Disclaimer

Bowles DNA Project

The Bowles of Canada and their Roots in Ireland and England

Ballickmoyler in the 1798 United Irish Rebellion

Home My Story My Bowles Family Bowles in Canada Bowles in Ireland Bowles in England Origin of the Name Index of Names Bowles in the US Related Links People's Lives New Additions

Search billions of records on Ancestry.com
   

The history of the United Irish Rebellion of 1798 is told on many web sites so I won't retell it here.  See 1798 Ireland for example.  I will only mention here by way of background to the events in Ballickmoyler that the word "United" hardly applied by the time the revolt actually got underway.  The United Irish movement began in 1791 when leaders of the several Catholic organizations such as the Defenders and the equivalent Protestant and Presbyterian organizations had realized that if they kept fighting each other they could not hope to prevail against the government.  What they planned as a stand by Catholics and Protestants who hoped for an independent Ireland united together against the present Government did not stand up well with the average man of either religion who had found himself on one side of the privilege issue or the other for over 200 years.  Old distrusts often developed whenever the groups came together.  On September 18, 1795 they came close when the Protestant Peep-of-Day Boys and the Defenders signed a peace agreement.  However, incidents between the factions only heightened and on Sept. 21 a planned meeting at Diamond, co. Tyrone to unite their forces broke down into the Battle of the Diamond which left 84 Defenders and an unknown number of Protestants dead.  ref.   That same evening the Orange Order was founded to unite the Protestants of the country specifically against the Catholic underground movement of rebellion against the Protestant minority in the country.  The Leadership of the United Irish further broke down with the arrest of the founder, Wolf Tone, in October 1797.  However, the gathered forces, many well armed by the previous efforts of the organization but most with makeshift weapons and hand made pikes continued to make their individual moves against the government.

Ballickmoyler's Role in the Rebellion

note: the word rebel in this text should not be seen as a negative term.  I believe the term may mean different things to people on different sides of the issue but I only mean the word rebel to mean a person who took part in the 1798 Rebellion.

On May 24, 1798 Ballickmoyler was the rallying point for Irish rebels from the area who, armed mostly with hand made pikes and a few firearms, then marched on to join their other counterparts at Carlow.  Their plan was to seize Carlow from the professional British Army troops and Irish Militia stationed there.  The government may have been expecting them though as when they approached the bridge at Graigue which crosses the Barrow River into Carlow, they found it defended by two cannons, British troops and the militia. They then returned to Ballickmoyler and finding that the majority of its Protestant inhabitants, possibly all, had fled the town they took out their frustrations by burning their houses.  The Protestant population of the town, about 10 families, had fled to the Rev'd. Edward Whitty's house, Providence Lodge, just NW of town on the road to Arles where they prepared to make a stand. The rebels attacked it but an account from the time says he and eleven Protestants succeeded in its defense.  I believe that Samuel Allen, John Tomlinson, Abraham May, Daniel Murray, Thomas Smith, Lancy Stephenson, Adam Taylor and my own ancestors Joseph and William Bowles may have been in that group as each of their houses was burned in Ballickmoyler that night.  A number of rebels were killed in the attack, one report from the time says 21 men died there, and some others were reportedly killed in action in Ballickmoyler.  A plaque commemorating the dead was erected in the square there a few years ago.

As the story of what happened at Ballickmoyler was recorded only in the official papers of the time largely as a backlash against the actions of the rebels, it's impossible to know whether events were exactly as described above.  Some people believe that the rebels were not the ones who burned the town and maintain that was done by the pursuing British Troops in revenge for the town having been used as a rallying point.  There are other documented occurrences of just such actions so it remains a possibility.  For example, the July 10, 1798 edition of The Belfast Newsletter (p. 2 column 1) reported that the Dunluce Cavalry, hearing that the town of Ballymoney had been occupied by the rebels, marched on the town.  When they arrived they found that the rebels had merely marched through the town towards Ballymena.  However, finding the town mostly deserted and taking that as a sign that the residents had joined the rebels, they burned the majority of it.  The report states that "a few houses of Loyalists unavoidably suffered from their bad neighbourhood."  The fact that the only houses which are documented as having been burned in Ballickmoyler were owned by Protestants would be explained by the fact that only those with "a proven loyalty" were allowed to make a damage claim afterwards.  One indication that it may have been the rebels who burned the Protestant houses is that the owners claims were only settled at 50% of the claimed value.  The Bill which allowed these claims provided only a 50% settlement for damages done by the rebels.  If it had been soldiers who burned the houses they would probably have received 100% of their claim.  If many Catholic houses had been burned as well that fact has not been recorded or at least discovered yet. 

Read a contemporary account of the Battle of Carlow and the role which Ballickmoyler played in the battle.  Note, this account was written by a Government supporter and shows a decided bias against the rebels but is historically interesting nevertheless.

Following the rebellion the government appointed a commission to accept claims for damages suffered by citizen's loyal to His Majesty's Government and to award them with compensation for their losses.  The list of claims which were filed for damages in Queen's county illustrate just how central a role Ballickmoyler, Providence and nearby Castletown and Coolanowle played in the rebellion.

See the full List of Persons who have suffered Losses in their Property in the Queen's county


Home | Up | The Bowles of Ballickmoyler and The Coopers of Cooper Hill Demesne | Michael Bowles of Ballickmoyler | Robert Bowles of Ballickmoyler's Family in Dublin | The Early History of Ballickmoyler | The Bowles of Ballickmoyler and the Church at Castletown | Ballickmoyler in the 1798 United Irish Rebellion | Some Notes on Trying to Trace Ann Mills | The Bowles of Ballickmoyler in Canada | The Bowles of Ballickmoyler's Family Tree

This site was last updated 06/16/07