WILL MONKTON
Copyright Carol Baxter 2011
Carol Baxter is the author of the book, Captain Thunderbolt and His Lady: The true story of bushrangers Frederick Ward and Mary Ann Bugg (Allen & Unwin, 2011). It was published to critical acclaim and is being turned into a TV series.
While researching the lives of Fred and Mary Ann, Carol discovered that many of the claims made in books, articles and websites about them and their associates are wrong. To ensure that the correct information makes its way into the public arena, she provides the following information about Fred's accomplice Will Monkton.
Accomplice in 1868
Unfortunately, Carol didn't get around to preparing a timeline for Will Monkton. However, she did analyse the evidence Will provided about Thunderbolt's identity to dispel some of the incorrect claims made about the bushranger shot in 1870 near Uralla, as shown below.
Thunderbolt aficionados, such as Barry Sinclair, who insist that Fred Ward was not the bushranger shot near Uralla on 25 May 1870, often use the contradictory statements made by Fred’s accomplice, William Monckton, to support their claims. It is important, therefore, to examine these statements to see what Monckton actually said.
The year 1870
Purely by chance, Monckton arrived on the mail coach from Sydney two days after the bushranger was shot. The following day, he was taken to view the body which was on display in the Uralla courthouse. A local correspondent reported that Monckton instantly identified the dead bushranger as being Fred Ward. “Oh, yes, that is him, right enough,” Monckton said (see image 1). He also pointed out where Fred had been shot at "the Rocks" (now known as Thunderbolt's Rock) six-and-a-half-years previously. [1]
Monckton signed a sworn statement to that effect – that is, he swore a legally binding oath declaring that his statement was the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth (as shown in image 2). This statement was sent with the police reports to the Inspector General of Police in Sydney, on 30 May 1870 and ultimately ended up in the records of the NSW Colonial Secretary. [2] Yet those who claim that Thunderbolt did not die in 1870 also provide a quite different account of Monckton's identification of the dead body, as shown below: [3]
The Statutary Declaration indicates that Monckton had changed his story. That being the case, the first thing to ask is how reliable is this Declaration? When we apply the historical detection tool of attempting to determine the likely accuracy of unknown information by assessing the accuracy of known information, we immediately encounter problems. Monckton in his Declaration says that he became Thunderbolt's companion about "sixty years ago". In fact it was seventy years previously. He also said he was with Thunderbolt "for about three years". In fact, it was only eleven months.
A Statutory Declaration is a legally binding document signed under oath and attesting to the fact that the signatory is stating the truth. To begin his Statutory Declaration with such untruths indicates that Monckton was either lying or confused or forgetful. Notably, he was in his eighties when he signed the 1937 Declaration.
However let’s ignore the issue of the Declaration’s questionable reliability for the moment and look at Monckton’s actual statements. Firstly, he makes no reference to the man who died in 1870, or to the death of anyone at all. His purpose was to say that Thunderbolt was not Fred Ward but was instead Ward’s fellow Cockatoo Island escapee, Fred Britten.
Secondly, he says that "A lady friend of Ward and Britten, who went to school with both men, said she would tell me the secret about Ward." He then recounts some information about the pair and concludes: "I promised to keep this secret for thirty or forty years." It is important to note that this information clearly did not come from Ward himself, or from Britten, or from whomever Monckton thought Thunderbolt was by the time he was in his dotage. The information came from this unnamed "lady friend". Her "secret about Ward" was that Ward was actually Britten. Clearly this unnamed lady was responsible for convincing Monckton that the man he had accompanied for nearly a year and had, until then, declared to be Fred Ward was in actual fact Fred Britten. It was her information he had reportedly promised to keep secret for 30 or 40 years, not Ward’s or Britten’s.
But there are serious problems with this information.
1. The lady said she went to school with Ward and Britten. If Ward attended school, it was at Windsor. Britten himself said that he was born in Tasmania and arrived in New South Wales in 1845 [8], around the time that Fred began droving, so on those grounds alone this information cannot be correct. Moreover, there is no evidence to suggest that Ward and Britten ever met prior to their incarceration on Cockatoo Island.
2. The lady’s information intimates that Ward and Britten escaped from Cockatoo Island, went their separate ways, then joined together again and committed some robberies down south in the Shoalhaven district. In fact, they remained together for a couple of months after their escape from Cockatoo Island, committed robberies up north in the New England district, then split up. [9]
3. The lady reported that the pair robbed McElroy’s Inn at the Shoalhaven, presumably late in 1863 or 1864. The Police Gazettes for 1863 and 1864 do not mention a robbery of a man named McElroy anywhere in NSW (by that spelling or any other). The Government Gazette for 1865 does not include a McElroy at Shoalhaven in its list of NSW innkeepers, nor does a Google search pick up any references to such an innkeeper.
Clearly, no supportive evidence has been found to back up the lady's "secret" information, as reported in Monckton’s 1937 Statutory Declaration. Conversely, strong evidence has been found to refute her claims.
Soon after Monckton signed this Statutory Declaration at Annie Rixon's behest, she produced a supposedly factual book claiming that Thunderbolt was Fred Britten rather than Fred Ward. [10] In fact, Rixon’s book is no more factual than Monckton’s Three Years with Thunderbolt. It seems likely that Monckton’s "memory" had been heavily influenced for the second time by a woman with an agenda – or perhaps the lady who convinced him that Thunderbolt was Britten rather than Ward was none other than Annie Rixon herself.
The year 1940
Monckton’s 1937 Statutory Declaration was included in Annie Rixon’s The Truth about Thunderbolt, published in 1940. This book also included a Foreword written by Monckton that states:
ThunPhotocopy from a later edition titled 'Captain Thunderbolt' by Annie Rixon
From the Foreword, we can discern the following:
1. Monckton clearly states in the second paragraph that “Fred Ward was not Thunderbolt”.
2. Monckton’s reference to “the outlaw” in the third paragraph is clearly a reference to “the notorious bushranger Thunderbolt” in the second paragraph, that is, to the outlaw bushranger Thunderbolt-who-was-not-Fred-Ward.
3. The phrase in the third paragraph “after the killing of the man at Uralla” is an aside that needs to be eliminated from the line of text if Monckton’s meaning is to be determined. That done, Monckton’s sentence reads “I, together with several friends of the outlaw, took a solemn oath to keep his identity a close secret for the period of forty years.” The phrase “his identity” is clearly a reference to the previously mentioned outlaw. Therefore, Monckton is saying that he took a solemn oath to keep the identity secret of the outlaw Thunderbolt-who-was-not-Fred-Ward.
4. If Monckton was intending to refer to the outlaw Thunderbolt in the above-mentioned aside, he would have written: “I, together with several friends of the outlaw – after he was killed at Uralla – took a solemn oath to keep his identity a close secret …” But instead Monckton wrote: “I, together with several friends of the outlaw – after the killing of the man at Uralla – took a solemn oath to keep his identity a close secret ...’ This is extremely important. Clearly, the reference to the man killed at Uralla is a reference to someone other than the outlaw Thunderbolt-who-was-not-Fred-Ward.
5. In the Foreword, Monckton does not identify Thunderbolt-who-was-not-Fred-Ward. But in the Statutory Declaration he says that Thunderbolt’s “correct name was Frederick Alfred Britten”. Therefore, Monckton is saying that he is keeping Britten’s identity secret and that the man killed at Uralla was not Britten. At no point does he say that Fred Ward was not the man killed at Uralla.
6. Clearly, Monckton’s Declaration cannot be used to argue that Fred Ward did not die at Uralla. At best, the combination of Monckton’s Statutory Declaration and Foreword simply shows that he was a very confused old man.
After Monckton's Statutory Declaration was published in the various editions of Annie Rixon's Thunderbolt books, a man named Oliver Smith wrote to the Charleville Times: "As a lad I worked with Bill Monckton ... The statement that Thunderbolt was Frederick Britten is not right. Bill Monckton was fond of relating many of the daring deeds performed by Thunderbolt and himself, and always claimed his boss' proper name was Fred Ward." He was not alone in attempting to correct the record.
So can Monckton's statements truly be used as evidence to show that Fred Ward was not the bushranger shot near Uralla in 1870?
Not at all.
1. The Empire 1 Jun 1870 p.2
2. Sworn statement of William Monckton, signed 29 May 1870
Blog Post: 24 November 2011 by Carol Baxter
I recently heard from Jan Skorich, a great-great-granddaughter of Will Monckton. I asked her if I could publish her email as a blog post on my website and received her permission. Jan writes:
Thank you, Carol, for your thorough research, which corresponds with that of my brother, Barry Nelson. Barry unfortunately died last year, but not before publishing his own research on Will Monckton and Thunderbolt. From early in our lives we knew of the connection to Thunderbolt (Will Monckton was our great-great-grandfather) but Barry became very interested in the truth, and thus researched thoroughly, sometimes in collaboration with Stephan Williams. He had an ongoing dispute with Barry Sinclair over the facts. We know that William Monckton gave conflicting accounts of the facts, but Barry Nelson's research indicates that the account you give on this website is indeed the truth, and that the greatest likelihood is that it was Fred Ward who died at Uralla. Fred Ward did not escape to Canada or the US. We don't really know why great-great grandfather Will told the stories he did, but what I do know is that his daughters were very reluctant to talk about this period of his life at all, hence we don't have any first- or even second-hand accounts of the stories.
I was given a copy of "Three Years with Thunderbolt" (Will Monckton) to read when I was about 10 years old. My mother had heard the stories, she was 11 years old when Will died, there's a picture of her as a baby sitting on his knee. And she tended to believe that Will was covering up for Fred Ward and that he was not the one shot at Uralla. One of stories we heard was that Fred Ward went to New Zealand. So there you are, yet another rumour! However, Barry Nelson's research debunks all of this. I wish he was here to talk to you about it as he spent a number of years on the research.
As well as reading the two books as children, Will Monckton’s “Three Years with Thunderbolt” and Annie Rixon’s book, and being told by our mother that Fred Ward went to the US and lived to a ripe old age, our parents took us to Thunderbolt’s grave when I was 12 years old. Mum said “It’s not Fred Ward, it’s not Captain Thunderbolt, in this grave, because he wasn’t shot in Uralla, he escaped to America”. So for us to all turn around from this position to exactly the opposite conclusion really took some convincing because it was firmly entrenched in our family history. We are grateful for Barry Nelson’s, and for your, research.
Thank you again, Carol, and we hope that truth will prevail!