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Post by Lex Of Sydney Australia on Apr 5, 2014 16:55:26 GMT
Ok I have an Australian Historical Myth about Edward (Ned) Kelly (1855-1880). An Australian bushranger, Ned Kelly is perhaps one of the best known Australian’s & our only ‘folk hero’. Ned Kelly was born in June 1855 at Beveridge, Victoria, the eldest son of John (Red) Kelly and his wife Ellen, née Quinn.. He is hailed as a ‘Robin Hood type hero’ by popular Australian culture. Popular folk lore sees Kelly honoured for his courage, resolution, independence, ect. (Personally I think he’s a murdering crook who got what he deserved.) adb.anu.edu.au/biography/kelly-edward-ned-3933The story goes Ned & three mates take on corrupt police, greedy land barons & an ignorant government in a quest to change their world for the better. Wrongly accused, they survived a deadly shootout with police in 1878 that saw Ned, his brother Dan, & their mates Joe Byrne and Steve Hart, outlawed with the largest reward ever offered in the British Empire – dead or alive. Over the next eighteen months, the Kelly Gang held up two country towns and robbed their banks without firing a single shot, wrote numerous essays explaining their actions, & became folk heroes to the masses. Their grand plan to derail a special police train & declare a Republic of North East Victoria came to a fiery end in Glenrowan, Victoria when they donned their famous but cumbersome armour against an overwhelming police force on June 28, 1880. The gang members were equipped with homemade armour that repelled bullets (but left their legs unprotected) made from plough mould-boards. Ned was protected by a cylindrical headpiece, breast and back plates and apron weighing about 90 lbs/41 kg. During the shootout with the police Ned was wounded in the foot, hand & arm. In the end he was captured by the police sent for trail & Kelly was hanged at the Melbourne gaol on November 11, 1880. He is said to have met his end without fear, & supposedly his last words were 'Ah well, I suppose it has come to this', another version however has him saying, 'Such is life'. The MYTH is had Ned Kelly had armour on his legs & arms he wouldn’t have been injured & could have fought his way to freedom. Ned Kelly's Armour:
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Post by the light works on Apr 5, 2014 17:58:31 GMT
is this, could he build effective armor at that tech level? if he could build effective armor, he could theoretically fight his way clear - unless it became too heavy for him and he collapsed under it.
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Post by Lex Of Sydney Australia on Apr 6, 2014 1:09:51 GMT
is this, could he build effective armor at that tech level? if he could build effective armor, he could theoretically fight his way clear - unless it became too heavy for him and he collapsed under it. All of the above, plus would the addition of leg & arm armour (I'm also going to add armour for his feet to this as he was also shot in the foot) have helped or would it have hindered him. Though according to reports (& the photographic evidence) the armour DID help to deflect the bullets. Basically as it stands the myth is could he have built a home made suit of armour from the materials of the time/available to him that he would have been able to wear without collapsing & allowed him move around effectively at speed. & would it have been bullet proof against the weapons of the time & helped him to not only survived the shootout but escaped to freedom. (I'm guessing he'd have made his escape on horse back.) On a side note I can SO see Jamie not Adam dressing up as Kelly in the armour suit for this one. Mind you Adam is physical a close build to Kelly than Jamie is.
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Post by silverdragon on Apr 6, 2014 10:33:42 GMT
May I just point out that I watched something where they also asked, if he had got "Any further", wouldnt someone have shot at the back, where he didnt have any armour.....
As for Adam in the armour?... you want Jamie in a loin-cloth and Adam in Armour..... I hate to see what comes next. But some say Tori is declining wardrobe assistance.....
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 6, 2014 11:59:20 GMT
I could have sworn I'd posted this on TC...but apparently not. I know this was posted on Discovery Boards and the MBFC, and in quite a lot of detail.
Press reports from the time claimed that the armour was proof against a '...Martin Henry Round* at 10 yards...', but like a lot of what was reported is in fact questionable when you look a little closer. This particular claim, for example, doesn't have a named source. Later the press reported that bullets were '...bouncing off the armour...' much to the horror of the police. However this related to the battle that took place at night, and it is clear from other accounts that the police didn't even know that the Kelly gang was wearing armour until the next morning - which kind of begs the question as to how they or the journalist could have seen bullets bouncing off the armour without seeing the armour itself.
It also seems that the police were not all that interested in trying to correcting errors. There are probably two reasons for this, the first being that there were some 50 officers who managed to miss the large armour wearing man lurching towards them. The second was that Kelly only hit one of the officers when he tried to escape the next morning, that individual happened to be the guy in charge who panicked and ran off. And it probably wasn't in the polices interest to promote this little fact.
As for the armour itself**. It was 1/4tr inch thick (at least for Kelly's suit) and didn't cover the legs. It is thought that the most reasonable explanations for the lack of leg protection were either that they were intending to fight from behind cover or that they left the legs free so they could mount and ride horses. It could also be a case of realising that given the weight of the suits adding leg armour would have increased the weight to the point they would have been more or less immobile - or given conditions in Australia they would have found the suits far to hot to wear for any length of time.
We do know that Kelly was captured because he was crippled from being shot in the legs. Of the other three members the effectiveness of the armour is questionable because of differing accounts. One member of the gang was said to have died when he made a toast, raised the groin plate and was hit by a bullet***. The way the remaining two died is open to debate, as was if they were wearing the armour at the time they died.
Construction wise there are at least three different versions. The legend has it that they were created in a 'bush fire', although as someone pointed out in Australia that would mean a full sized forest fire so is probably hyperbole. The other version had it that the Kelly gang 'convinced' a local blacksmith to create the armour. However the makers marks from the ploughshares can still be seen on the armour, which makes it rather improbable that they were made with professional tools and equipment. The more reasonable explanation, and one that has been tested, is that they were cold forged using a camp fire. It is not that unreasonable to speculate that Kelly may have called this a 'bush fire', or that the journalists reporting the story may have misunderstood him - especially if they were not native to Australia or if the term meant something slightly different back then.
(*'Martin Henry round' probably refers to the Martin Henry Rifle which was in service at the time. This used the 0.577/450 Martin Henry Round.)
(**Apparently the armour that is on display is the original, but that various sections have been mixed up or in one or two cases the plates have been placed in the wrong locations. They may have corrected this by now)
(***Why you'd need to raise the groin plate to make a toast is beyond me, unless you have a very strange anatomy. You'd think that otherwise your genitals should be hard enough to deflect a bullet if you were willing to expose them to men who were shooting at you...)
We do know that the armour was capable of stopping or deflecting bullets, since the armour clearly shows evidence of being hit several times. However since it is unlikely that all of the police who were shooting at Kelly were using rifles we can't be sure if the impacts came from revolvers or rifles.
So what parts of this could be tested?
Well cold forging certainly could be, and in fact more than one group has tested and confirmed this is possible. There were also a number of tests carried out on the armour that seem to confirm that the armour was indeed cold forged in a camp fire. These tests are probably not all that well known - as indeed 'Ned Kelly' is almost unknown outside Australia. So duplicating these tests would be reasonable for MB even if the results should be known.
The effectiveness of the armour could also be tested. As noted the official, or at least reported, claim is the ability to stop the rifle rounds of the period at ten yards. I suspect that the thickness of the armour would be effective against pistol rounds of that period, but have always been a little wary of the claim about the 'Martin-Henry' rounds at least at the distance given. I would expect enough energy to get though to cause problems for the wearer even if the bullet itself was stopped.
