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Battle of Killala

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Battle of Killala
Part of the United Irishmen Rebellion

Battle of Killala by Edward Seibert
Date22 August 1798
Location54°12′45″N 9°13′19″W / 54.2125°N 9.2219°W / 54.2125; -9.2219
Result British victory
Belligerents
United Irishmen
 France
 Great Britain
 Ireland
Commanders and leaders
Lieut. Col. Charost
Capt. Bellew
Richard Bourke
Roger MacGuire
Henry O'Keane
Eyre Power Trench
Strength
900[1]–4,000[2] Irish,
4 French officers
1,200
Casualties and losses
400–500 dead ?

The Battle of Killala was an engagement during the Irish Rebellion of 1798. It was fought on Sunday, 23 September 1798, between forces of the British Crown and a combined force of Irish rebels and a small number of French troops at Killala, County Mayo, Ireland.

Background

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On the day before the battle, the advance of a government force led by General Eyre Power Trench was visible miles from Killala, as it was marked by smoke from houses and cabins burned along the route.[3] Prior to the battle, Rebels and refugees began pouring into Killala – especially from the direction of Ballina. The morning was marked by heavy rainfall, but this cleared before noon.[4] The French troops present at the battle included only 4 officers – Charoust, Boudet, Ponson and Truc. Truc had arrived on the morning of the battle from Ballina.[4]

The battle

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The main body of Rebels occupied rising ground about a mile outside the town of Killala, on the road to Ballina. They positioned themselves behind low stone walls on each side of the road, which acted as breastworks. Other Rebels were positioned elsewhere near the town, correctly anticipating that Trench would split his forces for the attack. The government force approached the town in two divisions, each from a different direction. One of these divisions approached in the direction of where the Rebels were stationed on the Ballina road and a sharp engagement took place when the two sides met. This lasted for about twenty minutes, until the Rebels fell back into the town. They were pursued by government troops as they did so and, as a result, the rebel force sustained heavy casualties – both within the town and in the fields surrounding it.

Aftermath

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Memorial located at the main site of the Battle.

The defeat was the last major engagement of the Irish Rebellion 1798 on land; Killala had remained under rebel control for only thirty-two days. After the battle, government forces conducted sweeps in the town and the surrounding countryside, summarily executing any captured rebel found and burning houses suspected of harbouring rebels. These sweeps led to the deaths of several civilians, some of whom were loyalists.[5] The four French officers were captured during the battle, and were afterwards sent to Dublin, and from there to London. Irishman Henry O'Keane, though he was an officer in the French Revolutionary Army, was sent to Castlebar instead, where he was court-martialled. O'Keane was spared the death penalty, though he was exiled instead and forbidden to ever set foot on any territory under Crown control.[6]

A series of courts-martial began the day after the battle. The proceedings took place at a house in Killala owned by local resident Owen Morrisson.[7] Two rebel commanders, Richard Bourke and Captain Bellew, were tried on Monday evening and found guilty. They were executed the next morning in the park behind the town castle.[8][9] Another prominent rebel commander, Roger MacGuire, was transported to Botany Bay instead, while his father was hanged.[10] Courts-martial and executions of other captured rebels continued for a week.[11] In total, seventy-five prisoners were court-martialled at Killala. The Church of Ireland Bishop of Killala and Achonry, Joseph Stock, left the most detailed eye-witness account of the battle. It was published in 1800.

References & footnotes

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  1. ^ Gordon, p. 302.
  2. ^ Musgrave, Vol. 2., p. 188.
  3. ^ Stock, p. 135.
  4. ^ a b Stock, p. 142.
  5. ^ Maxwell, p. 247.
  6. ^ Stock, pp 71 – 74.
  7. ^ Stock, p. 75 & p. 164.
  8. ^ Stock, pp 164–165.
  9. ^ Maxwell, p. 251.
  10. ^ Stock, p. 166.
  11. ^ Teeling, p. 230.

Sources

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