Battle of Kilrush: Difference between revisions
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2021}} |
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{{Use Hiberno-English|date=December 2021}} |
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|conflict=Battle of Kilrush |
|conflict=Battle of Kilrush |
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|partof=the [[Irish Confederate Wars |
|partof=the [[Irish Confederate Wars]] |
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|date=15 April |
|date=15 April 1642 |
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|place=Kilrush, [[Kildare]] |
|place=Kilrush, [[County Kildare]] |
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|result= |
|result=Royalist victory |
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|combatant1= |
|combatant1 = [[Kingdom of Ireland|Royalists]] |
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|combatant2= |
|combatant2 =Irish Catholic rebels |
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|commander1= |
|commander1=[[James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde|Duke of Ormonde]] |
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|commander2= |
|commander2=[[Richard Butler, 3rd Viscount Mountgarret|Viscount Mountgarret]] |
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|strength1=3,000 infantry<br/>500 cavalry<ref name=Bagwell17 >Bagwell, p. 17.</ref> |
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|strength1= |
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|strength2=8,000 infantry<br/>400 cavalry<ref name=Jack4748 >Jackson, pp. 47–48.</ref> |
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|strength2= |
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|casualties1= |
|casualties1=60 |
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|casualties2= |
|casualties2=500 |
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|}} |
|}} |
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The '''Battle of Kilrush''' was a minor engagement at the start of the [[Irish Confederate Wars]]. It was fought in April [[1642]] between an [[England|English]] army under [[James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde|the Earl of Ormonde]], and [[Richard Butler, 3rd Viscount Mountgarret]], who led an untrained horde of [[Ireland|Irish]] troops raised during the [[Irish Rebellion of 1641]]. Ormonde led a punitive raid into rebel held territory, burning the lands of landowners who had joined the rebellion. His troops marched from [[Dublin]] to [[Portlaoise]], re-supplying the English garrison there before returning to Dublin. On their return march, the government troops were intercepted by Mountgarret’s rebel militia at [[Kilrush]], near [[Athy]] in [[County Kildare]]. The Irish troops were badly equipped and completely untrained, and after a short fire fight, many of them fled. Most of the Irish reached the safety of a nearby bog, where the English horse could not follow, but some of them were overtaken and killed. Irish sources claim their casualties were very light, while Ormonde claimed that over 500 of them had been killed. It is probable that losses on both sides were low. Ormonde afterwards successfully returned to Dublin. |
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{{Location map many | Ireland | relief=yes | width=305 |
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{{UK-battle-stub}} |
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| caption= Ireland and Kilrush |
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| lat1_deg = 53.062128 |
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| lon1_deg = -6.862631 |
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| label1 = Kilrush |
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| lat2_deg = 53.35 |
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| lon2_deg = -6.266667 |
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| label2 = Dublin |
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|position2 = right |
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| lat3_deg = 52.99 |
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| lon3_deg = -6.98698 |
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| label3 = Athy |
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|position3 = left |
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}} |
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{{Campaignbox Irish Confederate Wars|state=collapsed}} |
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The '''Battle of Kilrush''' was a fought during the [[Irish Confederate Wars]]. It was fought on 15 April 1642 between a [[Kingdom of Ireland|Royalist]] army under [[James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde|the Earl of Ormonde]] and [[Confederate Ireland|Irish Confederate]] troops commanded by [[Richard Butler, 3rd Viscount Mountgarret|Lord Mountgarret]]. |
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==Background== |
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On 2 April 1642, the Earl of Ormonde, serving as the commander of the Royalist army in Ireland, led his second expedition into the counties of Kildare and Laois, reinforcing Royalist garrisons and wreaking havoc upon the landowners who had joined the [[Irish Rebellion of 1641]]. After a ten-day period in which his forces traveled from [[Dublin]] to Maryborough (now [[Portlaoise]]), Ormonde returned part way back to Athy and became aware of the nearby presence of a large rebel militia attempting to intercept his force as they returned to Dublin.<ref name=Bag1718 >Bagwell, pp. 17–18.</ref><ref>Rawson, p. xiv.</ref> |
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==Before the battle== |
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Although Ormonde had left Dublin with 3,000 foot and 500 horse, his reinforcement activities had significantly reduced the size of his detachment and he desired to avoid a direct confrontation with the rebels if possible. [[Thomas Carte]] said that at Kilrush Ormonde's "''.. whole army did not in able fighting men exceed above two thousand four hundred men, and four hundred horse ..''"<ref>Carte T., p.249</ref> |
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The rebel militia, estimated to be as large as 8,000 foot with several hundred horse, was reported to have crossed the River Barrow at Mageny-ford 10 kilometers to the south. The rebel militia was commanded by Lord Mountgarret and attended by other rebel leaders including [[Rory O'Moore]] and Hugh O'Byrne.<ref name=Bag1718/><ref name=Raw2 >Rawson, pp. xiv–xv.</ref> As it happened, Mountgarret was Ormonde's great-uncle.{{sfn|Kelsey|2004}} |