Last of all the mobility of the suits could be tested if they have fairly accurate reproduction of around the same weight. The major question would be to see if you really could have ridden a horse in the armour, and maybe they could expand this to seeing if adding additional leg protection would have caused serious problems. They don't, of course, have to use a real horse for this - and may not want to as they could hurt the horse either by the weight of the armour or by catching parts of the suit on the poor animal when they try to mount.
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Post by the light works on Apr 6, 2014 14:48:33 GMT
is this, could he build effective armor at that tech level? if he could build effective armor, he could theoretically fight his way clear - unless it became too heavy for him and he collapsed under it. All of the above, plus would the addition of leg & arm armour (I'm also going to add armour for his feet to this as he was also shot in the foot) have helped or would it have hindered him. Though according to reports (& the photographic evidence) the armour DID help to deflect the bullets. Basically as it stands the myth is could he have built a home made suit of armour from the materials of the time/available to him that he would have been able to wear without collapsing & allowed him move around effectively at speed. & would it have been bullet proof against the weapons of the time & helped him to not only survived the shootout but escaped to freedom. (I'm guessing he'd have made his escape on horse back.) On a side note I can SO see Jamie not Adam dressing up as Kelly in the armour suit for this one. Mind you Adam is physical a close build to Kelly than Jamie is. they would have to do a two part test. part one: dress the "test dummies" all in white, put the armor on them and let the rest of the crew shoot at them with paint guns. part two: build a ballistic buster, dress it in the armor, and spend that amount of time shooting at it with the equivalent of the number and type of guns they had available - and see what the result would be. (the paint guns and white clothes check for the possibility of shrapnel injury as well)
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Post by the light works on Apr 6, 2014 15:10:13 GMT
I could have sworn I'd posted this on TC...but apparently not. I know this was posted on Discovery Boards and the MBFC, and in quite a lot of detail. Press reports from the time claimed that the armour was proof against a '...Martin Henry Round* at 10 yards...', but like a lot of what was reported is in fact questionable when you look a little closer. This particular claim, for example, doesn't have a named source. Later the press reported that bullets were '...bouncing off the armour...' much to the horror of the police. However this related to the battle that took place at night, and it is clear from other accounts that the police didn't even know that the Kelly gang was wearing armour until the next morning - which kind of begs the question as to how they or the journalist could have seen bullets bouncing off the armour without seeing the armour itself. It also seems that the police were not all that interested in trying to correcting errors. There are probably two reasons for this, the first being that there were some 50 officers who managed to miss the large armour wearing man lurching towards them. The second was that Kelly only hit one of the officers when he tried to escape the next morning, that individual happened to be the guy in charge who panicked and ran off. And it probably wasn't in the polices interest to promote this little fact. As for the armour itself**. It was 1/4tr inch thick (at least for Kelly's suit) and didn't cover the legs. It is thought that the most reasonable explanations for the lack of leg protection were either that they were intending to fight from behind cover or that they left the legs free so they could mount and ride horses. It could also be a case of realising that given the weight of the suits adding leg armour would have increased the weight to the point they would have been more or less immobile - or given conditions in Australia they would have found the suits far to hot to wear for any length of time. We do know that Kelly was captured because he was crippled from being shot in the legs. Of the other three members the effectiveness of the armour is questionable because of differing accounts. One member of the gang was said to have died when he made a toast, raised the groin plate and was hit by a bullet***. The way the remaining two died is open to debate, as was if they were wearing the armour at the time they died. Construction wise there are at least three different versions. The legend has it that they were created in a 'bush fire', although as someone pointed out in Australia that would mean a full sized forest fire so is probably hyperbole. The other version had it that the Kelly gang 'convinced' a local blacksmith to create the armour. However the makers marks from the ploughshares can still be seen on the armour, which makes it rather improbable that they were made with professional tools and equipment. The more reasonable explanation, and one that has been tested, is that they were cold forged using a camp fire. It is not that unreasonable to speculate