Shepherd, convicted sheep stealer, death-row convict, ticket-of-leave man, cattleman, station owner, eager husband, friend of bushrangers, victim of crime, loving father, generous donor, gentleman, occupier of an unmarked grave – I can’t work out for sure if all of these descriptions fit one man, or if there were two – or even three – Michaels. If these characters were one and the same person, then he certainly led an interesting life.
Ireland was experiencing a fine, mild summer in 1817, when judges arrived in Wicklow to preside over the trials of an unusually large number of prisoners. It was not to be a fine day for Michael Walsh, who was convicted of stealing sheep and sentenced to death. Saunders’s News-Letter reported that sheep stealing was becoming common, and therefore the…