for Dan Breen. The ambush would later be seen as the beginning of the
Irish War of Independence. The British government declared South Tipperary a Special Military Area under the
Defence of the Realm Act two days later. There was strong condemnation from the Catholic Church in Ireland. The parish priest of Tipperary Town called the dead officers "martyrs to duty". A meeting of the Executive of the Irish Volunteers took place shortly thereafter. On 31 January,
An t-Óglach (the official publication of the Irish Volunteers) stated that the formation of Dáil Éireann "justifies Irish Volunteers in treating the armed forces of the enemy – whether soldiers or policemen – exactly as a National Army would treat the members of an invading army". In February 1919 at a Brigade meeting in Nodstown Tipperary, Brigade officers drafted a proclamation (signed by Seamus Robinson as O/C) ordering all British military and police forces out of South Tipperary and, if they stayed they would be held to have "forfeited their lives". GHQ refused to sanction the proclamation and demanded it not be publicly displayed. Despite this it was still posted in several places in Tipperary.
Commemoration A monument was erected at the site of the ambush, and each year, a ceremony of remembrance is held there. ==See also==