A book about one of the South Island’s most shocking multiple murders has been published by Canterbury University Press to mark the 150th anniversary of the crimes.
‘Murder on the Maungatapu’ presents for the first time the
full story of the Burgess Gang, the events leading up to the cold-blooded
killings and the aftermath.
In June 1866, five men were murdered by the gang on the
Maungatapu track, which connects Nelson and Marlborough in the upper South
Island. Motivated by greed during the gold rush, the four notorious bushrangers
left a trail of devastation and destruction through the surrounding
communities.
Author Wayne Martin says the crimes were unparalleled in
colonial New Zealand for their scale and cold-bloodedness. There was also a
suspicion that they murdered many more people on the West Coast than the one
known – that of surveyor George Dobson. The book examines the evidence for
these other killings.
“Richard Burgess had great proclamations for people he left
behind and in the end was full of self-recrimination, but at his heart he was
utterly merciless, a ruthless psychopath. Sullivan had a criminal past, and was
not so obviously a cold-blooded murderer, but as a gang they were among the worst
of humanity.”
The author was inspired by reading the autobiography of
Burgess and the multiple points of view evident in contemporary newspapers, and
in various writings and testimony by Sullivan, who turned Queens’s evidence
against his associates.
“Most of the books on the subject, including two written in
the 1950s, essentially retold the infamous confession by Burgess. However
Sullivan’s version, particularly in respect to who did the killing, was
diametrically opposed.
“It was clear that Burgess was presenting a version of the
story designed to build himself up as the gallant highwayman while getting the
turncoat Sullivan hung. The fascination was to disentangle the contradictions
by examining parallel sources.”
By reviewing and analysing corroborative evidence, Martin
has written a historically accurate sequential narrative of the events, which
also provides windows into the New Zealand gold rush and legal system of the
time.
About the author
Wayne Martin is a Christchurch-based writer, history enthusiast
and mechanical engineer. His articles, usually destination pieces with a strong
historical backdrop, have appeared in Avenues, the Dominion Post,
NZ Today, AA Destinations, Australian Traveller and
Latitude magazine, among others. In 2009, Martin won the South Island
Writers’ Association Suffrage Cup for a short memoir. In 2013, he wrote the
corporate history, Strength to Strength: A 75-year history of Powell Fenwick
Consultants.
Murder on the Maungatapu: A
narrative history of the Burgess Gang and their greatest crime by Wayne Martin, published by Canterbury University
Press, June 2016, RRP $45, ISBN 978-1-927145-74-6.
No comments:
Post a Comment