that Kelly may have called this a 'bush fire', or that the journalists reporting the story may have misunderstood him - especially if they were not native to Australia or if the term meant something slightly different back then. (*'Martin Henry round' probably refers to the Martin Henry Rifle which was in service at the time. This used the 0.577/450 Martin Henry Round.) (**Apparently the armour that is on display is the original, but that various sections have been mixed up or in one or two cases the plates have been placed in the wrong locations. They may have corrected this by now) (***Why you'd need to raise the groin plate to make a toast is beyond me, unless you have a very strange anatomy. You'd think that otherwise your genitals should be hard enough to deflect a bullet if you were willing to expose them to men who were shooting at you...) We do know that the armour was capable of stopping or deflecting bullets, since the armour clearly shows evidence of being hit several times. However since it is unlikely that all of the police who were shooting at Kelly were using rifles we can't be sure if the impacts came from revolvers or rifles. So what parts of this could be tested? Well cold forging certainly could be, and in fact more than one group has tested and confirmed this is possible. There were also a number of tests carried out on the armour that seem to confirm that the armour was indeed cold forged in a camp fire. These tests are probably not all that well known - as indeed 'Ned Kelly' is almost unknown outside Australia. So duplicating these tests would be reasonable for MB even if the results should be known. The effectiveness of the armour could also be tested. As noted the official, or at least reported, claim is the ability to stop the rifle rounds of the period at ten yards. I suspect that the thickness of the armour would be effective against pistol rounds of that period, but have always been a little wary of the claim about the 'Martin-Henry' rounds at least at the distance given. I would expect enough energy to get though to cause problems for the wearer even if the bullet itself was stopped. Last of all the mobility of the suits could be tested if they have fairly accurate reproduction of around the same weight. The major question would be to see if you really could have ridden a horse in the armour, and maybe they could expand this to seeing if adding additional leg protection would have caused serious problems. They don't, of course, have to use a real horse for this - and may not want to as they could hurt the horse either by the weight of the armour or by catching parts of the suit on the poor animal when they try to mount. I'll try to hit some of the points in order: the reporter could have guessed about the armor if he was far enough from the police and the noise of the guns to hear the bullet impacts on the metal. for the question of the "toast" keep in mind this is Australia and he was a criminal - where giving a toast and raising his groin plate could have been a field expedient for not being able to drop his trousers. to me, the presence of makers marks does not automatically eliminate the possibility of having a professional involved. a professional could still have reworked ploughshares. the evidence that it was not done at forge temperatures may or may not indicate the lack of a professional - but is more significant data. I didn't confirm the dates to make the correlation, but if this was in the black powder cartridge era, it was common for rifles and pistols to be chambered for the same ammunition; to make carrying extra simpler. for example, the original Winchester repeating rifle and the Colt Peacemaker were both chambered in .44-40. this would both make it harder to tell the difference between rifle hits, and pistol hits - but also reduce the muzzle energy of the rifle below that which modern shooters think of as "rifle shots" last of all, you missed the last possibility for why they had no leg armor: the simple lack of resources (time and/or material)
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 6, 2014 15:41:15 GMT
If the reporter was close enough to tell they were wearing armour then the police should have been too, certainly if they could see bullets hitting the armour.
There were two parts to the fight, the majority of it was carried out at night with the climax being when Kelly himself lurched out to attack the police in the morning. The reports we have note that the police were surprised when Kelly appeared in the armour, having not realised that the gang was wearing armour*. This is not that surprising as the Kelly gang fought most of the battle from inside a building, and therefore out of sight.
This makes it likely that the reporter was either confusing the night action with Kelly's charge, or used the 'bullets bouncing off' line to make the story more interesting. 'Police shot at a building for several hours without apparent effect' isn't quite as headline grabbing.
(*It is unclear if the police knew that the Kelly gang had armour or not, or if they were warned but dismissed the claims. What does seem clear is that they were not aware that the gang was wearing the armour until the next morning when Kelly appeared. In fact its not even clear if the gang was wearing their armour for the majority of the fight.)
