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Churchtown's
History
The
Vale Star, August 1995 (by Jim McCarthy)
A
Journey Through Historic North Cork
The
Burning of Churchtown
On
the night of January 31st 1822 the Whiteboys attacked
the Police Barracks in the village of Churchtown in North
Cork. They set fire to the Barracks and a number of houses
adjoining it (which were all thatched in those days).
During the attack a number of Policemen were killed and
whenever the story is told, even to this day it is referred
to as the 'Burning of Churchtown'
The
Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier of Feburary
2nd 1822 carried the following report.
Daring
And Desperate Attack On The Police At Churchtown, In This
County
It
is with considerable pain we are obliged to report some
serious troubles from the northern part of our county.
At an advanced hour this day we received the following
letter from the postmaster in Doneraile, detailing a desperate
attack on the police, stationed in Churchtown, a village
in the neighbourhood of Doneraile, in which it seems several
lives were lost.
Letter
To The Editor Of The Southern Reporter
Doneraile
Feburary
1st,1822
Dear
Sir,
I
am sorry to acquaint you of one of the greatest outrages
that has occured since the commencement of the disturbances
in this part of the county. Last night a large party of
the Whiteboys attacked the Barracks occupied by the police
at Churchtown. Their first act was to shoot the sentry
and they then set fire to the building which was thatched.
The action started when the Police started firing which
they continued while their ammunition lasted, after about
an hours fighting the Whiteboys went off taking all the
ammunition and arms the Police had. They killed four of
the Policemen and severely wounded the Chief Constable.
They took a large amount of ammunition, rifles and pistols,
with some swords and bayonets. They took away their wounded
and by mistake they took one of the Police who they left
dead on the road near Annagh. I have just been told by
a gentleman that has seen the scene of action, that it
was shocking to see. The dead bodies were there in an
awful lacerated state, all cuts and bruises and the horses
all laying dead and the pigs learing at them. The street
of the village was covered in blood. The bodies were conveyed
to Buttevant this evening by the 40th regiment. I am sorry
to give you such a shocking account but you may rely on
the truth of it.
I
am, Dear Sir, Yours very truly
Thomas
Haycroft
More
Reports From The Same Newspaper
On
February 2nd 1822 the following report appeared in the
Southern Reporter and Commercial Courier.
On
the night of Monday some misguided wretches in the neighbourhood
of Kanturk visited Pallace, a farm belonging to Mr Leahy's
tenent, who is a most industrious and well contucted young
man by the name of Linehan, having taken the farm in question.
It would appear by the condition in which the cattle were
found next morning, some cemical preparation was made
use of destroying the animals eyes.
On
Sunday morning some Police who had been stationed at the
residence of a Mr Noonan, near Milford, 6 miles west of
Charleville, alarmed by the fate of the Police at Churchtown,
removed from that place to Headquarters.
As
they had anticipated a large number of Whiteboys surrounded
the house about 11 o'clock that night. They announced
thier approach by blowing bugles and firing shots in the
air. In revenge for their disappointment they burned the
fine two storied house.
One
of the Police who escaped from the Barracks at Churchtown
was found dead next day in the corner of a field near
the Windmill Cross. He died from the wounds he received
during the attack on the Barracks. His name was Ben Lapp
and he was a native of Newry, Co. Down.
Arrests
Following The Churchtown Attack (1822)
On
Monday, Feburary 4th 1822, two men were arrested by the
Mallow Yeomanry, on suspicion of being involved in the
attack on Churchtown Police Barracks. Next day 5 more
were arrested in the vicinity of Buttevant. At that time
there were arrests, trials and executions from at least
5 different locations in the North Cork. Unfortunately
part of the trial of the Churchtown prisoners is missing
from the old paper which I have from the troubled period.
