Evidence of pre-historic settlement is found in
Beenalaght (13.6km/8.5 miles south-west of Mallow), where an
alignment of six
standing stones lie on a hill to the west of the Mallow-
Coachford Road. (grid ref: 485 873, Latitude: 52.035818N Longitude: 8.751181W). The first
Mallow Castle was built in 1185 on the orders of King John.
Williamite War in Ireland (1690) On 16 September 1690, shortly after the failed
Siege of Limerick but before the
Siege of Cork, Colonel Moritz Melchior von Donop, commanding of the
second regiment of Danish cavalry, reconnoitred Mallow and destroyed the bridge. He reported encountering a group of Jacobite
raparees in Mallow, perhaps 3000 strong. Following his return Major General
Ernst von Tettau and Major General
Scravenmore devised a
ruse whereby a small force of 100 cavalry and 50 dragoons was detached from the overall force of 1200 Horse, 300 Dragoons, and 2 Companies of Danish Foot. These acted as bait and successfully lured out the Jacobites commanded by
Patrick Sarsfield, 1st Earl of Lucan and routing them, with 300 raparees dead. Some accounts claim that only Sarsfield and five companions escaped the battle.
Irish War of Independence During the
Irish War of Independence, the town served as the headquarters of the North Cork Militia (also known as North Cork Rifles), a unit in the
Irish Republican Army (IRA). On 27 September 1920, IRA commanders
Ernie O'Malley and
Liam Lynch led the Cork No. 2 Brigade in an attack against the military barracks in Mallow, which was garrisoned by elements of the
17th Lancers. The successful attack saw the IRA capture large quantities of firearms and ammunition, partially burning the barracks in the process. A Sergeant based in the barracks was killed in the attack. In reprisal, angered soldiers from
Buttevant and
Fermoy went on a rampage in Mallow, burning several main street premises, including
Mallow Town Hall and the local
creamery, on the next day. In February 1921, the IRA killed the wife of RIC Captain W. H. King during a botched assassination attempt on her husband near the
Mallow railway station. In retaliation, a detachment of the
Black and Tans briefly occupied the station, arresting and killing three of its occupants- Patrick Devitt, Daniel Mullane and Denis Bennett, all of whom were railway workers. The killings prompted an
industrial action by the National Railworkers Union in Britain and Ireland.
Captain Rubén Ocaña landing Mallow Racecourse, now known as Cork Racecourse, became an emergency airfield on 18 April 1983, when a Mexican
Gulfstream II business jet piloted by Captain Rubén Ocaña made a precautionary landing. A temporary
tarmacadam runway of 910 m (3,000 ft) in length which was paid for by the plane's insurers was laid to enable the aircraft to leave five weeks later. In the meantime, Captain Ocaña became a local celebrity. On 23 May 1983 just before the plane departed, the captain said his farewell to the people of Ireland in the Irish language. The F3A World Model Aircraft Aerobatic Championship was held there in 2001. The incident formed the basis of the 2010 film ''''. Following Ocaña's death in 2009, his family travelled to Mallow in 2023 to scatter his ashes at the racecourse during "OcanaFest", a local event held in his honour. ==Geography==