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Captain Moonlite
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Andrew George Scott (5 July 1842 – 20 January 1880), also known as Captain Moonlite,[1] though also referred to as Alexander Charles Scott and Captain Moonlight,[2] was an Irish-born New Zealand immigrant to the Colony of Victoria, a bushranger there and in the Colony of New South Wales, and an eventual and current day Australian folk figure.[3]
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Scott was born in Rathfriland, Ireland, son of Thomas Scott, an Anglican clergyman and Bessie Jeffares.[4] His father's intention was that he join the priesthood, but Scott instead trained to be an engineer, completing his studies in London.
The family moved to New Zealand in 1861, with Scott intending to try his luck in the Otago goldfields. However, the New Zealand Wars intervened and Scott signed up as an officer and fought at the battle of Orakau where he was wounded in both legs. After a long convalescence Scott was accused of malingering, and court-martialed. He gave his disquiet at the slaughter of women and children during the siege as the source of his objection to returning to service.
In Melbourne, he met Bishop Charles Perry and, in 1868, he was appointed lay reader at Bacchus Marsh, Victoria, with the intention of entering the Anglican priesthood on the completion of his service. He was then sent to the gold mining town of Mount Egerton.
Bushranging
[edit]On 8 May 1869, Scott was accused of disguising himself and forcing bank agent Ludwig Julius Wilhelm Bruun, a young man whom he had befriended, to open the safe. Bruun described being robbed by a fantastic black-crepe masked figure who forced him to sign a note absolving him of any role in the crime. The note read "I hereby certify that L.W. Bruun has done everything within his power to withstand this intrusion and the taking of money which was done with firearms, Captain Moonlite, Sworn."[citation needed] After this he went to the Maitland district, near Newcastle and was there convicted on two charges of obtaining money by false pretences for which he was sentenced to twelve and eighteen months' imprisonment. Of these concurrent terms, Scott served fifteen months, at the expiration of which time he returned to Sydney where, in March 1872, he was arrested on the charge of robbing the London Chartered Bank of Australia in Egerton and forwarded to Ballarat for examination and trial.
He succeeded in escaping jail by cutting a hole through the wall of his cell and gained entrance into the adjoining cell, which was occupied by another prisoner, who was as desirous of escaping as himself. Together they seized the warder when he came on his rounds, gagged him and tied him up. Making use of his keys, they proceeded to other cells, liberating four other prisoners, and the six men succeeded in escaping over the wall by means of blankets cut into strips, which they used as a rope. Scott was subsequently re-captured, and held safely until his trial. In July he was tried before judge Sir Redmond Barry at the Ballarat Circuit Court when, by a series of cross-examinations of unprecedented length conducted by himself after rejecting his counsel, he spread the case over no less than eight days, but was at last convicted, and sentenced to 10 years' hard labour. Despite some evidence against him, Scott claimed innocence in this matter until his dying day.

Scott only served two-thirds of his sentence of 10 years, was released from HM Prison Pentridge in March 1879 and after his release he made a few pounds by lecturing on the enormities of Pentridge Gaol. On regaining freedom, Scott met up with James Nesbitt, a young man whom he had met in prison. While some disagree on the grounds of speculation, he is considered by many to be Scott's lover and there is a significant primary source evidence that supports this reading. Scott's handwritten letters, currently held in the Archives Office of NSW, profess this love.[5] While it is difficult to definitively claim the exact nature of Scott and Nesbitt's sexual practices, it can certainly be said that their relationship was an overtly romantic one. With the aid of Nesbitt, Captain Moonlite began a career as a public speaker on prison reform trading on his tabloid celebrity.
However this reputation came back to bite him. Throughout this period Scott was harried by the authorities and by the tabloid press who attempted to link him to numerous crimes in the colony and printed fantastic rumours about supposed plots he had underway.
At some time during this period Scott seems to have decided to live up to this legend and assembled a gang of young men, with Nesbitt as his second in command and the others being Thomas Rogan (21), Thomas Williams (19), Gus Wreneckie (15) and Graham Bennet (18). Scott met these young men through his lecture tours.
The gang commenced their careers as bushrangers near Mansfield, in Victoria. While travelling through the Kellys' area of operation, the gang were frequently mistaken for The Kelly Gang and took advantage of this to receive food and to seize guns and ammunition from homesteads. Inspecting Superintendent of Police John Sadleir claimed that Scott sent word to infamous bushranger and outlaw Ned Kelly, asking to join forces with him but Kelly sent back word threatening that if Scott or his band approached him he would shoot them down. Scott and his gang left Victoria in the later part of 1879, after operating there for a short time. They travelled north across the border into New South Wales to look for work, far from the police surveillance that stymied any opportunity of employment in Victoria. It was in the southern district of the New South Wales colony that they entered upon the full practice of their profession.
In one act they made themselves notorious. On Saturday evening, 15 November 1879 they entered the little settlement of Wantabadgery, about 45 km (28 miles) from Gundagai, and proceeded to "bail up" (confine and rob) all the residents.[6]
Capture
[edit]

Scott's gang held up the Wantabadgery Station near Wagga Wagga on 15 November 1879 after being refused work, shelter and food. By this stage they were on the verge of starvation, after spending cold and rainy nights in the bush and in Moonlite's words succumbed to "desperation", terrorising staff and the family of Claude McDonald, the station owner. Scott also robbed the Australian Arms Hotel of a large quantity of alcohol and took prisoner the residents of some other neighbouring properties- bringing the number of prisoners to 25 in total.[7] One man, Ruskin, escaped in an attempt to warn others, but was caught and subject to a mock trial, the jury of his fellow prisoners finding him "not guilty". Another station-hand attempted to rush Scott but was overpowered.
A small party of four mounted troopers eventually arrived, but Scott's well armed gang captured their horses and held them down with gunfire for several hours until they retreated to gather reinforcements – at which point the gang slipped out.[8] The gang then holed up in the farmhouse of Edmund McGlede until surrounded by a reinforcement of five extra troopers led by Sergeant Carroll.
As the boy Wreneckie was running from a fence to reach a better position, he was shot through the side, paralyzed from the waist down and mortally wounded. The police gradually advanced from tree to tree, and drove the remaining desperadoes into a detached back kitchen. Carroll led an assault upon the kitchen, and in this rally Constable Edward Webb-Bowen was fatally wounded, a bullet from one of the gang members entering his neck, and lodging near the spine. Recent investigation pointed to Wreneckie being the likely shooter while on the ground to Webb-Bown's left, hitting him in the neck with a Colt revolver.[9]
Nesbitt was also shot and killed, attempting to lead police away from the house so that Scott could escape. When Scott saw Nesbitt shot down and was distracted, McGlede took the opportunity to disarm the gang leader and with the other members wounded, or captured on attempting to flee, the fire fight came to a close. Rogan succeeded in escaping, but was found next day under a bed in McGlede's house. According to newspaper reports at the time, Scott openly wept at the loss of his dearest and closest companion. As Nesbitt lay dying, 'his leader wept over him like a child, laid his head upon his breast, and kissed him passionately'.
Trial and execution
[edit]Scott was accused of firing the bullet that struck Webb-Bowen, which he denied. Witnesses confirmed that Scott was armed with a sniper rifle and the policeman had died from a bullet fired by a Colt's pistol. It was never discovered who used that weapon in the firefight, policeman or civilian, and it was not found afterwards. Scott was found guilty despite deflecting as much blame for the robbery from his companions as possible and the jury recommended mercy for three of them.
Scott and Rogan were hanged together in Sydney at Darlinghurst Gaol at 8 o'clock on 20 January 1880, on Scott's father's birthday.[10] While awaiting his hanging Scott wrote a series of death-cell letters which were discovered by historian Garry Wotherspoon. Scott went to the gallows wearing a ring woven from a lock of Nesbitt's hair on his finger[11] and his final request was to be buried in the same grave as his constant companion, "My dying wish is to be buried beside my beloved James Nesbitt, the man with whom I was united by every tie which could bind human friendship, we were one in hopes, in heart and soul and this unity lasted until he died in my arms." His request was not granted by the authorities of the time, but in January 1995, his remains were exhumed from Rookwood Cemetery in Sydney and reinterred at Gundagai next to Nesbitt's grave.[12]
In popular culture
[edit]His life was dramatised in:
- the 1906 stage play Captain Moonlite
- the 1910 film Moonlite
- the radio series Outlawry Under the Gums (1933)
- A fictionalised Moonlite appears in the short-lived television series Wild Boys, played by New Zealand-Australian actor Aaron Jeffery.[13]
Also noted in the 1992 film Far and Away
In October 2017, the Australasian History television channel broadcast an episode about Captain Moonlite,[14] showing evidence that Scott did not shoot Webb-Bowen, but that Wreneckie did.[citation needed]
A musical based on the death cell letters of A.G.Scott called Captain Moonlite was written by Australian Musical Theatre Composer, Jye Bryant in 2019 and premiered at Redcliffe Musical Theatre in August 2020 with a follow-up season at Richmond Players Inc in 2023. A third season was performed at Casula Powerhouse by Liverpool Performing Arts Ensemble in May 2024. Another musical based on Scott's life (also called "Captain Moonlite") was made by Gabriel Bergmoser with music by Dan Nixon. It was performed for the 2018 Midsumma Festival.
Visual Artist Todd Fuller's animation 'with whom I was united by every tie' centres around Captain Moonlight and was exhibited in the Sulman Prize, 2019.
The Zest Is History covered Captain Moonlite’s story in Season 1 Episode 11, in August 2020.
