4 episodes

In a History Lab season like no other, we're pulling on the threads of one of Australia's great misunderstood histories, moving beyond the myths to learn what the Aboriginal brothers Jimmy and Joe Governor faced in both life and death.

Australia's budding Federation is the background setting to this remarkable story, that sees the Governor brothers tied to the inauguration of a 'new' nation and Australia's dark history of frontier violence, racial injustice and the global trade and defilement of Aboriginal ancestral remains.

This Impact Studios production is a collaboration with the Governor family, UTS Faculty of Law and Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research.


The Last Outlaws team
Katherine Biber - UTS Law Professor and Chief Investigator
Aunty Loretta Parsley - Great-granddaughter of Jimmy Governor and the Governor Family Historian
Leroy Parsons - Governor descendant, Narrator and Co-Writer
Kaitlyn Sawrey - Host, Writer and Senior Producer
Frank Lopez - Writer, Senior Producer, Composer and Sound Engineer
Allison Chan - Producer and Researcher
Professor Daryle Rigney, Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research - Cultural Consultant
Dr Lyndon Ormond-Parker, honorary senior lecturer in the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University - Cultural Consultant
Belinda Lopez - Editorial Advisor
Benjamin Vozzo - Digital Communications Manager
Emma Lancaster - Executive Producer
Jake Duczynski - Digital Animation and Artwork by Studio Gilay
Additional sound engineering by Martin Peralta and Ryan Pemberton
Additional sound supplied by Camilla Hannan
Darwin Studio support from the Top End Aboriginal Bush Broadcasting Association - Lee Hewitt, Brendon Barlow and Bernard Namok

The Last Outlaws Impact Studios at UTS

    • History
    • 4.5 • 57 Ratings

In a History Lab season like no other, we're pulling on the threads of one of Australia's great misunderstood histories, moving beyond the myths to learn what the Aboriginal brothers Jimmy and Joe Governor faced in both life and death.

Australia's budding Federation is the background setting to this remarkable story, that sees the Governor brothers tied to the inauguration of a 'new' nation and Australia's dark history of frontier violence, racial injustice and the global trade and defilement of Aboriginal ancestral remains.

This Impact Studios production is a collaboration with the Governor family, UTS Faculty of Law and Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research.


The Last Outlaws team
Katherine Biber - UTS Law Professor and Chief Investigator
Aunty Loretta Parsley - Great-granddaughter of Jimmy Governor and the Governor Family Historian
Leroy Parsons - Governor descendant, Narrator and Co-Writer
Kaitlyn Sawrey - Host, Writer and Senior Producer
Frank Lopez - Writer, Senior Producer, Composer and Sound Engineer
Allison Chan - Producer and Researcher
Professor Daryle Rigney, Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research - Cultural Consultant
Dr Lyndon Ormond-Parker, honorary senior lecturer in the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University - Cultural Consultant
Belinda Lopez - Editorial Advisor
Benjamin Vozzo - Digital Communications Manager
Emma Lancaster - Executive Producer
Jake Duczynski - Digital Animation and Artwork by Studio Gilay
Additional sound engineering by Martin Peralta and Ryan Pemberton
Additional sound supplied by Camilla Hannan
Darwin Studio support from the Top End Aboriginal Bush Broadcasting Association - Lee Hewitt, Brendon Barlow and Bernard Namok

    What remains of Joe Governor?

    What remains of Joe Governor?

    After Jimmy's trial, what happened to his brother Joe?

    Joe has mostly been forgotten by history, and his presence in the archives is little more than a whisper.

    From coronial records, family tales and a visit to a country pub, it becomes clear that Joe fell foul of the frontier, in life and death.

    And yet, more questions remain: Was Joe Governor, an outlaw, killed lawfully?

    How do his ancestral remains become another transactional asset in the murky world of race science? And why is western knowledge still entangled in its colonial past?

    • 41 min
    Death Row Diary

    Death Row Diary

    How does the law deal with an outlaw?

    Jimmy Governor is captured and his legal case becomes a lightning rod for justice in the new federation. But how did Australia's most-wanted murderer get one of the best lawyers in the colony?

    A prison experiment begins with a diary and we find out how the present mimics the past.

    • 34 min
    The Last Outlaws

    The Last Outlaws

    This is the tale of a prison colony trying to become a country and the murder case that stood in its way, but this is not a true crime podcast.

    Jimmy and Joe Governor, two brothers from Wiradjuri and Wonnarua country, were the last proclaimed outlaws in Australia - wanted dead or alive.

    120 years later we examine what has survived and what we can still learn from the Governor brothers' story.

    To find out more visit: https://thelastoutlaws.com.au

    • 32 min
    Introducing: The Last Outlaws

    Introducing: The Last Outlaws

    The Last Outlaws is the latest audio series to be released by Impact Studios, an audio production house embedded in the University of Technology Sydney.

    The trilogy podcast is based on UTS Law Professor Katherine Biber's tenacious and careful research of Jimmy and Joe Governor, Australia's last proclaimed outlaws.

    The Governor brothers' story has been told in books and film before, but never like this.

    For the Governor family descendants this is a difficult story to tell, but one that demands to be heard.

    Coming September 22nd.

    • 3 min

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5
57 Ratings

57 Ratings

Mulligah ,

Wonderful podcast

I really enjoyed listening to the well researched, balanced and truth telling stories.

no middle names ,

Deluded racist tribalist academics

I truely don’t know how educated people can blatantly tell so many lies and proclaim them as fact in Australia. We didn’t massacre and treat aboriginals any different to how Irishmen were treated in them days. The world was hard. Why don’t we talk about that anymore??? But you academics aren’t ok until you totally re wrote history until it’s all lies. He was involved in the deaths of 9 individuals and was hanged just the same as any white man in those days. If he had of committed those crimes in the USA he would have been lynched and tortured to death. But he wasn’t he was hanged same as any white member of the commonwealth.
And human migration is natural and aboriginals were never gonna be entitled to own a massive chunk of land and never be disturbed. That doesn’t happen. Nor should it.

sarvcon ,

Fantastic

Well researched and respectfully told. I learnt a lot. If you don’t like hearing colonial truths this may not be for you (or perhaps it’s exactly for you).

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