Norman Bruhn: A Man with Criminal Connections

The interwar era was a key period in Australia’s criminal justice history, one that saw the rise of organised crime, gang violence and the narcotics trade. One of the individuals associated with this scene was Norman Bruhn. Bruhn’s prison record reveals a busy offender with 8 convictions listed against him. However, this only scratches the surface of Bruhn’s criminal history and connections.

Norman Bruhn – future gangster of both the Melbourne and Sydney underworlds – was born in Geelong on 2 July 1894. Victoria was in the midst of a severe economic depression following the collapse of the speculative land boom and the failure of several financial institutions. Norman’s parents – 31-year-old baker Oscar and 28-year old Mary Ann – already had four children. The eldest, Ellen, had been born on 30 October 1886, just four months after her parents’ marriage. William had followed in 1888, then Oscar in 1890 and Edward in 1893. Another five children were added to the clan after Norman’s birth: Stanley (1897), Agnes (1899), Eric (1902), Roy (1905) and Catherine (1908).

Lily Walker: A Prostitute-Pickpocket Meets A Reverend

Although male offenders far outnumbered women, both historically and in the present, the lives of over 6,000 female offenders can be glimpsed through the prison records being transcribed by citizen historians for the Criminal Characters project. These female prisoners include infamous Melbourne prostitute-pickpocket Lily Walker.

Locally-born Lily Walker was first tried at the Melbourne Supreme Court in 1885, aged just 17 years old. Listed in her prison record as a brown-eyed brunette with a sallow complexion and a diminutive stature of 4 feet 10.5 inches, Walker was described in newspaper accounts of the trial as a ‘gaudily-attired female’. This coded language, along with references to her being a ‘notorious character’, served to inform the knowing nineteenth-century audience that Walker was a sex-worker.

Mugshot of William King, circa 1915. He wears a white hat and has a sombre expression. He appears very gaunt.

William King: An African-American Prisoner in Nineteenth-Century Australia

Prison records reveal fascinating, complex and often tragic human stories. Delving into almost any prisoner’s life will reveal points of interest, but some characters do stand out. William King’s record jumps out to viewers for two reasons. Firstly, its length: King was reconvicted multiple times, and committed more infractions against prison discipline than perhaps any other prisoner of the period. Secondly, King’s mugshots show his rapid deterioration from youth to old man, and draw attention to King’s African-American heritage.