Moonlite is a secular oratorio for voices, percussion and viola, by composer Wally Gunn to lyrics by Maria Zajkowski. It was premiered by Variant 6, voices and Mobius Percussion in New York on 17 May 2019 and received its Australian premiere at the Fitzroy Town Hall on 26 July 2025.[15][16]
Folklore
[edit]There are references to Captain Moonlite having preached in towns including Bacchus Marsh, at this time he was acting as a lay preacher and there are references of him signing "religious books". These stories have been passed down through the generations. He was known to frequent the area of Blackwood and surrounds. On the way to Blackwood from Melbourne visitors pass the "Half built church" the tales go on to state that it was Captain Moonlite who stole the funds that were to be used to complete the building and therefore remains as a half built church as the population and funding declined. The half church still stands today.
References
[edit]- ^ A.), McPhee, John (John; NSW., Museums and Galleries (2008). Great Collections : treasures from Art Gallery of NSW, Australian Museum, Botanic Gardens Trust, Historic Houses Trust of NSW, Museum of Contemporary Art, Powerhouse Museum, State Library of NSW, State Records NSW. Museums & Galleries NSW. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-646-49603-0. OCLC 302147838.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Independent Newspaper (Footscray VIC) 20 December 1890 as accessed via https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/73242828 on 11 October 2020
- ^ Paul Terry (2013). In Search of Captain Moonlite: Bushranger, conman, warrior, lunatic. Allen & Unwin. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-74331-525-5.
- ^ "Scott, Andrew George (Captain Moonlite) (1842–1880)". Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 6. Australian National University and Melbourne University Press. 1976. pp. 94–95. Retrieved 2 April 2007.
- ^ Wotherspoon, Garry (December 1992). "Moonlight and ... Romance? The death-cell letters of Captain Moonlight and some of their implications". Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society. 78: 76–91. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
- ^ "Novelist". Kalgoorlie Western Argus. WA. 11 August 1903. p. 3. Retrieved 15 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "A TRUE NARRATIVE". The Independent. Footscray, Vic. 20 December 1890. p. 3. Retrieved 30 May 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "NEW SOUTH WALES". The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 23 December 1879. p. 4. Retrieved 15 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Davie, Michael. Lawless: The Real Bushrangers [Captain Moonlite] (TV series). Australia. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
- ^ "EXECUTION OF THE BUSHRANGERS". Kerang Times and Swan Hill Gazette. Vic. 23 January 1880. p. 4 Edition: WEEKLY. Retrieved 15 April 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ A queer bushranger: The tale of Captain Moonlite, by Jeff Sparrow, in The Monthly; published November 2015; retrieved 16 February 2016
- ^ "Gundagai". Walkabout: Australian Travel Guide. Fairfax Digital. Archived from the original on 2 September 2001. Retrieved 12 July 2006.
- ^ Wild Boys: Episode 5. (2011). [TV Series] AUS: Michelle Offen
- ^ "Lawless the Real Bushrangers". Australian History Channel. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
- ^ "Moonlite". Pregones/PRTT. 3 May 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
- ^ Way, Tony (27 July 2025). "Moonlight". The Age. Retrieved 27 July 2025.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Captain Moonlite at Wikimedia Commons
Captain Moonlite
View on GrokipediaAndrew George Scott (5 July 1842 – 20 January 1880), self-styled Captain Moonlite, was an Irish-born Australian bushranger notorious for armed robberies in colonial Victoria and New South Wales during the 1860s and 1870s.[1] Born in Rathfriland, County Down, he emigrated first to New Zealand and then to Australia around 1868, initially pursuing respectable occupations as a surveyor and lay preacher in the goldfields region before descending into criminality.[1][2] Scott's career included the 1869 Egerton bank robbery, for which he was convicted and imprisoned for twelve years despite claims of innocence, during his sentence at Pentridge Gaol he formed a close companionship with fellow inmate James Nesbitt.[3][4] After early release in 1879, he recruited Nesbitt and others into a gang that perpetrated the Wantabadgery outrage—a violent homestead siege resulting in Nesbitt's death—which led to Scott's capture, trial, and execution by hanging in Sydney.[5][6] In letters from Darlinghurst Gaol awaiting execution, Scott professed an intense bond with Nesbitt, stating they were "united by every tie which could bind human beings together" and requesting joint burial, though historical interpretations of their relationship remain debated due to the era's social conventions and limited direct evidence beyond affectionate rhetoric.[7][8] Educated and articulate, Scott later advocated for prison reform through public lectures, blending his outlaw persona with critiques of colonial justice systems, while controversies persist over his culpability in earlier crimes and the reliability of trial testimonies influenced by bushranger folklore.[9][10]
Early Life and Education
Family Origins and Childhood in Ireland