I should have been clearer, which is my fault. The story about them getting a blacksmith involved indicated that the metal was melted in a forge and poured into moulds. This would, of course, have removed any makers marks on the metal and therefore can be dismissed as the way the suits were constructed. (There are other reasons for questioning this version, but this is the most logical and straightforward objection)
The Martin-Henry was indeed a blackpowder round.
Judging from what little I can tell it appears that this was a pure rifle round, and not suitable for pistols (although pistols did use the same calibre round from what I can recall). Certainly based on the size of the cartridge they appear to have been far too large for a revolver.
I don't think either was a problem. It appears that the Kelly gang spent quite some time making the armour, and only decided to use it once it was ready. (And if the claim about the Martin Henry round is correct they also had the time to test the armour). They certainly didn't have any problems getting the materials - ploughshares would hardly have been difficult to find and steal.
From this the logical assumption is that the armour was designed and built without leg protection by choice, rather than a lack of time or material.
As I said, the two explanations given were that the armour had originally been intended to be used when the gang was standing behind cover - which would have protected the legs. Or that they decided that leg armour would have made it difficult to impossible to mount and ride a horse. Given the weight of the armour as it is, the weight of a 'full' suit might well have been beyond what a horse could have taken especially if they intended to carry any loot with them.
*Edit*
I'm not dismissing the possibility of time or materials limiting what the gang was able or willing to do. Rather noting that what we do know about the construction of the suits doesn't fit with the idea of them having been a 'rush job', or hampered by limited materials.
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Post by the light works on Apr 6, 2014 15:57:19 GMT
If the reporter was close enough to tell they were wearing armour then the police should have been too, certainly if they could see bullets hitting the armour. There were two parts to the fight, the majority of it was carried out at night with the climax being when Kelly himself lurched out to attack the police in the morning. The reports we have note that the police were surprised when Kelly appeared in the armour, having not realised that the gang was wearing armour*. This is not that surprising as the Kelly gang fought most of the battle from inside a building, and therefore out of sight. This makes it likely that the reporter was either confusing the night action with Kelly's charge, or used the 'bullets bouncing off' line to make the story more interesting. 'Police shot at a building for several hours without apparent effect' isn't quite as headline grabbing. (*It is unclear if the police knew that the Kelly gang had armour or not, or if they were warned but dismissed the claims. What does seem clear is that they were not aware that the gang was wearing the armour until the next morning when Kelly appeared. In fact its not even clear if the gang was wearing their armour for the majority of the fight.) I should have been clearer, which is my fault. The story about them getting a blacksmith involved indicated that the metal was melted in a forge and poured into moulds. This would, of course, have removed any makers marks on the metal and therefore can be dismissed as the way the suits were constructed. (There are other reasons for questioning this version, but this is the most logical and straightforward objection) The Martin-Henry was indeed a blackpowder round. Judging from what little I can tell it appears that this was a pure rifle round, and not suitable for pistols (although pistols did use the same calibre round from what I can recall). Certainly based on the size of the cartridge they appear to have been far too large for a revolver. I don't think either was a problem. It appears that the Kelly gang spent quite some time making the armour, and only decided to use it once it was ready. (And if the claim about the Martin Henry round is correct they also had the time to test the armour). They certainly didn't have any problems getting the materials - ploughshares would hardly have been difficult to find and steal. From this the logical assumption is that the armour was designed and built without leg protection by choice, rather than a lack of time or material. As I said, the two explanations given were that the armour had originally been intended to be used when the gang was standing behind cover - which would have protected the legs. Or that they decided that leg armour would have made it difficult to impossible to mount and ride a horse. Given the weight of the armour as it is, the weight of a 'full' suit might well have been beyond what a horse could have taken especially if they intended to carry any loot with them. the reporters claims about the armor must be judged in the context of WHEN the report was made. if he filed his story a day later, then certainly he was adding embellishments after the fact. if he filed the story as soon as the police stopped shooting at night, we might be interested to figure out how he determined there was armor when the police didn't. ah, yes - makers marks would show the armor was reshaped out of other things. rather than fresh cast. as for resources: we had a slogan in the theatre: "done is art" without being able to talk to the gang, we will never know their line of reasoning, which leaves "well, I think we can get by with that" on the table.
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 6, 2014 16:05:40 GMT
The story seems to have been filed at least a day or two later. In fact I'm not even clear if the reporter was in fact present at the time, or if he wrote the story from interviewing those present.
I doubt that even the most intrepid reporter would have wanted to get closer to the Kelly gang than the police when the two were in the middle of a shoot out. Nor do I think the police would have let civilians, press or not, get that close.
We should probably also consider the possibility that the editor may have 'juiced up' the story rather than the reporter. This was a period when the press were even more inclined to make things up to sell papers than they are today. Something that can be shown by looking at American papers from the same period, and some of the rather...fantastical...stories they liked to print as well as the hyperbole that crept into even the most mundane stories.
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Post by memeengine on Apr 6, 2014 18:40:52 GMT
(*'Martin Henry round' probably refers to the Martin Henry Rifle which was in service at the time. This used the 0.577/450 Martin Henry Round.) I think you probably mean the Martini-Henry Rifle.
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Post by the light works on Apr 7, 2014 0:59:45 GMT
The story seems to have been filed at least a day or two later. In fact I'm not even clear if the reporter was in fact present at the time, or if he wrote the story from interviewing those present. I doubt that even the most intrepid reporter would have wanted to get closer to the Kelly gang than the police when the two were in the middle of a shoot out. Nor do I think the police would have let civilians, press or not, get that close. We should probably also consider the possibility that the editor may have 'juiced up' the story rather than the reporter. This was a period when the press were even more inclined to make things up to sell papers than they are today. Something that can be shown by looking at American papers from the same period, and some of the rather...fantastical...stories they liked to print as well as the hyperbole that crept into even the most mundane stories. that was where I had the idea the reporter was probably away from the noise of the gunfire, and had a chance of hearing the bullets striking the steel. - because the kelly gang was presumably also shooting, which would make the best place to be gathering information would be away from both parties. - sounds to me like it was probably at the watering hole in the next town away.
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 7, 2014 7:41:49 GMT
As I said, even the police were unaware that the gang was wearing armour until the next morning when Kelly came out to face them and the gang was fighting from within a building at night which hid them from sight. So even if someone had heard the sound of bullets hitting metal they would have assumed they were striking something other than armour.
After all metal armour wasn't something that had been in use for over 230 odd years*, so was hardly something anyone would expect.
(*The last appearance I know of was a cavalry/mounted infantry unit that fought on the Parliamentary side during the English Civil war circa 1650. This unit was nicknamed 'Lobsters' due to the colour of the troops when they took the armour off. One can only imagine what colour you'd be after wearing a similar suit of armour in the Australian outback - which might be yet another reason for dispensing with leg armour.)
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Post by silverdragon on Apr 7, 2014 8:39:03 GMT
Martini also make a falling block action rifle, which was my favoured rifle when target shooting...
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Post by mrfatso on Apr 8, 2014 4:59:59 GMT
As I said, even the police were unaware that the gang was wearing armour until the next morning when Kelly came out to face them and the gang was fighting from within a building at night which hid them from sight. So even if someone had heard the sound of bullets hitting metal they would have assumed they were striking something other than armour. After all metal armour wasn't something that had been in use for over 230 odd years*, so was hardly something anyone would expect. (*The last appearance I know of was a cavalry/mounted infantry unit that fought on the Parliamentary side during the English Civil war circa 1650. This unit was nicknamed 'Lobsters' due to the colour of the troops when they took the armour off. One can only imagine what colour you'd be after wearing a similar suit of armour in the Australian outback - which might be yet another reason for dispensing with leg armour.) French Cuirassier cavalry regiments wore Breast plates during the Napoleonic era, indeed the charge they made against British squares at Waterloo is quite famous.
