The criminal underworld of Sydney in the 1840s

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
  • Featuring extracts from the Registry of Flash Men narrated by 'William Augustus Miles' (aka Fabian LoSchiavo)
    This is a unique insight into the criminal underworld in Sydney during the 1840s. The volume was kept as an official surveillance record by William Augustus Miles who was Superintendent, then Commissioner, of Sydney Police in New South Wales from July 1840 to July 1848. Miles held the belief that much crime was caused by the contamination of innocent people, and that most of the crime in Sydney was the result of former convicts mixing with free immigrants. He believed that the criminal class required constant surveillance by the police.
    The complete manuscript and transcription of William Augustus Miles Registry of Flash Men, together with many other records from the seedier side of our past can be found on State Records website at: www.records.nsw...

Комментарии •

  • @Dunawori1957
    @Dunawori1957 3 года назад +1

    Excellent. I love the way that this has been filmed and all the information in it

  • @dazwall5092
    @dazwall5092 6 месяцев назад

    Great video, the decade prior to the gold rush. His accounts are a very clean version of what was going on during those Colonial days. Then the gold rush started in 1851 and the dynamics of the criminal underworld changed.

  • @leanneblake4248
    @leanneblake4248 8 лет назад +3

    Fabulous , love it. Thank you so much.

  • @barrygiddey9139
    @barrygiddey9139 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting video thanks for that!

  • @tompchromedome
    @tompchromedome Год назад +2

    now days they are called politicians

    • @overworlder
      @overworlder 2 месяца назад +2

      we'll lose the gains of centuries and what rights we do have with that attitude

  • @Jeansieguy
    @Jeansieguy 2 года назад

    I did not know any of this before, thanks.

  • @tippngthevelvet
    @tippngthevelvet 13 лет назад +5

    Bringing political and social history alive, it's fabulous.

  • @petersmith9771
    @petersmith9771 5 лет назад +5

    Outstanding. Would have loved to live in those days. Great. Excellent.

    • @xzz6845
      @xzz6845 2 года назад +2

      No you wouldn’t trust me these weren’t the best of days especially in Sydney they were boring depressing riddled with disease and if your a person of colour by any chance you wouldn’t last long

    • @ae.denniss
      @ae.denniss 2 года назад

      You watch too many movies bud

  • @kevinherbert4256
    @kevinherbert4256 2 года назад

    brilliant!!!!

  • @stevenwebb3634
    @stevenwebb3634 4 года назад +2

    Interesting how the superintendent has an Australian accent despite not being from Australia.

  • @EdwardM-t8p
    @EdwardM-t8p 9 месяцев назад

    A new city in a new colony on a new continent and yet it's full of Victorian slums like Bloomfield where people are crowded into the most _dirty_ places!

  • @valziexuglyforehead3916
    @valziexuglyforehead3916 6 лет назад +8

    dose any body think that it is strange how developed sydney is in the photos only 50 years after the first fleet.i think this story is made up so we dont notice these things.i would rather see a story on some of the people who built the place.not a made up crook

    • @Jimmison007
      @Jimmison007 4 года назад

      I am sure there are many great stories about Sydney out there you just need to find them.

    • @BaChNiEr
      @BaChNiEr 4 года назад +2

      No shit these photo's are from after 1840, the first photograph ever taken was in 1839... The story is true and the photos are there to set the scene.

    • @MrsTrohman666
      @MrsTrohman666 3 года назад +2

      I don’t fault them for using early photos of sydney. People react well to seeing actual photos as opposed to paintings etc

    • @adamconnolly7519
      @adamconnolly7519 5 месяцев назад +1

      Why aren’t there any photos from the building of the Egyptian Pyramids!!!!

  • @xzz6845
    @xzz6845 2 года назад +1

    Australian organised crime was way organised back in the day it’s stopped becoming organised in the 2010s and starting becoming a social media flex 😂😂😂