During the late 1850s and 1860s, when the
Fenian Brotherhood was being organised, a large number of Irishmen who were soldiers in the
British Army in Ireland, were 'sworn in' as members of the Fenian movement. This also occurred at Templemore. As a result of this, in December 1885, the 11th Depot Battalion which had been stationed here for a long time, was broken up and transferred to
Newry and
Enniskillen. It was then replaced by the
59th Regiment from
Glasgow. The reason was published at the time in
The Nenagh Guardian which reported: The reason assigned for the transfer of the 11th Depot Battalion from Templemore is that it was strongly suspected that those troops were tainted with Fenianism. Templemore is the Headquarters of a Depot Battn. And the majority of those soldiers are recruits drafted from several parts of Ireland, but Tipperary-men predominate. Several of these soldiers were constantly entering public houses and associating with persons whose feeling of loyalty was not strong. The officers knew this, and the Commanding Officer – Colonel W. Irwin – spoke to the men on the subject, but his words had no effect. Those troops are now being replaced by an English Battalion. The people of the town very much regret the change. In addition it may be mentioned that the 11th Battn hunted its own pack of hounds, and when leaving, the officers offered for sale by private treaty "30 dogs, 27 horses, and a large amount of leather equipment for same". Reputedly, even when transferred to Enniskillen, the troops retained their "taint of Fenianism", because again in the Nenagh Guardian it is stated: "Two private soldiers lately removed from Templemore to Enniskillen on account of a report that some of their Battn were tampering with Fenianism, were arrested in Enniskillen for singing Fenian songs. They were placed in the cells pending orders from Dublin. When arrested one of the soldiers remarked that the whole company to which he belonged might as well be arrested as him." At a local Petty Sessions Court in Templemore, on 15 May 1865, an old woman was sentenced to one month imprisonment for stealing a key from the door of one Capt. Thomas Borrow of the 11th Battalion. This Capt Borrow was the father of the novelist
George Borrow who accompanied his father when his battalion moved to Templemore. Borrow mentions the town in some of his books, describing his wandering on horseback around the locality and up to the "
Devil's Bit" mountain. ==World War I==