Those who were most targetted were passengers and drivers of the carriages which carried gold from the goldfields.
Yes, there were different types of bushrangers. The first group were the convict bolters, who were the escaped convicts who stole in order to survive. The most famous of these was John 'Black' Caesar. Then there were the 'wild colonial boys', the bushrangers before the gold rush, and who were often bd out in the bush, some of free settlers. 'Bold' Jack Donohoe epitomised these bushrangers. After 1851, there were the Goldrush bushrangers, which included Australia's most famous bushrangers, such as Ned Kelly, Frank Gardiner, Ben Hall and Thunderbolt.
Australian outlaws of the bush were known as bushrangers.
Most bushrangers lived rough, in the bush, in New South Wales and Victoria. They would sometimes live with friends or family, or sometimes in barns and outhouses.
Bushrangers did not build shelters. They needed to hide form the authorities, so their most common shelter was in caves or under cliff overhangs in mountainous countryside.
The most frequent targets of arson is buildings.
Bushrangers are common in NSW, Queensland and Victoria, but they lived all over Australia. During the gold rushes they were most common in places where their were a lot of money and gold, or along the 'money routes'.
the compromise of 1850
Ned Kelly was one of Australia's most notorious bushrangers.
Like most people, they liked to be with their friends. Sometimes they were more successful as a gang.
They usually select either 'weak' targets (that are easy to damage) - or 'sensitive' targets (those that will get the most publicity).
Being of the targets is a OK idea
Yes, most of the targets are usually chased in the day night cricket match.