Patrick Roach: a well-connected bruiser

Patrick Roach was an inveterate thief and a vicious thug. Quick with his fists, he was well known to police and residents around Glebe, Darlington, Ultimo and Chippendale. He was frequently charged with committing crimes ‘in company’; his list of accomplices during the 1920s and 1930s reads like a who’s who of Sydney’s underworld.

Described by police as ‘one of the most daring burglars we have had in Sydney for a great number of years’1, Patrick Roach was an inveterate thief and a vicious thug. He was quick with his fists, bashing the drunks he robbed for the cash in their pockets, young constables patrolling the streets, and his long-suffering wife, Edith. He was well known to police and residents around Glebe, where he lived, and the surrounding suburbs of Darlington, Ultimo and Chippendale, and was frequently charged with committing crimes ‘in company’; his list of accomplices during the 1920s and 1930s reads like a who’s who of Sydney’s underworld.

Roach first appears in official police records in 1920, at the age of 17, and faced court twice that year on charges of stealing, and shooting with intent to inflict grievous bodily harm; he was acquitted of the second charge.

1921 was a busy year for Roach, who appeared before the courts on at least three separate, serious charges. In May, Roach, along with his older brother Richard and accomplice Henry Robert Gray, was discovered by police in a house in Darlington with a quantity of serge fabric, silk hose and felt hats; the haul was valued at over £1000. Police discovered that the David Jones warehouse in Glebe had been raided by thieves just half an hour earlier. A fourth member of the gang, Charles John Scott, was picked up by police on suspicion of involvement. Although the goods were identified as those missing from the warehouse, none of the suspects was found guilty or served any jail time on this charge. While Richard Roach disappears from the police records at this point, Gray, who already had an extensive juvenile record for theft, continued to rack up similar charges throughout the 1920s, under various aliases.

In September, Patrick Roach and known thief and thug Reuben Holmes were suspected of bashing a taxi driver. Thought to have been hit with an iron bar, the victim had a fracture at the base of his skull and doctors doubted he would survive. Some newspaper reports suggested that the three men had been drinking and a fight broke out over a card game. Roach and Holmes were found not guilty.

Roach was undoubtedly the leader of this gang of crooks that had terrorised the Glebe district for years. Stolen stuff had been repeatedly traced to his possession but hitherto the police had never been able to dig up sufficient evidence to ensure a conviction, even of receiving.

Truth (Sydney), 19 February 1922.

All of the gang members were found guilty of receiving, with four sentenced to jail time.

A ‘quintette of sinners’

In May 1924, Roach was released from Bathurst Gaol. Within months he was again before the courts, alongside Edward McDermot and Albert Edwards, charged with viciously assaulting Charles William Smith, a tram conductor, and robbing him of a watch and money to the value of £2 7s, including £1 of government money. In the witness box, however, Smith was unable to identify the accused. Despite suggestions of collusion, including a wink between the victim and the defendants, without this critical evidence the trio were found not guilty by direction of the judge.

In the following months, Roach was involved in a series of assaults, robberies and break-ins, including an assault on a police officer, most of the offences committed with one or two accomplices. He was sent back to jail for three years.

I consider [Thomas] Craig one of the worst criminals. He is a convicted thief. Every time I have seen him he has been in company with the very worst type of criminal at large.

The Sun (Sydney), 16 January 1928.

In the early hours of 31 December 1927, police raided a house in Maroubra, arresting six men and a woman on charges of vagrancy and for being found in a house in the company of reputed thieves. Among this ragtag bunch was Roach. Several of those arrested alongside him also feature in the Specials collection; Thomas Craig, William Thompson and Aiden Feutrill were photographed a few weeks later among another familiar group of thugs and underworld figures following another police raid on a house frequented by thieves.

Detective Delaney described all seven of the defendants as reputed thieves of the assault and robbery class and alleged that they mixed with members of the underworld. All the male defendants gave evidence of having worked as wharf labourers and the charges were dismissed, although Feutrill was fined £20 for being in possession of an unlicensed revolver. Later that year, Roach was found guilty of two counts of assaulting police and returned to jail. Released on 24 December 1928, he was back in jail for a month in January 1929 after assaulting his wife and giving her a black eye.

On 29 March 1930, two police constables were brutally assaulted by a group of men in Shepherd Street, Chippendale, while a crowd of 500 people looked on. According to newspaper reports, only one young boy ran off to get help. Roach, John Finnie, William Wilson McRitchie (alias William Roache, ‘Sausage’ Rogers), William Joseph Harrison (alias William Harrison, Boo Boo Harrison) and Thomas William Law were arrested and charged with assault. Again, Roach and his gang, some of whom feature in previous arrests and charges alongside Roach, were acquitted of the charges.

In 1933, Roach was declared a habitual criminal by the courts. He had certainly established himself as a cynical thief quick to take any opportunity presented to him, from nicking poultry from temporarily unattended vehicles at the markets in Ultimo to rolling drunks in dark alleyways and breaking into warehouses. Roach was also violent towards women, with charges for assaulting his wife and an accusation of rape in 1930. His entry in the New South Wales criminal register noted that he was a dangerous criminal who would resort to the use of firearms or other violence to evade arrest, and referred to a long list of accomplices from the Glebe district, including Thomas Esmond ‘Ezzie’ Bollard, first cousin to notorious gangster and gunman John Frederick ‘Chow’ Hayes and a violent criminal in his own right. In 1937 Roach was present at the death of another associate, gunman Eric ‘Ted’ Pulley, and was called before the courts, this time as a witness.

Little can be gleaned of Roach’s later career from available records of the following decades, but it seems he survived the criminal life, and died an old man in 1980.

Notes

  1. Truth (Sydney), 19 February 1922.
C Smith, J Bezzina, W J Williamson, A Feutrill, G Hodder and W Thorson, Special Photograph number 1607, 25 January 1928, Central Police Station, Sydney

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Veronica Kooyman

Veronica Kooyman

Former Assistant Curator

Veronica has worked in museums since 2009 and has been fortunate to work at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Darling Harbour and the National Motor Museum in the Adelaide Hills where she had far too much fun riding around in vintage cars. Between 2014 and 2018 Veronica worked as part of the exhibitions team, learning and sharing new and fascinating stories from her home city.

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