Rumours were rife in Melbourne. The goldfield was said to be in
rebel hands and people became uncomfortably aware that the diggers could form an
army tens of thousands strong and be on their way to pillage their defenceless
town. A citizens’ rifle brigade was formed and Hotham was applauded when he
announced that special constables would be sworn in to meet the emergency. In
Ballarat, some more radical diggers met at the Star Hotel where Alfred
Black drew up a ‘Declaration of Independence’ but they were a small minority and
Lalor, who favoured force only in defence, played no part in it. Vern did and
Lalor felt sufficiently insecure in his leadership to offer his resignation on
Friday 1 December in order to maintain unity within the movement. However, he
was dissuaded from doing so largely because Vern and others recognised that,
without him the movement would fall apart. [1] Vern had promised to raise 500 armed German diggers
and sought the position of second-in-command but contented himself with
enlarging the Stockade. [2] Carboni thought this absurd as there was no
possibility of defending the original space let alone an extended one. [3] Vern may have promised the best hope for military
leadership but largely from accounts written by Carboni who detested him, he
appears vague and contradictory in his military organisation. [4] He did, however, approach the task of forming a rebel
army with some energy but he is best remembered for fleeing the subsequent
battle though not, as some suggested, at its outset but when a large number of
the defenders fled ten minutes into the battle.
Few diggers slept in the Stockade on Friday night returning
early on Saturday morning, 2 December. Drilling recommenced at 8.00 am and the
blacksmith inside the stockade continued to make pikes for the diggers who had
no firearms. Drilling stopped around midday when Father Smyth arrived to tend to
the needs of the Irish Catholics. He had permission from Lalor to address the
Catholics and pointed out to them their poor defences and their lack of
experience in the face of well-armed troops and police, with more reinforcements
on the way. He pleaded for them to stop before blood was spilled, and to attend
Mass the following morning, but was largely unsuccessful. No license hunt
occurred in the morning and by midday most diggers agreed that nothing would
happen until Monday at the earliest and Lalor believed that this would take the
form of further license hunts not a direct attack on their camp. By
mid-afternoon, 1,500 men were drilling in and around the Stockade. Captain
Thomas suggested that the rebels were ‘forcing people to join their ranks’. [5]
Around 4.00 pm, 200 Americans, the Independent Californian
Rangers under James McGill, arrived in the Stockade.[6] Their arrival bolstered men’s spirits as McGill had
some military knowledge and was promptly appointed second-in-command to Lalor.
There is considerable ambiguity over the extent of McGill’s military experience.
[7] But he put whatever military training he had to work
and set up a sentry system to warn the rebels of a British attack. Even so
McGill and two-thirds of his Californians left before midnight on the pretext
that they were going to intercept further reinforcements from Melbourne.
McGill’s wife later claimed that a representative of the American consul, a
friend of Hotham, had ordered McGill to get his men out of the Stockade. [8] Vern, also without providing any evidence to support
his assertion, suggested that McGill accepted a bribe of £800 to absent himself
from the Stockade. This left the Stockade seriously under-manned and Rede’s
spies observed these actions. In the evening, most men had drifted home to their
families or visited friends outside the boundary. Lalor had retired to the
stores tent within the Stockade for much needed sleep by midnight and there were
only about 120 diggers within the Stockade with a hundred or so firearms between
them.
Although it appears that Lalor did not anticipate an imminent
military assault, this was not the position in the Camp where tension was
rising. Captain Thomas later stated that shots were fired over the heads of
sentries and that the rebels in the ‘intrenched camp… [had] the avowed intention
of intercepting the force under the Major-General’s command en route from
Melbourne.’ [9] Rede knew that unless he used his available men, he
could lose the opportunity to end the rebellion quickly. Soldiers and mounted
police had poured in from around the state; 106 men from the 40th Regiment and
39 mounted troopers arrived from Geelong. Reinforcements were also sent from
Castlemaine, as well as directly from Melbourne. Rede was informed by his spies
that the Californian Rangers had left the Stockade depleting its defenders.
There was a hint of things to come when on the day before the attack Rede had
written to Hotham:
I am convinced that the future welfare of the Colony and
the peace and prosperity of all the Gold Fields depends upon the crushing of
this movement in such a manner that it may act as a warning.
Now, he concluded, was the ideal time to attack and destroy the
Stockade.
[1] Ibid, Molony, John, Eureka, pp. 146-147, draws
attention to the ‘alleged’ nature of this document but says nothing more.
[2] Vern, Frederick, ‘Col. Vern’s Narrative of the Ballarat
Insurrection, Part I’, Melbourne Monthly Magazine, November 1855, pp.
5-14, Part II, does not appear to have been published.
[3] Ibid, Carboni, Raffaelo, The Eureka Stockade, pp.
80-81.
[4] Ibid, Carboni, Raffaelo, The Eureka Stockade, p.
84.
[5] Thomas to Major Adjutant-General, 3 December 1854, PROV,
1085/P Duplicate 162, Enclosure no. 7.
[6] Ibid, Carboni, Raffaelo, The Eureka Stockade, pp.
84-86, 88.
[7] Ibid, Blake, Gregory, To Pierce The Tyrant’s Heart: A
Military History of The Battle for The Eureka Stockade 3 December 1854, pp.
49-51.
[8] SLV, MS 13518, Charles Evans, Diary, 3 December
1854, pp. 134-135, gives an alternative explanation suggesting that one
government spy ‘[possibly McGill] had decoyed a large body of men from the
Stockade last night on some pretence or other, leaving only about 150 in it and
they imperfectly armed…’
[9] Thomas to Major Adjutant-General, 3 December 1854, PROV,
1085/P Duplicate 162, Enclosure no. 7.
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