The
Trial Of The Churchtown Prisoners
Before
the court on trial for the murder of several Policemen
and the wounding of others and the burning of the Police
Barracks at Churchtown and also the burning of several
houses in the village were John Mahony, Corneilus Relihan,
John Relihan, Denis Moynihan and Daniel Bresnihan who
gave his name as Breen. Brenihan was a native of Ardglass
in the Parish of Newtownshandrum. The trials of the prisoners
from the different parts of North Cork lasted for six
days. The trial of the Churchtown prisoners was held on
the 6th day. The judge was Baron McClelland and the jury
were as follows:- Thomas Gibbings, William Roberts, John
Nicholas Wrixon, Edward O'Donoghue, William Brazier Creagh,
John Warren, Thomas James Wise, J.G. Spiers, Denis O'Callaghan,
N.G. Seymour. Thomas Leahy, Thomas Ware.
The
Attorney General stated to the court and jury that he
did not think it was necessary to trouble them with any
obversations on the case now before them which would be
sufficiently explained by the evidence.
Survivors
Evidence
Darby
Burke swore that he was a member of the Police Force.
He said he remembered well the night of January 31st 1822.
He was stationed in Churchtown with a party of 16 Policemen.
The Chief Constable of the Police was a man named William
Lamsden. On that night their Barracks was attacked by
a large party of Whiteboys. Policeman Darby Burke stated
he heard the Sergeant cry out 'the Whiteboys are coming'.
And after a few minutes the firing began. Darby Burke
said he could not remember which side fired the first
shot as he was upstairs at the time. After a short time
the Barracks and the stables were on fire and five horses
and all the appointments were consumed. The firing continued
for more than half an hour and then the Whiteboys called
on us to surrender and hand over our arms and they would
do us no harm. The Sergeant cried out if we do you will
kill us but the Whiteboys leadersaid,'We will not'. As
the Police surrendered they were attacked and killed by
the Whiteboys. Some of the Police were killed on the street
and amoung them was Constable Hugh Cologan whose body
I saw next. The Barracks and the stables with some houses
nearby were burned and 7 Policemen who escaped the violent
death were severely wounded.
The
witness Constable Darby Burke was not cross examined and
desired to stay in Court.
Constable
William Lumsden Sworn
William
Lumsden sworn that he was Chief Constable of Police. He
stated that he remembered January 31st 1822 when he was
on duty at Churchtown Barracks. He stated that he heard
the accurate account of the transactions given by the
last witness.
Mr
Florence McCarthy, on behalf of the prisoners applied
to the bench, in order that witnesses should not remain
in court. Baron McClelland answered, that where the case
was likely to depend on the identity of the prisoners,
it must be immaterial, whether the witnesses were within
hearing the evidence.
Mr
McCarthy assented and the trial continued.
Witnesses
Examination Continues
The
attack was made about 10 o'clock that night where 5 Policemen
were killed and 7 injured beside the witness, William
Lumsden. The Barracks and four houses in the village were
burned down and the fire continued until next morning.
Mrs
Elizabeth Blackwell Is Called
Elizabeth
Blackwell, wife of William Blackwell, one of the Police
Constables, she swore that she was with them at Churchtown
Barracks on the night of January 31st 1822. She swore
she did not leave the Barracks until all the arms were
handed up to the Whiteboys. She then endeavoured to get
out through them and tried to make her way to a house
of a family named Crowley. She was then stopped by a man
with a long pole with a spear attached to the top of it.
She was then obliged to stand for an hour in the middle
of the Whiteboys while they shot and slaughtered the Policemen.
They
then began to scatter and clear away, and Mrs Blackwell
then told the court how she made her escape and after
some difficulty made her way to Mrs Croft's Lodge.
Part
2
Last
week I began telling the story of the attack on the Police
Barracks in the village of Churchtown in North Cork, on
the night of January 31st 1822
I
will now continue with the Trial of the Prisoners who
were arrested for the outrage which is referred to down
to the present day as the Burning of Churchtown.
Continuing
Mrs Elizabeth Blackwell's Story
Last
week we came to that part of the Trial where Mrs Elizabeth
Blackwell, wife of one of the Police, told how she escaped
to Mrs Croft's Lodge which stood inside the main entrance
to Churchtown house.
Mrs
Blackwell told the Court, that she made her way up the
street she was stopped by another member of the gang.
