|url=https://www.theherald.com.au/story/2614913/the-hunters-lady-bushranger/|title=Out of the mists: Search for truth about Elizabeth Jessie Hickman|author=Mike Scanlon|date=10 October 2014|work=Newcastle Herald}} 4 : 1890 births|1936 deaths|Bushrangers|Deaths from brain tumor |
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