Dunlavin Green executions

Dunlavin Green executions
Location Dunlavin, County Wicklow, Ireland
Date 26 May 1798
Attack type
Firing squad
Deaths 36
Non-fatal injuries
3
Perpetrator Kingdom of Great Britain British Army

The Dunlavin Green executions refers to the summary execution of 36 suspected rebel prisoners and Theobald Wolfe Tone in County Wicklow by the British military shortly after the outbreak of the rebellion of 1798. There are several accounts of the events, recorded at differing times and differing in detail.

Background

The British government had begun raising yeomanry forces from the local Irish population in 1796. The force, composed of both Catholics and Protestants, was raised to help defend against a possible French invasion of Ireland and to aid in the policing of the country. The United Irishmen had long threatened a rebellion in Ireland, which finally occurred in late May 1798.[1] Major uprisings of the rebellion only occurred in Ulster, Wicklow and Wexford, a county in the province of Leinster.[2] For several months prior to May 1798, Wicklow and many other areas of the country had been subject to martial law which had been imposed in an effort to prevent the long threatened rebellion.[3]

The campaign extended against the military itself as some corps of yeomen and militia, especially those with Catholic members, were suspected as United Irish infiltrators who had joined to get training and arms. Several days after the outbreak of the rebellion, the yeomanry and militia at Dunlavin were called out on parade and informed by their commanding officer that he had information on the identities of those in the corps who were affiliated with the United Irishmen among them. The British did not actually have such information, but twenty-eight fell for their bluff and came forward in hopes of receiving clemency.[3] Those who came forward were immediately arrested and imprisoned while several were subjected to flogging in an effort to extract information about the rebels plans and organization.[4][5][6] Those who were outed as affiliates of the United Irishmen were imprisoned in the Market House of Dunlavin, while the British officers decided what to do with them.[3]

Dunlavin Market House, where the victims were held before being executed

Executions

The following day, Captain William Ryves of Rathsallagh yeoman had his horse shot from under him by rebels while on patrol. Ryves rode to Dunlavin the next day and brought eight suspected rebels imprisoned by his corps with him. There he met with Captain Saunders of the Dunlavin yeomanry.[3] It was decided that their prisoners, a total of 36 men, should be put to death. On 26 May, Market Day, the 36 were taken to the green, lined up and shot in front of the townspeople, including, in some cases, their own families.[3] The firing squad returned to the Market House where others were flogged or hanged. Before the bodies of the shot men were removed, soldiers' wives looted them of valuables, one wounded man protested but he was finished off by a soldier. The bodies were either removed for burial by their families or interred in a common grave ("large pit") at Tournant cemetery. One man survived, despite grievous wounds, and lived to "an advanced age". Two more men, either hanging or about to be, were saved by the intervention of a "respectable Protestant" and escaped.[3]

One loyalist account, details the events leading up to the execution differently.[7] According to this account, Captain Ryves, a yeomanry commander at Dunlavin received word that a large number of rebels were set to attack Dunlavin and he observed that many Protestant houses had been set on fire in the surrounding countryside. Under the circumstances, he expected that the rebels' intention was a pogrom of Protestants and loyalists in the town and its environs. A foray by the troops into the countryside failed and the garrison's officers were aware that they were outnumbered by the prisoners held in the Market House.[7]

Analysis

The executions appear to have been motivated by simple revenge and intimidation, rather than fear of the prisoners and the ongoing rebellion. Though the public exhibition may have been designed to intimidate and discourage rebels in the immediate area from taking to the field, news of the executions, as well as those at Carnew spread rapidly and played a part in the rapid mobilization of rebels in north County Wexford over the next few days.[3]

Commemoration

The story of Dunlavin Green was quickly commemorated in the famous ballad "Dunlavin Green", which tells the story from the view of a sympathetic local eyewitness.[3] In 1998, a commemorative stone was installed in St Nicholas of Myra Roman Catholic church, adjacent to the green.

See also


References

  1. Bartlett, Thomas; Jeffery, Keith (1997). A Military History of Ireland. Cambridge University Press. p. 278. ISBN 0521629896.
  2. "Irish Rebellion (1798)". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Fitzpatrick, William John (1 January 1866). 'The sham squire' and the informers of 1798; with a view of their contemporaries. To which are added jottings about Ireland seventy years ago.
  4. Northern Ireland – A Short History, BBC.co.uk; accessed 8 December 2015.
  5. Dunlavin Green details, numachi.com; accessed 8 December 2015.
  6. Dunlavin Green details, Kildare.ie; accessed 8 December 2015.
  7. 1 2 Musgrave, Richard (1802). Memoirs of the Different Rebellions in Ireland from the Arrival of the English, p. 298. Retrieved 5 September 2008.

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