He asked her if she could bless herself, shake holy water
or speak Irish. She replied that she could do neither.
Mrs Blackwell said it was a clear bright moonlit night
and with the glare from the blazing houses it was as bright
as day.
She
could clearly recognise all the faces that came near her.
Mrs Blackwell identified Corneilus Relihan, and then pointed
out the other prisoners, of whom she said she had no doubt,
even though she was repeatedly causioned by the Attorney
General. She said she had no previous acquaintances with
them and she never knew thier names until after the arrests
when she again saw them at the Headquarters in Buttevant.She
said her husband had not the same opportunity of seeing
them as she did as he escaped over a wall. She again swore
on oath that the five men she pointed out were among the
Whiteboys she saw.
Mrs
Blackwell underwent a long cross examination, principally
in respect of the time when she first said she would know
the prisoners who were among the Whiteboys. She was consistent
in all her answers and did not vary in any respect from
her direct testimony.
The
Evidence Of Sergeant Patrick Reardon
Patrick
Reardon, Sergeant of Police described the manner in which
four of the prisoners were taken with two other Policemen
and himself and a party of 40th regiment from Buttevant
Barracks on Sunday, Feburary 3rd 1822, when they received
a report of an assemblage of Whiteboys in the vicinity
of the town of Buttevant. Major Carter, from Buttevant
Barracks corroborated the evidence of Sergeant Reardon,
and explained some circumstances respecting the delay
of Mrs Blackwell's lodging information.
Barrington,
whose family lived at Glenstal Castle, near Murroe, in
Co. Limerick. Today Glenstal Castle is the famous Benedictine
Abbey.
Matthew
Barrington told the Court at the Trial of the Churchtown
prisoners, that in some consequence of some circumstances,
which came to light in arranging this trial he thought
it his duty to send Mrs Blackwell back to jail to look
at the prisoners again and he requested Mr William White,
to accompany her there.
Mr
William P White, Called
Mr
White deposed to what happened at the prison on going
there with Mrs Blackwell. Mr White asked the gaoler to
put Bresnihan(Alias Breen) with several other prisoners,
which was done, to the number of 8 or 9 from whom Mrs
Blackwell selected a man. He desired her to be very cautious
and particular, and after looking at him again and again
for some time she said, she was certain, this man was
Breen. as I stated earlier, this man whos name was Bresnihan,
but also used the name Breen, came from Ardglass, in the
Parish of Newtownshandrum.
Constable
Jeremiah Fitzgerald, A Doneraile Policeman
Constable
Jeremiah Fitzgerald, said he was a guard over Bresnihan(orBreen)
at the Barracks in Doneraile and seeing marks of blood
on him, asked him how he got it. He appeared very agitated
and asker (the witness) for God sake not to say any more
about it. He then confessed that he had been in the attack
at Mr Crone's house and also in the attack on Mr Hill's
house at Graig, near Clogher.
This
was on the night he was taken and he made the same statement
next day before Mr Hill.
The
Defence William Condon is called
William
Condon for the defence said he remembered the night the
Police were attacked in Churchtown. He said he knew John
and Corneilus Relihan, in whose house he slept that night,
where he went to carry potatoes for them next day to the
market in Mallow. Some time after they had gone to bed
they were routed by a man who shouted 'Churchtown is on
fire'. The family ran out and saw the sky light up and
heard shots coming from the direction of the village which
lay less than two miles away. While they were watching
the fire a man by the name of Mahony came along and told
them that he had been warned by a Mr Quinlan that the
army would comb the countryside.They returned to bed and
stayed there until morning.The witness was then asked
solemnly on oath, whether the two prisoners, the Relihans,
were at the attack, and he swore positively they were
not. The prisoners mother and the wife of the witness,
Condon, were sisters.
The
witness underwent a long cross examination, to account
his being at Relihan's house that night. He lived about
seven miles from their house which was less than two miles
from Churchtown.He came there to carry potatoes for them
to market. They had sent for him 7 or 8 days before. The
prisoners brother, Daniel Relihan mowed hay for the witness
and he promised to pay him by giving the horse anf butt
and his own labour to draw the potatoes. Here he was again
questioned as to why, when Daniel did the work, was he
paying John and Corneilus. He answered 'I would rather
pay them'. He swore he did not know the prisoners were
taken until the following Friday. He said it was the prisoners
who sent for him asthey knew they could prove they were
not in Churchtown on the night of the attack on the Police.