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Post by memeengine on Apr 8, 2014 6:04:19 GMT
French Cuirassier cavalry regiments wore Breast plates during the Napoleonic era, indeed the charge they made against British squares at Waterloo is quite famous. However, as you noted, this armour only consisted of a breast plate (intended largely as a defence against sword or bayonet attack) rather than full body coverage. I think that if you looked worldwide, there would be troops with full armour in battle later than the mid-17th century (especially in east Asia) but I imagine they would be non-existent by the late 19th century when these events occured. Simply because, by then, there was a global arms trade shipping modern rifles around the world.
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 8, 2014 8:24:29 GMT
British cavalry also wore breastplates during the Napoleonic wars.
However by Kelly's time such armour was used for dress purposes, and would in any case not have been something seen in Australia.
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Post by silverdragon on Apr 8, 2014 8:34:15 GMT
British Cavalry breastplates (Napoleon period) would not have been anywhere near modern rifle bulletproof?... heck, its hardly even long-bow proof..... from what I hear its more resistant to glancing blows from swords?....
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Post by Cybermortis on Apr 8, 2014 8:58:36 GMT
The breast plates worn by the British Horse Guards circa 1815 were required to be proof against pistol shot at ten yards, and most of them seem to have been more than capable of stopping rounds at point blank range.
The swords carried by the horse guards were of poor quality, or at least the issued swords were known to be of somewhat questionable quality*. But the armour doesn't seem to have been complained about. That said Napoleonic pistols would have been considerably less powerful and had less penetrating power than a pistol 70 years later.
(*One trooper hit a French man and had his sword snap at the hand guard. He was a semi-professional boxer and rather than disengage - which would have been more than acceptable under the circumstances - he stayed in the cavalry fight and used what was left of his sword as a knuckle-duster. Had he done this a generation or two later he would most likely have won a Victoria Cross for his actions.)
BTW, I'm not 100% sure that the French Cavalry ever made it as far as the British lines before being engaged by the Allied cavalry. I do know that the French Cavalry charged, but the result was a mass brawl between the cavalry units of both sides that effectively took them out of the battle for the rest of the day. It was only towards the end of the day that the Horse Guards were considered in any condition to mount a counter-charge, and then more because it looked like the battle might have been lost than because they were considered to be in top form. This was down to the condition of the horses rather than losses sustained in the brawl. While I've not seen anything in regards the condition of the French Cavalry at this point, it seems unlikely that they were in any better condition given that the horses used by the British Horse guards were almost certainly in much better condition than anything used by the French both because of breeding and in the way they were looked after.
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Post by mrfatso on Apr 8, 2014 10:24:07 GMT
British cavalry also wore breastplates during the Napoleonic wars. However by Kelly's time such armour was used for dress purposes, and would in any case not have been something seen in Australia. True but it brings the idea of the use of Breastplates on the Battlefield to just about living memory of Ned Kellys time, admittedly any veteran of the battle would have been very old by the time Kelly built the armour and there is no proof that he knew any but second hand or third hand accounts may well have been circulating. From What I understand, at Waterloo there was the Charge by British Cavalry, then a counter charge by French Cavalry which resulted in the Melee you described, and then a charge by French cavalry reserves into British lines. An Account of parts of the Battle is included in this Book, Reminiscences of Captain Gronow www.gutenberg.org/files/3798/3798-h/3798-h.htm In fact doing some searching I have found references to the Cuirassiers regiments wearing their Breastplates into battle as late as the early stages of WWI, it may not have be a sound doctrine, but it was still done. After all the French were still going into battle with Serge Coats and Red trousers, when the British were wearing Khaki.
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