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🗓️ 4 November 2025
⏱️ 37 minutes
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In February 1842, a dingo unearthed a shallow grave near Ironstone Bridge, revealing the decomposing body of an Irish immi
Kearns Landregan was twenty-seven years old when he died on a dusty colonial road seven miles from Berrima. An Irish immigrant who'd traveled halfway around the world seeking opportunity in Australia, Landregan worked as a carrier—hard labor that required strength, reliability, and trust. On February 19th, 1842, he was driving his cart to market when he accepted what seemed like innocent companionship from a fellow traveler. He had no way of knowing that the man walking beside him had already murdered at least eight people. Among Lynch's victims was thirteen-year-old Mary Macnamara, a child who watched her entire family die before being assaulted and killed herself. There was Thomas Smith, a skilled plowman respected for his agricultural expertise. And there was an unnamed Aboriginal boy whose murder was barely recorded in colonial documents—a child whose name we'll never know but whose life mattered just as much.
John Lynch's killing spree across colonial New South Wales exposed the brutal vulnerabilities of frontier justice and the systematic devaluation of certain lives in 1840s Australia. His 1836 acquittal for Thomas Smith's murder—despite clear evidence—taught him he could kill with impunity in a justice system stretched impossibly thin across vast wilderness. The case reveals how colonial authorities treated crimes differently based on victims' race and social status: a white child's murder shocked the colony, while an Aboriginal boy's death warranted barely a sentence in court records. The 2019 memorial plaque installed at All Saints Anglican Church in Sutton Forest represents a crucial shift toward victim-centered historical narrative, finally naming those whose stories were nearly lost to history.
This episode contains descriptions of violence against children and references to sexual assault. Listener discretion advised.
Lynch's methodical approach to murder began after his 1836 acquittal emboldened him. Operating along isolated bush tracks in the Razorback Range, he targeted travelers with money or goods, striking them from behind with a tomahawk before stealing their possessions and assuming their identities.
Timeline & Investigation:
Resolution:Â Chief Constable James Chapman's investigation connected Lynch to Landregan's distinctive felt hat, which Lynch had been wearing openly around Berrima. Excavation of the Mulligan property revealed four shallow graves. Lynch confessed to all murders during questioning, showing no remorse. He was tried, convicted of Landregan's murder, and hanged at Berrima Jail on April 22nd, 1842 at age 29.
This episode draws on colonial court records from the 1842 Supreme Court trial proceedings in Sydney, contemporary newspaper accounts from the Sydney Morning Herald, and historical research from the Berrima District Historical and Family History Society. The case documentation reveals the challenges of frontier policing in 1840s New South Wales, where vast distances and limited communication made coordinating murder investigations exceptionally difficult. Sergeant James Wilson's creation of a primitive geographic profile to track disappearances along the Berrima-Campbelltown Road represented early criminal investigative innovation. The 2019 memorial plaque commemorating Lynch's victims by name marks an important shift toward victim-centered historical narrative, particularly significant in finally acknowledging the unnamed Aboriginal child whose murder colonial authorities barely recorded.
Foul Play is hosted by Shane Waters and Wendy Cee. Research and writing by the Foul Play production team. For more historical true crime stories from the Victorian era and beyond, subscribe to Foul Play wherever you listen to podcasts.
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| 0:00.0 | Hello, friend. |
| 0:07.0 | February 19, 1842. |
| 0:11.0 | Ironstone Bridge, about seven miles from Barama, in the New South Wales Colony. |
| 0:19.0 | The summer heat had turned the brushed tracks to dust, |
| 0:22.6 | and the gum trees stood still in the heavy air. |
| 0:26.6 | The Australian sun beat down on red earth and pale bark. |
| 0:32.6 | Hugh Tinney was a drover, |
| 0:34.6 | one of the men who moved cattle along the dangerous colonial roads. |
| 0:40.1 | He knew these tracks well, knew which fords were safe, which camps offered water, |
| 0:46.6 | which stretches of road were most likely to attract bush rangers. |
| 0:52.1 | On this particular morning, he was driving his team to market when something |
| 0:57.0 | caught his eye. A dingo, one of the wild dogs that haunted the Australian wilderness, |
| 1:04.0 | scavenging what they could find. But this dingo wasn't just scavenging. It was digging. Its paws worked at the red earth |
| 1:13.6 | near the creek bank, digging up something with purpose. |
| 1:18.6 | Tinney pulled his team to a stop. Something about the animal's behavior made him uneasy. |
| 1:25.6 | He approached slowly. |
| 1:29.9 | The dingo fled into the scrub. |
| 1:35.2 | What Taney saw in that shallow grave made him take a step back. |
| 1:40.7 | A human skull stared up at him, still wearing flesh. |
| 1:46.3 | The body had been there long enough for the elements to do their work, but not long enough to disappear completely. The body wore the rough clothing of a laborer. Work clothes, |
| 1:56.0 | practical and worn. A leather belt still clenched around what remained of the wrist. A felt hat lay |
| 2:03.6 | nearby, partially buried in the red earth. These were the belongings of a working man, |
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