Witness
swore he had a wife and three boys of the age 18,17 and
12 and they all worked for Mr Shinnors of Doneraile, where
he himself was a dairyman. Witness was asked why he did
not send one of the boys to carry the potatoes, he answered,
they were bound to work.
William
Mahony, Called
William
Mahony , was next examined . He swore he recalled the
night of the attack of the Police. He was at home that
night. The Relihans lived about 2 miles from him. Witness
was routed out of bed by someone shouting that Churchtown
was on fire and that the whole countryside was about to
be burned by the Army. He called up his neighbour, a man
named O'Keeffe and asked him to go and warn the Relihans
and also the witness's brother.
John
O'Keeffe, Sworn
John
O'Keeffe swore he remembered the night of the attack on
Churchtown Barracks. He went to the home of the Relihans
and on that night called them up. He told them that Churchtown
was on fire and that the military were going to burn the
whole countryside. He said he lived within half a mile
of the Relihans and it was Bill Mahony who called him.
The neighbours were all roused up, some were on the ditches
and others were standing at their doors. They were all
peacefully in bed until called out.
In
our story so far on the attack on the Police Barracks
at Churchtown, on the night of January 31st 1822, we came
to the evidence for the Defence of the prisoners. We heard
the evidence of John O'Keeffe and we now come to the evidence
of Thomas Haynes who was described as a Sub Constable
of the Police. Haynes did not live in the barracks or
the village. We are told he lived near Biddystree. When
called he swore he remembered the night of the attack
on the Police.
When
he heard of the attack he ran out of his house in fear
of his life, but returned later for his wife and was about
to bring her to Buttevant when he met O'Keeffe in a great
state of alarm. O'Keeffe desired him to stay at his house,
which he did, for a long time. When he decided to go home,
O'Keeffe went along part of the way with him.
EDWARD
WRIXON, OF WALSHESTOWN CALLED
Edward
Wrixon, Esq., told the Court how he had known the Relihans
for 5 or 6 years. They worked for him over a long period
but left him in the year 1818. While he had known them
they conducted themselves properly, and he never heard
they were guilty of anything outside the law. At the end
of Mr Wrixon's evidence, the defence of the Relihans closed.
PATRICK
SHEEHAN CALLED
Patrick
Sheehan was called on the part of John Mahony, who was
his brother in law. He swore that on the night of the
attack he and the prisoner slept together at his (the
witnesses house) which is near Churchtown. Under cross
examination he swore the prisoner had no house and lived
here and there earning a livelyhood. The witness said
he did not know where the prisoner slept the night before
or after the attack, or any other night.
JAMES
BROWNE, CALLED ON BEHALF OF DENIS MOYNIHAN
James
Browne told the Court that he lived not far from the scene
of the attack on the eastern side of the village of Churchtown.
He swore he remembered the night of the attack on the
Barracks, on which night, Moynihan, who was a tailor,
slept in his house, having been employed by him to make
clothes for the children. The tailor worked in his house
for two and a half days and did not leave the house the
next day until 11.30p.m. They went to bed around 9 o'
clock on the night of the attack. The prisoner slept in
a bed with two of James Browne's children. The following
Friday when Browne heard Moynihan was arrested, he said
to a neighbour, that cannot be true as he slept in my
house on the night of the attack.
JOHN
MOYNIHAN CALLED, ON BEHALF OF THE SAME PRISONER
John
Moynihan said he knew the prisoner (Moynihan) for more
than 20 years and never heard anything against his character.
He said that he (himself) was a publican and a teacher
and he did not see the prisoner for six months before.
