By the middle of July 1763, the government of Ireland, worried by the Hearts of Oak's progress, dispatched troops to the affected counties. Whilst in some areas their presence was enough to suppress the movement, active operations were required to end demonstrations and marches elsewhere. This led to a few bloody confrontations which saw several Oakboys killed and many others arrested. A general pardon was issued at the start of August 1763 for all Hearts of Oak who would return to their homes, and by the end of August, the movement had been subdued. This pardon however excluded those who had already been arrested or previously indicted, some of whom were considered to require "exemplary" punishment. The trials descended into farce, with only one defendant found guilty, possibly because the charges laid were of treason, bearing the death penalty, which
petty juries disliked; it is suggested that jurors were sympathetic to the movement. The sole Oakboy found guilty had been accused of treating a clergyman "very ill". Despite some small degree of sectarianism in rhetoric, the movement comprised aggrieved
Anglicans,
Presbyterians, and
Roman Catholics. Despite that, the Church of Ireland, to which the vast majority of gentlemen belonged, blamed the Presbyterians. The local Presbyterian churches responded with notices calling on their members to remember their loyalty and obedience to peace and demanding to be absolved of blame. ==See also==