Andrew George Scott, later known as Captain Moonlite, was born in Rathfriland, County Down, Ireland, and baptized on 5 July 1842.[1][11] He was the son of Reverend Thomas Scott, an Anglican clergyman serving as rector in the Church of Ireland, and his wife Elizabeth Jeffares, known as Bessie.[1][12][11] The family traced its descent to Scottish origins through the Scotts.[12] Scott grew up in Rathfriland, a small town in northern Ireland, where his father's clerical position provided a stable, middle-class environment.[1] He received a solid education typical for a clergyman's son, with his father intending him to pursue a career in the church.[13] He had at least one younger sibling, brother Thomas William Scott, born around 1849.[11] Little is documented about specific childhood experiences, though the family's religious household emphasized moral and scholarly pursuits.[1] By his late teens, Scott showed early inclinations toward independence, diverging from his father's expectations before the family's emigration in 1861.[14]Immigration to Australia and Initial Settlement
Andrew George Scott arrived in Australia in early 1868 after spending several years in New Zealand, where he had immigrated with his family aboard the Black Eagle on 22 November 1861.[1] He possibly landed first in Sydney before traveling to Melbourne around April 1868, seeking opportunities in the colony of Victoria.[1] Upon his arrival in Melbourne, Scott quickly integrated into local religious circles, leveraging his background as the son of an Anglican clergyman. In July 1868, he was appointed stipendiary lay reader at Holy Trinity Church in Bacchus Marsh, a position arranged through Bishop Charles Perry, reflecting his articulate demeanor and clerical heritage.[1][15] Scott supplemented his religious duties by advertising his professional services as a surveyor and civil engineer in November 1868, drawing on possible prior training in engineering.[1] By March 1869, he had been transferred to a lay preaching role in Egerton, near Ballarat, continuing his settlement in Victoria's rural districts amid the waning gold rush era.[1][16]Professional Training and Early Career
Scott trained as a civil engineer, possibly completing his studies in London before emigrating.[1][17] In November 1861, at age 19, he arrived in Auckland, New Zealand, aboard the Black Eagle with his family.[1] There, he initially taught school in the Coromandel region before enlisting in military service.[1] In February 1864, Scott was commissioned into the Waikato Militia during the New Zealand Wars against the Māori, later transferring to the Auckland Volunteer Engineers Corps, where his engineering skills were applied.[1] He received a wound in combat but recovered, demonstrating early competence in technical and field roles.[18] Scott migrated to Australia in early 1868, settling in Victoria. By July of that year, he served as a stipendiary lay reader at the Church of Holy Trinity in Bacchus Marsh, reflecting his clerical family background despite his engineering focus.[1] In November 1868, he advertised his services as a consultant surveyor and engineer in the Bacchus Marsh Express, undertaking local projects in the region.[1] By March 1869, he had taken up a lay reader position in Egerton near Ballarat, blending professional engineering work with religious duties until his arrest later that year.[1]Entry into Criminal Activity
The Egerton Bank Robbery
On the evening of 8 May 1869, the Mount Egerton branch of the London Chartered Bank of Australia was robbed by a single masked intruder who targeted the bank's agent, Ludwig Julius Bruun.[1] Disguised in a cloak and mask, the robber confronted Bruun at his residence adjacent to the bank, declaring his intent to plunder the institution rather than harm the agent personally.[19] Under duress, Bruun was compelled to accompany the assailant to the bank premises, where he unlocked the safe containing gold dust, bank notes, and coinage, surrendering an estimated several hundred pounds in assets, including a substantial quantity of half-sovereigns and Chartered Bank promissory notes.[20] The perpetrator then bound Bruun's hands and feet before departing undetected into the night.[1] To stage the appearance of resistance, the robber forced Bruun to pen a declaration attesting to his compliance under threat, which concluded with the fabricated claim that "Captain Moonlite has stuck me up and robbed the bank." The intruder affixed his signature to this note as "Captain Moonlite," deliberately misspelling the alias, marking the debut of the moniker that Scott would later adopt.[1] [5] Bruun raised the alarm the following morning, prompting an immediate investigation by local constables, who noted the absence of forced entry and the theatrical elements of the crime, suggesting possible insider knowledge.[19] Andrew George Scott, a recent arrival in Mount Egerton employed in civil engineering and known socially to Bruun, emerged as the primary suspect due to handwriting resemblances between the note and his correspondence, corroborated by eyewitness accounts of his presence in the township that evening despite his alibi of absence.[1] Scott protested his innocence throughout, asserting he had departed for Melbourne prior to the incident, yet forensic scrutiny of the script and his subsequent possession of matching bank notes undermined these denials.[20] The robbery represented Scott's inaugural venture into armed felonious activity, blending audacity with rudimentary deception, though it yielded limited proceeds relative to the publicity it generated.[1]Arrest, Trial, and Acquittal
