In 1879 the Kelly Gang came up with the idea of creating armour from mouldboards. They used hammers to beat the metal into shape until it could be worn as a suit.
Some farmers sympathised with the gang and offered them their mouldboards, others began to report their mouldboards as being stolen. A police informer, Daniel Kennedy, reported the ‘...missing portions of cultivators described as jackets are now being worked and fit splendidly.'
When Ned Kelly was captured and his gang members killed, the gang's armour quickly became a source of fascination and conflict between the police involved in the final shoot-out.
Superintendent Hare, who led the attack at Glenrowan, felt entitled to a souvenir as a reward for the major role he played in the gang's capture. He took a set of armour that he thought was Ned's, but which actually belonged to Joe Byrne.
In Benalla, Superintendent Sadleir had several sacks of armour that the head office in Melbourne was demanding he return to them. But the Chief Commissioner Captain Standish in Melbourne had other plans for the armour: