Three Years with Thunderbolt

1905 memoir by William Monckton From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Three Years with Thunderbolt is a 1905 memoir by William Monckton concerning his time with the Australian bushranger Captain Thunderbolt. The book was edited by Ambrose Pratt.[1][2]

AuthorWilliam Monckton
Ambrose Pratt
LanguageEnglish
Genrememoir
Quick facts Author, Language ...
Three Years with Thunderbolt
AuthorWilliam Monckton
Ambrose Pratt
LanguageEnglish
SubjectCaptain Thunderbolt
Genrememoir
PublisherNSW Bookstall Company
Publication date
1905
Publication placeAustralia
Close

Its full title was Three Years With Thunderbolt: Being the narrative of William Monckton, who for three years attended the famous outlaw, Frederick Ward, better known as Captain Thunderbolt, as servant, companion, and intimate friend: during which period he shared the bushranger's crimes and perils, and was twice severely wounded in encounters with the police.

The book was serialised in newspapers before being published in book form.[3]

Stage adaptation

Quick facts Thunderbolt, Written by ...
Thunderbolt
Written byAmbrose Pratt
A.S. Joseph
Based onThree Years with Thunderbolt
by William Mockton
Date premieredOctober 14, 1905 (1905-10-14)
Place premieredTheatre Royal, Sydney[4]
Original languageEnglish
Close

The book was adapted in a 1905 melodrama Thunderbolt.[5][6][7]

The play was produced by William Anderson and the cast of the original production included Bert Bailey.

The play was very popular.[8]

Film adaptation

The stage version was adapted into the 1910 film Thunderbolt.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI