Following the rebellion, Warwick's name (mistakenly prefixed with
reverend by authorities) appeared among the most wanted of the rebels, and a month after the end of the rebellion he was captured. On 15 August 1798, Warwick was brought before a
court-martial, and despite weak and contradictory evidence, was convicted of ‘acting as a traitor and rebel and endeavouring to excite treason and rebellion in Ireland’. Warwick's death sentence was not carried out immediately, with him being imprisoned instead in Newtownards Gaol for 2 months, raising expectations that he may be given a reprieve. His execution in front of his congregation was to stand as a warning against further rebellion in the
Ards peninsula. Warwick was one of seven licentiates to be found guilty of treason, and one of two probationers to receive
capital punishment. He is buried in
Movilla cemetery in Newtownards. Warwick is sometimes erroneously referred to as William or James Warwick due to errors in historical publications or accounts. Warwick's execution also appeared in
Florence Wilson’s much-recited poem
‘The Man from God Knows Where’. == References ==