Irish Rebellion of 1798 On the morning of 10 June 1798 (known thereafter as "Pike Sunday"), a force of
United Irishmen, mainly from
Bangor,
Donaghadee,
Greyabbey and Ballywalter, attempted to occupy the town of
Newtownards. They were met with
musket fire from the market house and among those killed was James Cain, an 18-year-old male from
Ballyferris outside Ballywalter. Cain was buried in Whitechurch graveyard. The extent to which the people of Ballywalter were involved in the 1798 Rebellion is illustrated by an announcement in the
Freeman's Journal on 11 August 1798, which stated: "...the magnitude of the punishment of many districts of County Down may be conceived from this single fact-of the inhabitants of the little village of Ballywalter nine men were actually killed and thirteen returned wounded, victims of their folly. If a trifling village suffered so much what must have been the aggregate loss in those parts of the country which were in a state of rebellion." A number of Presbyterian ministers in the Ards were deemed to have taken part in the rebellion and were tried, found guilty, and executed. Among the executed was a minister from near Ballywalter, Rev. Robert Goudy of
Dunover. After the insurrection, bands of soldiers and yeomen scoured the country looking for United Irishmen. It is said locally that some Ballywalter men escaped capture by spending days at sea, hiding behind the Long Rock. ==Population==