Following the robbery of the London Chartered Bank at Egerton on 8 May 1869, suspicion quickly turned to the bank's agent, L. J. Bruun, who had surrendered the safe's contents without significant resistance, prompting accusations of complicity in an inside job. Bruun, along with bank associate James Simpson, was arrested and charged with burglariously entering the premises and stealing approximately 164 ounces of gold along with other valuables.[21][1] The preliminary investigation into Bruun and Simpson's charges began in early June 1869, with police alleging their involvement based on the ease of the theft and Bruun's subsequent behavior.[22] Despite detailed examinations of their actions and potential motives, the cases proceeded to trial amid public scrutiny of bank security lapses, but both men were ultimately acquitted due to insufficient evidence linking them directly to the crime.[3][1] Andrew George Scott, who had conducted the robbery disguised as "Captain Moonlite" and forced Bruun to comply under threat, evaded immediate arrest and was not charged in this initial phase. He later consistently denied any role in the Egerton incident, attributing blame to unnamed parties while pursuing other ventures in New South Wales.[1][3] The acquittals of Bruun and Simpson highlighted evidentiary challenges in prosecuting accomplices without direct proof, allowing Scott to remain at large until later investigations connected him to the event.[10]Imprisonment and Radicalization
Following his 1872 conviction for the 1866 Mount Egerton bank robbery, Andrew George Scott received a sentence of ten years' hard labor plus one additional year for escaping from Ballarat Gaol while on remand.[1] The trial, held in Melbourne, rejected Scott's defense of alibi and determined his direct involvement in coercing bank agent Ludwig Bruun to hand over gold and cash valued at approximately £1,500.[23] He was incarcerated at Pentridge Gaol in Coburg, Victoria, commencing service on July 24, 1872.[1] Scott's conduct in Pentridge was marked by recalcitrance and violence, including conflicts with warders amid the prison's notoriously brutal regime of forced labor, isolation, and minimal rations.[1] These conditions, which included quarrying bluestone in the stockade and frequent solitary confinement for infractions, exacerbated his resentment toward colonial penal practices, fostering a critique of systemic injustice that echoed broader 1870s debates on prison overcrowding and inhumane treatment.[24] Released conditionally in March 1879 after serving roughly two-thirds of his term—likely due to partial remission for orderly periods despite his overall defiance—Scott initially pursued reformist advocacy.[1] [25] He delivered public lectures in venues like Ballarat's Academy of Music, decrying Pentridge's "diabolical" abuses and calling for alternatives to hard labor, drawing crowds but facing venue refusals and official opposition tied to his notoriety.[26] [27] This shift toward penal critique, rooted in personal suffering, represented a radical departure from passive compliance, though thwarted efforts deepened his alienation, precipitating a return to outlawry as a perceived rebuke to unresponsive institutions.[28][29]Bushranging Career
Gang Recruitment and Operations
Following his release from Pentridge Gaol on 18 March 1879, Andrew George Scott, leveraging his notoriety as Captain Moonlite, assembled a gang primarily from impressionable young men encountered through prison associations and public engagements.[1] James Nesbitt, aged 20, whom Scott had met during a prior incarceration and who awaited him at the prison gates after his own release in September 1878, became his closest companion and second-in-command.[30] Scott initially recruited Thomas Williams, alias Frank Johns, a 22-year-old former confectioner with a deformed hand from a workplace injury, to assist with lectures on prison reform that Scott delivered in Melbourne and Sydney; these efforts, however, yielded little success and transitioned into plans for bushranging.[13] As the group departed Victoria for New South Wales in mid-1879, seeking employment in the Riverina amid economic hardship, additional members joined during the journey, drawn by desperation and Scott's charismatic promises of adventure and gain.[3] Augustus "Gus" Wernicke, a 15-year-old son of a publican, and Thomas Rogan, 21, with a prior conviction for horse stealing, attached themselves to the party; Graham Bennett, another young swagman, linked up near Gundagai.[29] The recruits were largely inexperienced—lacking skills in riding, shooting, or bushcraft—with backgrounds in urban trades or vagrancy rather than established criminality, reflecting Scott's appeal to the unemployed and disaffected youth amid high unemployment and police scrutiny that barred legitimate work.[31] The gang's operations commenced with opportunistic hold-ups of rural stores and stations for provisions as they traversed southeastern Australia, often under the misapprehension by locals of being connected to the more infamous Kelly Gang.[13] These minor depredations, undocumented in confessions but reported in contemporary accounts, sustained the group through late 1879 while evading capture, culminating in their approach to Wantabadgery Station after repeated refusals of shelter and labor due to Scott's criminal reputation.[1] The operations highlighted the gang's amateurish nature, relying on Scott's leadership and bravado rather than tactical proficiency, as they traveled on foot and armed with limited weaponry including revolvers and Snider rifles procured en route.[3]The Wantabadgery Outrage