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Given his predicament, Ormonde moved out of Athy early on the morning of 15 April traveling northeast along the high ground through the towns of Ardscull and Funtstown. The rebel militia moved concurrently in the same direction along the high ground southeast of Ormonde's army through the towns of Ballyndrum and Narraghmore. The rebels were attempting to reach the Ballyshannon pass before the Royalists. Slowed by his wagons and baggage, Ormonde decided to send his cavalry on ahead. The rebels arrived first and took positions in Kilrush and Bullhill intercepting Ormonde's force.<ref name=Bag1718/><ref name=Raw2/> |
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==Battle== |
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Although he was outnumbered, Ormonde managed to defeat the rebels. Mountgarret's militia was poorly organized and the Royalist cavalry led the way breaking the left wing of the rebel militia with their first charge. The right wing of the rebel militia held for some time but later retreated and broke. Many of the fleeing rebels were overtaken and killed. Other rebels sought the safety of a nearby bog, where the Royalist horse could not follow.<ref name=Bag1718/><ref name=Raw2/> |
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Carte described the rebel right wing at the crux of the fighting: "''All this time the right wing of the army of the rebels stood firm, without moving. There were in it the lord Mountgarret, Hugh Byrne and several others of the principal rebels. Against this body ... Ormond advanced with his corps of volunteers, and three hundred foot commanded by sir John Sherlock, lieutenant-colonel of lord Lambert's regiment. The rebels stood the exchanging of several volleys of shot, and then retired in some order till they got to the top of an hill near them, when they broke at once, and ran for their lives ..''"<ref>Carte, p.252</ref> |
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Ormonde claimed that over 500 rebels had been killed. The actual number of rebel casualties is unknown although a number of ranked individuals were reported to be lost and the rebel militia participating in this battle ceased to exist. In his biography of Ormonde (1736) [[Thomas Carte]] described this campaign in six pages, and assessed the casualties at Kilrush as: "''..twenty English slain and about forty wounded; but the rebels lost above seven hundred killed outright.''"<ref name=Carte252 >Carte, p. 252.</ref><ref name=Bag18 >Bagwell, p. 18.</ref> |
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==Aftermath== |
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The Royalists considered the battle such a great victory that the Irish government presented Ormonde with a jewel valued at £500. The rebel leaders including Mountgarret, O'Moore, and O'Byrne all survived the battle and continued to play prominent roles in the Irish Confederate Wars.<ref name=Bag18/><ref>Rawson, p. xv.</ref> |
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At the time the Royalist forces had many garrisons around Ireland, but only one field army, which, if it had been surrounded and destroyed at Kilrush, would have had enormous strategic effect across the whole island. This was the longer-term outcome of the battle. |
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==References== |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
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==Sources== |
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*{{cite book |last1=Bagwell |first1=Richard |title=Ireland Under the Stuarts and During the Interregnum: 1642–1660 – Volume 2 of Ireland Under the Stuarts and During the Interregnum |date=1909 |publisher=Longmans, Green and Company |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4p5CAAAAYAAJ&q=Kilrush&pg=PA15}} |
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*{{cite book |last1=Carte |first1=T. |title=Life of Ormonde, 3 vols., 1735–1736 |date=1851 |location=Oxford |edition=Republished in 6 vols.}} |
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*{{cite book |last1=Jackson |first1=Mason |title=The Pictorial Press, Its Origin and Progress |date=1885 |publisher=Hurst and Blackett |location=London |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y9UjAAAAMAAJ}} |
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*{{cite odnb|id=4202|title=Butler, Richard, third Viscount Mountgarret |last=Kelsey|first=Sean |year=2004}} |
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*{{cite book |last1=Rawson |first1=Thomas James |title=Statistical Survey of the County of Kildare: With Observations on the Means of Improvement; Drawn Up for the Consideration, and by Direction of the Dublin Society |date=1807 |
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|publisher=Graisberry and Campbell |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VUQTAAAAYAAJ&q=Ballyndrum&pg=PR15}} |
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==Further reading== |
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*{{cite book |last1=Warner |first1=Ferdinando |title=The history of the rebellion and civil-war in Ireland, Volume 1 |date=1768 |publisher=J. Williams |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7gkvAAAAMAAJ&q=Glenmaquin |accessdate=17 May 2020}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Kilrush, Battle of}} |
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[[Category:1642 in Ireland]] |
[[Category:1642 in Ireland]] |
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[[Category:Battles of the Irish Confederate Wars|Kilrush 1642]] |
[[Category:Battles of the Irish Confederate Wars|Kilrush 1642]] |
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[[Category:Battles involving England|Kilrush 1642]] |
[[Category:Battles involving England|Kilrush 1642]] |
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[[Category:History of County Kildare|Kilrush]] |
[[Category:History of County Kildare|Kilrush]] |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1642]] |
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[[ |
[[Category:Battles involving Ireland|Kilrush]] |
Latest revision as of 12:01, 28 August 2024
53°03′44″N 6°51′45″W / 53.062128°N 6.862631°W
Battle of Kilrush | |||||||
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Part of the Irish Confederate Wars | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Royalists | Irish Catholic rebels | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Duke of Ormonde | Viscount Mountgarret | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
3,000 infantry 500 cavalry[1] |
8,000 infantry 400 cavalry[2] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
60 | 500 |
The Battle of Kilrush was a fought during the Irish Confederate Wars. It was fought on 15 April 1642 between a Royalist army under the Earl of Ormonde and Irish Confederate troops commanded by Lord Mountgarret.
