Rocks Push
The Rocks Push was a notorious larrikin gang, which dominated The Rocks area of Sydney from the 1870s to the end of the 1890s. In its day it was referred to as The Push, a title which has since come to be more widely used for cliques in general and the left-wing movement the Sydney Push. ActivitiesThe gang was engaged in running warfare with other larrikin gangs of the time such as the Miller's Point Push,[1] Straw Hat Push, the Glebe Push, the Argyle Cut Push, the Forty Thieves from Surry Hills, and the Gibb Street Mob. They conducted such crimes as theft, murder, assault and battery against police and pedestrians in The Rocks area. Female members of the Push would entice drunks and seamen into dark areas to be murdered or assaulted and robbed by the gang. The leaders of the Rocks Push were crowned through victory in bare-knuckle boxing matches. Larry Foley, later to be regarded as the 'Father of Australian Boxing', was the leader of a Roman Catholic larrikin gang known as the Greens. On 18 March 1871, at the age of twenty-one, Foley fought Sandy Ross, leader of the 'Orange' or Protestant group. The fight lasted 71 rounds before police intervened.[2] The Push DressThe Rocks push had a strict dress style to make victims feel more at ease in their presence. Gang members would wear tailored jackets and dress pants with expensive hats and shoes. Banjo Patterson describes;
This dress style would show the general public and the members' victims that they had no swords or guns on hand. They would have a razor blade stuck to the toe of their boot and hidden in the band of their hat for attacks instead. References in literatureAustralian authors of the time mentioned the Push in various of their works. A poem called The Bastard from the Bush, attributed to Henry Lawson, and a sanitised published version, The Captain of the Push,[3] describe in vivid and colourful language a meeting between a Push leader and a "stranger from the bush":
Another contemporary poet, Banjo Paterson, describes a group of tourists who go to visit the Rocks Push, and paints the following picture of the appearance of the gang members:
Paterson also said, addressing Lawson in In Defence of the Bush,
The Suez CanalOne of the most famous haunts of the Rocks Push was Harrington Place, also known as the "Suez Canal" (named after the Suez Canal in Egypt, due to the passageway saving a walk around the buildings of The Rocks, just as the Suez Canal did for ships in Egypt.), one of the most unsavoury places in Sydney in its time, due to the Rocks Push. The canal was used to transport waste to the Harbor. In the early hours of the morning (around 00:00-04:00), Push members would employ a prostitute from one of the bars on Harrington Street to bed a young sailor, then move towards the canal for an intimate moment. The Push members' dress was not intimidating, but they were to keep a razor blade in the band of their hat, and attached to the toe of their shoe. The members would have the prostitute (aka. 'Donah') lean against the wall of the passage with the sailor facing her. A member would then walk out of the shadows and use the razor on his boot's toe to slice the sailor's achilles tendon, rendering the sailor in too much pain to move. The push member would then slice his throat using the razor from his hat, and the member and the Donah were to share the winnings. The body would get pushed down the canal into the Harbor with the waste, and a ferryman would fish bodies out come morning. Further information about similar events is provided in the famous Rocks Ghost tours, as a majority of related stories are passed down from generations. See alsoReferences
Further reading
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