In November 1879, Andrew George Scott, known as Captain Moonlite, led a small gang in holding up Wantabadgery Station, a sheep property near Gundagai in New South Wales.[1] The group, which included James Nesbitt, Augustus Wernicke, Thomas Rogan, and 15-year-old William Jamieson, arrived seeking employment and provisions but were refused assistance by station manager Percy Baynes.[32] Frustrated and desperate after weeks of hardship, they decided to rob the station, bailing up the occupants on the morning of 16 November.[32] The gang seized control of the homestead, demanding food, clothing, and other supplies from owners Claude and Falconer McDonald and their employees.[32] They looted provisions, firearms, and horses, while using two young children—sons of nearby hotelkeeper James Patterson—as human shields, forcibly separating them from their family to deter pursuit.[1] [32] Scott, styling himself as a romantic bushranger, reportedly treated some captives with a degree of courtesy, providing them with food and engaging in conversation, though the overall act involved armed intimidation and theft under duress.[32] One employee managed to escape and alert authorities in Gundagai, prompting police response.[32] The hold-up lasted approximately two days, during which the gang fortified their position in the homestead, aware that reinforcements were approaching from Wagga Wagga.[1] This incident, marked by the taking of hostages and plunder of rural property, exemplified the gang's shift from opportunistic crime to outright bushranging aggression amid economic desperation in the region.[33]Methods and Motivations
Upon his release from Pentridge Prison on 3 July 1879, Andrew George Scott, styling himself Captain Moonlite, initially sought legitimate employment but faced repeated rejections due to his criminal record and police surveillance, leading him to associate with James Nesbitt and recruit a small gang of young, impressionable men including Thomas Rogan, Albert Eyers, and Gus Wernicke for survival-oriented robberies in rural Victoria and New South Wales.[13] The gang's methods involved opportunistic "stick-ups" of isolated homesteads, stores, and public houses, such as the robbery of the Australian Arms hotel where they intimidated staff and patrons to surrender cash and goods, often under the guise of being affiliated with the more notorious Kelly Gang to amplify fear and compliance.[13] They employed basic bushranger tactics like armed takeover of properties, holding occupants as hostages to demand provisions, horses, and money—exemplified by their two-day occupation of Wantabadgery Station on 15 November 1879, during which they confined the manager and family, ransacked the premises for supplies, and conducted informal "trials" of captives to extract information or valuables before fleeing on stolen mounts.[1] [13] Scott's motivations were rooted in post-incarceration destitution and societal exclusion; having exhausted options like unpaid clerical work at a church and itinerant lecturing on prison reform, he cited "despair" as the force compelling him into bushranging, later expressing in correspondence a deep regret for the bloodshed it entailed while framing it as a response to systemic barriers against ex-convicts.[13] Economic hardship exacerbated by police interference in his attempts at rehabilitation—such as warnings to potential employers—pushed the group toward New South Wales for a fresh start, but escalating needs for mobility and funds devolved into violent crime rather than mere vagrancy.[1] [13] Contemporaries inferred additional personal defiance, with Scott's theatrical self-presentation as "Captain Moonlite" suggesting an element of embracing his notoriety to assert agency amid rejection, though primary accounts emphasize pragmatic survival over ideological rebellion.[1]Capture, Trial, and Execution
The Wantabadgery Siege
Following the gang's occupation of Wantabadgery Station on 15 November 1879, where they held approximately 25 to 35 hostages including the McDonald family and station hands, word of the outrage reached authorities in Wagga Wagga and Gundagai.[34] Four constables from Wagga Wagga—Howe, Williamson, Headley, and Johns—were dispatched and arrived at the station around 4:00 a.m. on 16 November, initiating the first confrontation.[32] Scott and Nesbitt exchanged gunfire with the police using shotguns, while the gang set fire to a barn to cover their retreat; no immediate casualties occurred in this skirmish, and the bushrangers fled on stolen horses toward McGlede's farm, approximately two miles away.[32] Gundagai police, led by Senior-Sergeant Carroll and including Sergeant Cassin and Constables Webb-Bowen, Barry, and Gorman, joined the pursuit after receiving reports.[32] The gang barricaded themselves at McGlede's homestead, prompting a prolonged siege and gunfight as police surrounded the property and fired from cover.[32] During the exchange, Gus Wernicke was fatally shot in the wrist and abdomen, and James Nesbitt was killed by a bullet to the temple; Constable Edmund Webb-Bowen sustained a neck wound that left him paralyzed and led to his death a week later on 23 November.[32] [34] With two comrades dead, Scott, along with Graham Bennett and Frank Williams, surrendered to the police, while Thomas Rogan was captured the following morning after hiding nearby.[32] Scott and Rogan were both wounded in the leg during the fighting but survived to face trial.[35] The remaining gang member, Frank Johns, initially escaped but was apprehended shortly thereafter.[35] The captives were transported to Gundagai Gaol, marking the effective end of Scott's bushranging activities.[34]Arrest and Legal Proceedings
