There was no autopsy held on Dan or Steve, and there have been many stories about what might have happened. The arrangement of their bodies in the hotel suggests they may have killed themselves. This was the story that was used in the first Kelly film,
The Story of the Kelly Gang, in 1906, and in the 2003 film
Ned Kelly. Despite his body being identified by police and a priest before being burnt, there have also been stories that both Dan and Steve survived the fire. There is little evidence to support these claims. One man, James Ryan, claimed he was Dan Kelly. In 1934 he went on stage at the
Brisbane Exhibition and told stories about the Kelly Gang. He died on 29 July 1948, after being struck by a train. The
Ipswich City Council have put a memorial on his grave. In 2001,
scientists took a small piece of bone from the grave of Charles Devine Tindall at
Toowoomba, Queensland, to see if they could find
DNA to prove he was Dan Kelly. Devine, who had burn scars on his body, told his family he was really Dan. He said he had hidden under the floor of the Glenrowan hotel and escaped after the fire. In October 1902, a Melbourne newspaper printed
W. B. Melville's story that Dan Kelly and Steve Hart were living in
South Africa, where the men allegedly fought in the
Boer War. Another man, Jim Davis from Darra (a
suburb of Brisbane, Queensland), said in 1938 that he was Dan Kelly. He claimed that he, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne had escaped from the hotel. He also said he was born at the
Eureka Stockade in 1854, which makes him too old to have really been Dan. ==Cultural references==