The events of March 1761, however, prompted a more determined response, and a considerable military force under the
Marquess of Drogheda was sent to
Munster to crush the Whiteboys. On 2 April 1761, a force of 50 militiamen and 40 soldiers set out for
Tallow, County Waterford, "where they took (mostly in their beds) eleven
Levellers, against whom Information on Oath was given". Other raids took 17 Whiteboys west of
Bruff, in
County Limerick and by mid-April at least 150 suspected Whiteboys had been arrested. Clogheen in
County Tipperary bore the initial brunt of this assault as the local parish priest, Fr.
Nicholas Sheehy, had earlier spoken out against
tithes and collected funds for the defence of parishioners charged with rioting. An unknown number of "insurgents" were reported killed in the "pacification exercise" and Fr. Sheehy was unsuccessfully indicted for
sedition several times before eventually being found guilty of a charge of accessory to murder, and hanged in
Clonmel in March 1766. In the cities, suspected Whiteboy sympathizers were arrested and in
Cork, citizens formed an association of about 2,000 strong which offered rewards of £300 for the capture of the chief Whiteboy and £50 for the first five sub-chiefs arrested and often accompanied the military on their rampages. The leading Catholics in Cork also offered similar rewards of £200 and £40 respectively. However,
Lord Halifax was soon expressing concern that the repression was going too far: "so many People are directly or indirectly concerned in these illegal Practices and so many have been seized on Information or Suspicion, that in several Places, the Majority of the Inhabitants have been struck with the utmost Consternation, and have fled to the Mountains, insomuch that at this Season, from the almost general Flight of the labouring Hands, a Famine is, not without Reason, apprehended." Similarly, the
Dublin Journal reported at the same time that the south-east part of
Tipperary "is almost waste, and the Houses of many locked up, or inhabited by Women and old Men only; such has been the Terror the Approach of the Light Dragoons has thrown them into." File:MADDEN(1888) p103 LIBERLIP, THE PRIEST KILLER.jpg|An illustration of Jedediah Limberlip firing on a fleeing Father Duane File:MADDEN(1888) p130 LORDCHAMPTON'S BLOODHOUNDS.jpg|
Lord Carhampton's
Bloodhound Soldiers File:MADDEN(1888) p111 PEEP-OF-DAY BOYS.jpg|
Peep-of-Day Boys In the aftermath of the
Irish Rebellion of 1798, agrarian agitation swept Munster. In 1822 a group of about fifty attacked the house of a Mr. Bolster near Athlacca, where they damaged the house, broke the windows, and took his musket.
Whiteboy Acts Acts passed by the
Parliament of Ireland (to 1800) and Parliament of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (from 1801) to empower the authorities to combat Whiteboyism were commonly called "Whiteboy Acts". ==In popular culture==