Background
[edit]On 2 April 1642, the Earl of Ormonde, serving as the commander of the Royalist army in Ireland, led his second expedition into the counties of Kildare and Laois, reinforcing Royalist garrisons and wreaking havoc upon the landowners who had joined the Irish Rebellion of 1641. After a ten-day period in which his forces traveled from Dublin to Maryborough (now Portlaoise), Ormonde returned part way back to Athy and became aware of the nearby presence of a large rebel militia attempting to intercept his force as they returned to Dublin.[3][4]
Before the battle
[edit]Although Ormonde had left Dublin with 3,000 foot and 500 horse, his reinforcement activities had significantly reduced the size of his detachment and he desired to avoid a direct confrontation with the rebels if possible. Thomas Carte said that at Kilrush Ormonde's ".. whole army did not in able fighting men exceed above two thousand four hundred men, and four hundred horse .."[5]
The rebel militia, estimated to be as large as 8,000 foot with several hundred horse, was reported to have crossed the River Barrow at Mageny-ford 10 kilometers to the south. The rebel militia was commanded by Lord Mountgarret and attended by other rebel leaders including Rory O'Moore and Hugh O'Byrne.[3][6] As it happened, Mountgarret was Ormonde's great-uncle.[7]
Given his predicament, Ormonde moved out of Athy early on the morning of 15 April traveling northeast along the high ground through the towns of Ardscull and Funtstown. The rebel militia moved concurrently in the same direction along the high ground southeast of Ormonde's army through the towns of Ballyndrum and Narraghmore. The rebels were attempting to reach the Ballyshannon pass before the Royalists. Slowed by his wagons and baggage, Ormonde decided to send his cavalry on ahead. The rebels arrived first and took positions in Kilrush and Bullhill intercepting Ormonde's force.[3][6]
Battle
[edit]Although he was outnumbered, Ormonde managed to defeat the rebels. Mountgarret's militia was poorly organized and the Royalist cavalry led the way breaking the left wing of the rebel militia with their first charge. The right wing of the rebel militia held for some time but later retreated and broke. Many of the fleeing rebels were overtaken and killed. Other rebels sought the safety of a nearby bog, where the Royalist horse could not follow.[3][6]
Carte described the rebel right wing at the crux of the fighting: "All this time the right wing of the army of the rebels stood firm, without moving. There were in it the lord Mountgarret, Hugh Byrne and several others of the principal rebels. Against this body ... Ormond advanced with his corps of volunteers, and three hundred foot commanded by sir John Sherlock, lieutenant-colonel of lord Lambert's regiment. The rebels stood the exchanging of several volleys of shot, and then retired in some order till they got to the top of an hill near them, when they broke at once, and ran for their lives .."[8]
Ormonde claimed that over 500 rebels had been killed. The actual number of rebel casualties is unknown although a number of ranked individuals were reported to be lost and the rebel militia participating in this battle ceased to exist. In his biography of Ormonde (1736) Thomas Carte described this campaign in six pages, and assessed the casualties at Kilrush as: "..twenty English slain and about forty wounded; but the rebels lost above seven hundred killed outright."[9][10]
Aftermath
[edit]The Royalists considered the battle such a great victory that the Irish government presented Ormonde with a jewel valued at £500. The rebel leaders including Mountgarret, O'Moore, and O'Byrne all survived the battle and continued to play prominent roles in the Irish Confederate Wars.[10][11]
At the time the Royalist forces had many garrisons around Ireland, but only one field army, which, if it had been surrounded and destroyed at Kilrush, would have had enormous strategic effect across the whole island. This was the longer-term outcome of the battle.
References
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Bagwell, Richard (1909). Ireland Under the Stuarts and During the Interregnum: 1642–1660 – Volume 2 of Ireland Under the Stuarts and During the Interregnum. Longmans, Green and Company.
- Carte, T. (1851). Life of Ormonde, 3 vols., 1735–1736 (Republished in 6 vols. ed.). Oxford.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Jackson, Mason (1885). The Pictorial Press, Its Origin and Progress. London: Hurst and Blackett.
- Kelsey, Sean (2004). "Butler, Richard, third Viscount Mountgarret". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4202. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Rawson, Thomas James (1807). Statistical Survey of the County of Kildare: With Observations on the Means of Improvement; Drawn Up for the Consideration, and by Direction of the Dublin Society. Graisberry and Campbell.
Further reading
[edit]- Warner, Ferdinando (1768). The history of the rebellion and civil-war in Ireland, Volume 1. J. Williams. Retrieved 17 May 2020.