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The Last Outlaws
Paperback

The Last Outlaws

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Brilliantly reconstructed from contemporary narratives, The Last Outlaws is both a gripping work of historical true crime and a richly revealing examination of our nation at its birth. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith meets Killing for Country.

In the winter of 1900, Wiradjuri man Jimmy Governor and his brother Joe murdered nine people across New South Wales, in a rampage that caused panic in the colony on the cusp of nationhood. Triggered, it seems, by a racist incident, they killed men, women and children, evading a vast manhunt until they were eventually captured. Joe was shot in the open; Jimmy survived to be put on trial. Thus the last man to be outlawed in the colony was hanged in the new nation, meeting his end in Darlinghurst Gaol as the Federation decorations were taken down. The brothers’ names still resonate, partly due to Thomas Keneally’s novel The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith and Fred Schepisi’s subsequent film, but their story has remained distorted and obscure.

Undertaken with the co-operation of the Governors' descendants, Katherine Biber’s compelling reconstruction of events – from the murders themselves to Jimmy’s eventual execution – brings this extraordinary story back to life. In doing so it sheds fresh, vivid light on the country that inspired and reacted to the murders. Not only did many of the lawyers and politicians involved also play key roles in Federation, but the case revealed in microcosm the psychology of the nascent nation: its attitudes to land and race; its anxiety about a wider First Nations insurrection; its obsession with paperwork and the emerging ‘sciences’ of neuroanatomy and criminology; its nepotism, religiosity, sweeping police powers and sensationalist media. More powerfully than the story of Ned Kelly or the Anzacs, the fate of Jimmy Governor illuminates the origin story of the Australian nation.

Populated by a cast of extraordinary characters and compelling detail, The Last Outlaws brings the energy of true crime into the telling of history, offering an electric new understanding of both our past and our present.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Australia
Country
Australia
Date
2 July 2025
Pages
336
ISBN
9781761631665

Brilliantly reconstructed from contemporary narratives, The Last Outlaws is both a gripping work of historical true crime and a richly revealing examination of our nation at its birth. The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith meets Killing for Country.

In the winter of 1900, Wiradjuri man Jimmy Governor and his brother Joe murdered nine people across New South Wales, in a rampage that caused panic in the colony on the cusp of nationhood. Triggered, it seems, by a racist incident, they killed men, women and children, evading a vast manhunt until they were eventually captured. Joe was shot in the open; Jimmy survived to be put on trial. Thus the last man to be outlawed in the colony was hanged in the new nation, meeting his end in Darlinghurst Gaol as the Federation decorations were taken down. The brothers’ names still resonate, partly due to Thomas Keneally’s novel The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith and Fred Schepisi’s subsequent film, but their story has remained distorted and obscure.

Undertaken with the co-operation of the Governors' descendants, Katherine Biber’s compelling reconstruction of events – from the murders themselves to Jimmy’s eventual execution – brings this extraordinary story back to life. In doing so it sheds fresh, vivid light on the country that inspired and reacted to the murders. Not only did many of the lawyers and politicians involved also play key roles in Federation, but the case revealed in microcosm the psychology of the nascent nation: its attitudes to land and race; its anxiety about a wider First Nations insurrection; its obsession with paperwork and the emerging ‘sciences’ of neuroanatomy and criminology; its nepotism, religiosity, sweeping police powers and sensationalist media. More powerfully than the story of Ned Kelly or the Anzacs, the fate of Jimmy Governor illuminates the origin story of the Australian nation.

Populated by a cast of extraordinary characters and compelling detail, The Last Outlaws brings the energy of true crime into the telling of history, offering an electric new understanding of both our past and our present.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Australia
Country
Australia
Date
2 July 2025
Pages
336
ISBN
9781761631665
 
Book Review

The Last Outlaws
by Katherine Biber

by Gene Pinter, Jun 2025

On a midsummer’s morning in 1901, a Wiradjuri and Wonnarua man was hanged for murder at Darlinghurst Gaol. What marked the end of Jimmy Governor’s life was the newly Federated nation’s first blood: an act which deepened routinised violence against Indigenous peoples and set the wheels of systemic racism in Federal law into its most extensive motion.

Katherine Biber’s The Last Outlaws, developed from her NSW Premier’s History Award-winning podcast of the same name, meticulously tracks Jimmy’s story through written and oral records to illuminate a far broader history of colonialism’s legal machinery. Jimmy and his brother Joe were the final two men in Australia proclaimed outlaws after the murders of Sarah Mawbey, three of her children and their schoolteacher Helena Kerz. Rather than examining Jimmy and Joe’s actions as isolated incidents, Biber maps how persistent humiliation, dispossession and brutality through the brothers’ and their family’s lives fostered circumstances capable of begetting further violence.

Biber’s ability to slip seamlessly from past to present, from open wound to aching scar, gives The Last Outlaws a rare immediacy few writers of legal history can sustain through a saga as far-reaching as the Governors’. In clearly articulating how the threads of Jimmy and Joe’s cases form the tapestries of our current judicial, political and cultural frameworks, Biber’s resolute and compassionate account provides much-needed context for understanding the full scope of the last two centuries of Australian history. With an eye to the future of reconciliation, The Last Outlaws unravels the legacies of injustice that continue to haunt courtrooms and Country, challenging us to look beyond the punitive and toward truth-telling.