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Michael Edward Ward

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Father
  
John Ward

Mother
  
Mary Caulfield

Name
  
Michael Ward


Michael Edward Ward Michael Edward Ward The Globe and Mail

Died
  
27th May 1921 Melbourne

Burial
  
28th May 1921 Melbourne General Cemetery

Wives
  
Ellen McDonald (m. 1882) Margaret Mary Aiken (m. 1902)

Issue
  
Charles Hayes Ward (1896-1977)

James Ward-Prowse 2019 • Freekick Specialist • Goals, Assists and Tackles | HD


Michael Edward Ward (1845 - 27 May 1921) was an Irish-Australian detective. best known for his role in the capture of Ned Kelly and his brother Dan Kelly during the Kelly Outbreak of 1879/1880. Ward is renowned for his waxed moustache which he liked to twirl often gave the lie to his many disguises and his affairs with servant girls

Contents

Michael Edward Ward Michael Edward Ward 1845 1921 Find A Grave Memorial

Early and Family Life

Ward was born the second son to John Ward, a large farmer, in Kidlawn (a townland in the parish of Moore) near Ballinasloe, County Galway, Ireland in about 1845. He had at least two other brothers; Peter and James. In 1865 at the age of 20, Ward emigrated from Liverpool to Melbourne on board the Marco Polo. By 1869, he had settled in the Benalla/Beechworth area where he remained for about 11 years. In 1880, he moved to Melbourne where he met his first wife, Ellen "Nellie" McDonald, whom he married in 1882. Ellen died in 1890 at the age of thirty of a pelvic abscess. Twelve years later, Ward married Margaret Mary Aiken, a native of Benalla with whom he lived until his death in 1921. The couple adopted Charles Eustace Hayes, an English orphan born in Blackpool in about 1912. Hayes had his name changed by deed poll on the 12th March 1920 to Charles Hayes Ward

Career

Michael E. Ward joined the police force in October 1869 and was stationed at Benalla and Beechworth. In 1876, he was promoted to the rank of detective.

In this position he was instrumental in the capture of members of the Kelly gang. A number of books have been written about the efforts of Ward and his colleagues to capture these outlaws. News reports as far away as England kept the public up to date on the chase. Ward's persistent pursuit frustrated Kelly, who sent death threats to the detective. Eventually Ward devised a trap which involved considerable trickery and misdirection; Kelly later accused him of threatening to harm his family. Ward controversially accepted a reward for his part in the capture.

Ward's experiences were the basis for a character in Rolph Bolderwood's romantic crime fiction work. Robbery Under Arms.

Following the Kelly Outbreak, Ward was transferred to Melbourne in 1880, where he served until his retirement, having reached the rank of Sub-Inspector, in 1905. Ward's career was distinguished not only for his role in the capture of the Kellys but also many other high-profile arrests such as that of Ferozi Fathay Mahommed in 1904

References

Michael Edward Ward Wikipedia