Following the armed confrontation at McGlede's farm near Wantabadgery on 17 November 1879, Andrew George Scott (alias Captain Moonlite) and the surviving members of his gang—Thomas Rogan, Thomas Williams, and Graham Bennett—surrendered to pursuing police forces after the deaths of James Nesbitt and Gus McGuire, leading to their arrest.[36] The group was initially detained locally before being transported to Sydney for trial due to the capital charges involved.[37] Scott, Rogan, Williams, and Bennett were indicted for the wilful murder of Senior Constable Edward Mostyn Webb-Bowen, who was fatally shot during the gang's attempted escape from the homestead siege.[37] The proceedings began on 8 December 1879 at Sydney's Central Criminal Court, presided over by Mr. Justice Windeyer, with Attorney-General Robert Wisdom leading the prosecution.[37] Scott elected to defend himself, arguing evidentiary inconsistencies such as bullet mismatches and potential friendly fire from police or volunteers, while also decrying prejudicial media coverage; Rogan, Williams, and Bennett were represented by J. H. Want.[37][36] Prosecution evidence featured testimonies from officers like Rowe and Hedley, who claimed Scott fired the killing shot from a Snider rifle at close range, alongside ballistic analysis linking the wound to gang firearms.[36] Scott countered by questioning witness reliability and assuming moral culpability to shield his younger accomplices, though he maintained the shooting was not premeditated murder.[36] The jury delivered guilty verdicts against all four on 12 December 1879 after brief deliberation, prompting death sentences by hanging for each.[36] Appeals and executive review resulted in reprieves for Williams and Bennett, who received life imprisonment instead, while Scott and Rogan had their sentences upheld and were hanged together at Darlinghurst Gaol on 20 January 1880.[33][6]Imprisonment and Death
Following his conviction on 3 December 1879 for the murder of Constable Edward Webb-Bowen, Andrew George Scott was sentenced to death by hanging and transferred to Darlinghurst Gaol in Sydney to await execution.[38][39] During his brief confinement, Scott composed several letters from his cell, including expressions of remorse for his crimes and pleas for clemency on behalf of his accomplices, though these efforts failed to alter his fate.[7] On 20 January 1880, Scott and fellow convict Thomas Rogan were executed by hanging at Darlinghurst Gaol at 9 a.m.[40][41] Scott, appearing composed, addressed the spectators briefly before the drop, while Rogan's execution was marred by a miscalculation in rope length, leading to prolonged strangulation rather than instantaneous death by cervical fracture.[42][40] Scott's remains were initially buried in an unmarked grave at Rookwood Cemetery in Sydney, despite his expressed wish to be interred alongside James Nesbitt at Gundagai, near the site of their final bushranging activities.[24] In January 1995, his body was exhumed and reburied at North Gundagai Cemetery adjacent to Nesbitt's unmarked plot, with a headstone erected to commemorate him as "Captain Moonlite."[43][44]Personal Life and Relationships
Associations with Gang Members
Andrew George Scott formed associations with several young men of disadvantaged backgrounds following his parole from Pentridge Prison on 18 January 1879, drawing them into his orbit through lectures on prison reform where he capitalized on his bushranger persona.[13] These recruits, often impressionable and seeking purpose, included Augustus "Gus" Wernicke, approximately 19 years old and the son of a Melbourne publican from an abusive family environment; Thomas Rogan, about 22, an Irish orphan with a prior conviction for horse stealing served in Beechworth Gaol; and William Winter, a 15- or 16-year-old unemployed youth from Goulburn.[28][3] Wernicke joined during the group's initial travels northward from Victoria toward New South Wales, attracted by Scott's tales of adventure and promises of camaraderie amid shared unemployment and societal rejection.[13] Rogan and Winter were recruited en route near Goulburn, where the former's criminal experience and the latter's vulnerability to authority figures aligned with Scott's need for followers in his desperate quest for livelihood, as legitimate work evaporated under police scrutiny.[28] Earlier, during Victorian lecture tours, Scott briefly associated with Frank Johns (alias Thomas Williams), a crippled former confectioner enlisted as a stage assistant, though Johns did not participate in the subsequent New South Wales raids.[13] These relationships reflected Scott's pattern of paternalistic leadership over socially marginalized youths, whom he framed as a surrogate family unit rebelling against systemic indifference, though contemporary accounts highlight the recruits' inexperience and the gang's rapid descent into disarray during operations.[28] Graham Bennett, an itinerant swagman, attached himself near Gundagai but fled before major confrontations, underscoring the transient and opportunistic nature of some ties.[13] The group's cohesion relied on Scott's charisma rather than shared ideology, with members hailing from fractured circumstances that made them susceptible to his influence.[3]Relationship with James Nesbitt
Andrew George Scott, known as Captain Moonlite, first encountered James Nesbitt in Victoria's Pentridge Prison between 1875 and 1878, during overlapping terms of imprisonment.[8] Nesbitt, born on 27 August 1858, demonstrated early loyalty by smuggling tea to Scott, an act that resulted in disciplinary action against him.[7] This incident highlighted the budding devotion Nesbitt held toward Scott, who was serving time for prior bank robbery convictions.[7] Upon their respective releases in 1879—Scott granted early parole for good behavior, Nesbitt similarly paroled—the pair reunited and embarked on a bushranging venture together.[8] They recruited additional members, including Augustus Wernicke, Thomas Rogan, and William Winter, forming the core of what became known as the Wantabadgery Bushrangers.[7] Nesbitt served as Scott's closest companion and de facto lieutenant during their operations, which culminated in the armed takeover of Wantabadgery Station near Gundagai, New South Wales, on 15 November 1879.[8] During the ensuing police siege on 17 November 1879, Nesbitt was fatally shot while attempting to negotiate or assist in the standoff, an event that profoundly affected Scott.[7] Following Nesbitt's death, Scott, awaiting execution at Darlinghurst Gaol, penned over 60 letters between December 1879 and January 1880 expressing intense grief and affection.[30] In one letter dated 15 January 1880, Scott wrote to a friend, "When he died it broke my heart."[7] Addressing Nesbitt's mother on 19 January 1880, he described their bond as "the love and friendship, true, pure, real friendship that blessed our union" and repeatedly requested burial beside Nesbitt, stating in multiple missives that Nesbitt was "the best, truest, kindest friend" and that "we were one in heart and soul."[7][30] These letters, rediscovered in the late 1980s, offer primary evidence of the depth of their emotional connection amid the hardships of prison and outlaw life.[30] Scott's execution on 20 January 1880 prevented immediate fulfillment of his burial wish, though his remains were reinterred near Nesbitt's unmarked grave in Gundagai Cemetery in 1995.[8]Character Assessments from Contemporaries
Contemporary law enforcement officials regarded Andrew George Scott, known as Captain Moonlite, as a highly dangerous and desperate individual. Victorian Detective Brown testified during the inquest following the Wantabadgery siege on November 19, 1879, that "Moonlite is known to be a desperate character, and has already on former occasions made numerous attempts to escape," highlighting his history of defiance while imprisoned at Pentridge Gaol.[45] Police reports emphasized his ruthlessness, such as threats to mutilate and kill captives during the 1879 outrage, underscoring a view of him as a leader prone to extreme violence rather than mere opportunism.[45] Newspaper journalists from the period often portrayed Scott with a mix of admiration for his personal qualities and condemnation of his criminality, depicting him as an atypical bushranger due to his background and demeanor. A November 1879 account in Freeman's Journal described him as "a man of commanding presence, highly educated, and his manners... gentlemanly and winning. Brave to the verge of recklessness, cool, clear-headed, and sagacious, and with a certain air of chivalrous dash, he is the beau ideal of a brigand chief," attributing these traits to observations of his conduct and education at Brompton Grammar School.[46] The same report noted his "indomitable will, splendid intellect, and fascinating manner" made him "more dangerous to the community than a dozen ordinary bushrangers," suggesting his charisma amplified his threat beyond physical prowess.[46] Earlier coverage in April 1879 by the Ballarat Courier highlighted his courage during the 1866 Egerton bank robbery and skillful self-defense in court, framing his career as an illustration of crime's "romance" while acknowledging his disruptive behavior in prison.[47] Public and prison associates offered divided opinions, reflecting Scott's polarizing reputation. Victorian contemporaries reported in 1879 that "he was a great favourite with some, though some considered him a scamp and hypocrite, and others insisted he was mad," indicating his engaging personality won allies despite evident deceptions, such as posing as a reverend.[46] His daring and abilities reportedly secured "numerous well-wishers" post-release from Pentridge in 1879, with intimates viewing him as possessing "something more than the mere criminal" in composition, though this did not mitigate perceptions of his recidivist tendencies.[48][46] These assessments, drawn from direct interactions and trial observations, consistently emphasized his education—possibly as a civil engineer—and gentlemanly airs as factors distinguishing him from rougher outlaws, yet ultimately reinforcing his role as a calculated menace.[49]Controversies and Historical Debates
Claims of Heroism vs. Criminal Reality
Andrew George Scott, known as Captain Moonlite, repeatedly asserted his innocence in the 1869 robbery of the London Chartered Bank at Egerton, Victoria, where he allegedly disguised himself and compelled bank agent L. J. Bruun to surrender the safe's contents, despite Bruun's identification of his voice and subsequent evidence linking him to the crime.[3][13] Following his release from Pentridge Prison on 18 March 1879, Scott launched a series of public lectures critiquing the penal system and advocating reform, framing his incarceration as a lens for exposing institutional failures and seeking to rehabilitate his image as a knowledgeable critic rather than a felon.[10][9] In stark contrast, Scott's actions shortly after parole revealed persistent criminal intent: he assembled a gang including James Nesbitt and on 18 November 1879 executed an armed takeover of Wantabadgery Station near Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, detaining residents for two days, seizing supplies, and employing two children as human shields amid escalating tensions driven by the group's desperation and prior petty thefts.[1][25] The confrontation culminated in a police siege on 19 November, where gunfire killed Senior Constable Edward Webb-Bowen, Nesbitt, and another gang member Gus Wernicke, events that trial evidence attributed to the gang's armed resistance under Scott's leadership.[1][25] Convicted of Webb-Bowen's murder despite Scott's denials of direct responsibility, he was executed by hanging at Darlinghurst Gaol on 20 January 1880.[1] Earlier offenses further delineate this pattern, including Scott's 1870 fraudulent purchase of the yacht Why-Not using forged funds from prior thefts, for which he received a 12-month sentence, compounded by his escape from Ballarat Gaol and recapture, adding a decade of hard labor.[1] These verifiable acts of deception, violence, and defiance—coupled with his recalcitrant behavior in custody—undermine portrayals of Scott as a principled reformer or unjustly persecuted figure, revealing instead a self-serving opportunist whose "reform" rhetoric served personal redemption attempts amid unrepentant recidivism.[1][10]