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Sunday, January 03, 2010 - 3:06 PM
The following morning, blissfully unaware of their narrow
escape from death, Lagge and Lee invited Lynch to travel behind them
for company, an offer he readily accepted. As they approached Liverpool
on the outskirts of southern Sydney, Lynch nearly died of shock when a
man cantered his horse alongside the dray that Lynch was driving and
asked him what he was doing driving his team. The man was Thomas
Cowper. As quick as a flash Lynch smiled at the man and said, "I'm glad
I've seen you. I was just wondering whether I'd knock into you. The
fact is that your man Ireland was taken ill back there and begged me to
take the load to Sydney for you. He said I'd probably meet you
somewhere along the way." When Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire explained that
Ireland was very ill and that he had left the boy to look after him at
the camp, Cowper expressed his gratitude that Lynch had taken the load
of perishables ahead toward Sydney. He was even more grateful when
Lynch agreed to continue to Sydney with the dray and its load while
Cowper went back and looked for Ireland. Silently thanking the Lord for
looking after him through his close call with Cowper, Lynch arranged to
meet Cowper in Sydney in a few days. He pushed on with the bullock team
until he caught up with Lagge and Lee. They parted company at the
junction of Liverpool Road and Dog Trap Road, when the two men turned
in the opposite direction and headed toward Parramatta. By
driving all day and night, Lynch reached Sydney two days before his
scheduled time to meet Cowper. He knew he had no time to lose because,
when Cowper couldn't find his missing employees, he would come looking
for Lynch. Lynch employed the services of a drunk to
sell the produce so that he could not be incriminated at a later date
and if questioned by police could stick to his story about Ireland
being taken ill, adding that the produce had been stolen from the back
of the dray while it was unattended.
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