Last resistance 's final defeat, 1804 On 1 July 1798 in Belfast, the birthplace of the United Irish movement, it was reported that no man appeared in the street without wearing the
red coat of the Yeomanry. As he enlisted former radicals into his
Portglenone Yeomanry, Anglican clergyman Edward Hudson claimed that "the brotherhood of affection [between Catholic and Protestant] is over". The holdouts had organised in Defender cells from whose oaths references to religion had been notably dropped. The execution in February 1800 of one of these irreconcilables,
Roddy McCorley "at
the bridge of Toome", enters into
Irish republican martyrology through a ballad written in the 1890s by
Ethna Carberry. At the time, the name that captured the public imagination was that of McCorley's captain, Thomas Archer, a militia turncoat for whom there could be no amnesty. Archer's execution in
Ballymena in March 1800 (with his body left hanging in a cage
in terrorem for several months), and of fifteen of his confederates, marked the final end of the insurgency in Antrim. In the south-east, in
County Wicklow, the United Irish General,
Joseph Holt, fought on until his negotiated surrender in Autumn 1798. It was not until December 1803, following the construction of a military road into the
Wicklow Mountains and the failure of
Emmet's rising in Dublin, that the last organised rebel forces under Captain
Michael Dwyer capitulated. Small pockets of rebel resistance had also survived within Wexford and the last rebel group under
James Corcoran was not vanquished until his death in February 1804. In the west, after
Battles of Ballinamuck and
Killala, remnants of the "Republic of
Connacht" had held out for some months in the hills of
Erris and
Tyrawley in
County Mayo and in
Connemara in
County Galway Fate of the United Irish and rebel leadership Taken prisoner, those who had commanded rebels in the field faced court martial and execution. This was the fate of
Bagenal Harvey, Fr.
Philip Roche, and five others hanged on
Wexford Bridge;
John Esmonde hanged in
Sallins with his coat reversed to indicate that he was a Yeomanry deserter;
Watty Graham whose head was paraded through
Maghera;
Henry Joy McCracken hanged before the Market House in Belfast; Fr
John Murphy, stripped, flogged, hanged, decapitated, his corpse burnt in a barrel of tar and his
head impaled on a spike in
Tullow; The
Sheares brothers had been
hanged, drawn and quartered in Dublin in July. Once confident that the rebellion had been contained, Cornwallis, and his
Chief Secretary,
Lord Castlereagh, resisted pressure from the Irish Parliament to proceed against the other directory leaders held as state prisoners.
Michael Dwyer negotiated his surrender in December 1803 on terms that permitted him, and all his party, to be transported to
New South Wales, Australia, as unsentenced exiles. Reprieved by
Cornwallis, in 1799
John Moore, Humbert's President of Connacht, was also to have been transported, but he died in custody.
Rebel ministers and priests |left In Ulster, some twenty Presbyterian ministers and probationers were implicated in the insurrectionary movement. Two were executed. Others were allowed American exile, including
William Steele Dickson Reacting to what he identified as "the democratic party in the Synod of Ulster|[Presbyterian] synod, most of whom, if not engaged in the Rebellion, were deeply infected with its principles", Castlereagh moved to condition the size and payment to ministers of the synod's Crown grant (
regium donum) upon professions and proofs of loyalty. In the spirit of reaction, between 1798 and 1800 at least 69 Catholic chapels were destroyed or damaged, mostly in south Leinster. were rejected by their bishop, James Caufield of
Ferns, as "the very faeces of the church", Two were killed, and four, including Roche and Murphy, were executed. Their bishop,
Dominic Bellew of Killala had served as president of the "committee of public safety" in
Ballina but he satisfied
Dublin Castle that his sole purpose had been to prevent rebel outrages. that additional measures were thought necessary to secure the loyalty of the Catholic clergy. The government that had since 1795 endowed the
Catholic seminary at Maynooth, now proposed that, in return for future episcopal appointments in Ireland being subject to Crown approval, that its graduates enjoy their own regium donum—that, like Presbyterian ministers, priests receive a government stipend. But this too proved too much for the king, and Cornwallis was obliged to withdraw the offer.
The Union In August 1800, the Irish Parliament (induced by extensive favours and emoluments) agreed to abolish itself. was transferred to Westminster, now styled as the
Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. In seeking to rally support for a renewal of the rebellion in 1803, Robert Emmet argued that if Ireland had cause in 1798, it had only been compounded by subjecting Ireland to "a foreign parliament" in which "seven-eighths of the population have no right to send a member of their body to represent them" and in which the "other eighth part" are "the tools and taskmasters, acting for the cruel English government and their
Irish Ascendancy--a monster still worse, if possible than foreign tyranny". Yet at the time, there was no popular protest. This may have reflected the demoralisation that followed the rebellion's crushing defeat, but for the Irish Parliament there was little nostalgia. From exile in
Hamburg,
Archibald Hamilton Rowan predicted that, in depriving the
Anglo-Irish lords of their "corrupt assembly", the union would itself see "the wreck of the old Ascendancy". In opposing the union, this had been the express fear of the Speaker of the
Irish House of Commons,
John Foster. Without promised firearms,
Michael Dwyer refused to lead his men down from the Wicklow Mountains. In Ulster, despite being represented by the original Society's two most successful organisers in the north,
Thomas Russell and
James Hope, the republic proclaimed by Emmet rallied neither former United men nor Defenders. Many of those arrested or taken prisoner in '98 were transported to penal colonies of
New South Wales. In March 1804, when news reached them of Emmet's rising,
several hundred convicts mutinied in the hope of capturing ships for a return to Ireland. They were routed in an encounter loyalists celebrated as the
Second Battle of Vinegar Hill. == Contested commemoration ==