DAVID
ROCHE ON BEHALF OF DANIEL BRESNIHAN ALIAS BREEN
David
Roche said he remembered the night of the attack on the
Police Barracks at Churchtown. That night he slept at
the house of the prisoner, whose wife was his witness
(the witnesses) daughter and had the cholic. He was asked
when he came to tell this story that he said on Thursday
last. Then the Solicitor General rose, and drew the attention
of the Court to the circumstance that it was only yesterday
this prisoner was charged with having been concerned in
the attack on the Churchtown Police Barracks. The witness
was then sent off the table, and the Judge proceeded to
charge the Jury, who retired, and then returned with a
verdict of guilty, against Cornelius Relihan, John Mahony
and Daniel Bresnihan, alias Breen and acquitted John Relihan
and Denis Moynihan.
On
that same day more than 30 persons came up for sentence
from different parts of County Cork. With the Churchtown
prisoners were two men who were found in arms near Charleville,
they were Patrick Walsh and William McDonnell. Before
the Judge passed sentence on the prisoners, night had
fallen and the Court had to be accommodated with candles.
The Judge addressed the prisoners and told them they had
been found guilty of a crime of a very heinous nature
under the Whiteboy Act, that of Assembling in Arms to
the Terror of the Kings Peaceable Subjects.
The
Judge said that at that moment he was not going to say
much, as he would have the occasion by and by when he
would come to pronounce the sentence of death.
I
must here mention that the two Charleville men were among
the more fortunate ones. Patrick Walsh and William McDonnell
escaped the death sentence and instead they were sent
to prison for one year after being twice publicly whipped.
THE
SENTENCE ON THE WHITEBOY PRISONERS
The
usual form was gone through by the clerk of the Crown,
informing then that tey had been found guilty by a jury
of their own county, and anything to say why sentence
of death should not be passed against them, to which there
was no answer.
The
Judge said it was his painful duty to pass that sentence
upon them which inevitably must follow the crimes of which
they had been found guilty. It was, said the Judge, a
frightful situation to be placed in, to have to pass sentence
on those unfortunate men. They had been found guilty of
a crime of a most revolting nature, and all tending to
subvert the tranquility of the countryside, and to place
the lives and the properties of all peaceful residents
in danger.
The
Judge said that where ever a shadow of a doubt existed
he always leaned to the side of mercy. He ordered that
those recommended to mercy should be immediately tended
to.
THE
EXECUTION OF THE CHURCHTOWN PRISONERS
The
three prisoners sentenxced to death for the attack on
the Police Barracks at Churchtown and the murder of Constable
Hugh Collogan, and other Policemen, were, Cornelius Relihan,
John Mahony and Daniel Bresnihan, alias Breen. They were
sentenced to be hanged at the most convenient spot nearest
the scene of the crime. On Sunday morning they were conveyed
from the County Jail, in Cork City, under the care of
the High Sherriff of the county, and a strong military
escort, on their way to Churchtown.
They
reached Mallow that evening where they spent the night.
On Monday morning they left Mallow early on the final
stage of their journey to Churchtown. The prisoners were
strongly guarded and accompanied by Rev. Fr. John Kiely,
Parish Priest of Mitchelstown, who it is said was a native
of Churchtown Parish. Also in the procession was Rev.
Thomas England, Catholic Chaplain to the County Jail.
The
gallows was erected at the top of the hill then known
as Peggy's Rock, which is known today as Flannery's Quarry
about a mile south from Churchtown, on the road to Buttevant
near a spot well known as Buffer's Cross. Father King
P.P., Mitchelstown addressed the unhappy men in Irish
and he also addressed the people present in a very feeling
address, he exhorted them at awful moment to make atonement
for, and confess, their offences, but they all protested
their innocence of the crime for which they were about
to suffer, and in this declaration they persevered to
the last.
THE
AUTHORITIES WERE DISAPPOINTED
On
the day of the executions of the Churchtown prisoners
the men of the district were all absent from the scene.
Some of the women were at the scene but only in small
numbers. What was then considered extraordinary was the
fact that not one of the local gentry were present. The
High Sherriff of County Cork was more than disappointed
that the gentry of the county did not evince their sense
of the attrocity of the deed by giving the authorities
the aid and influence of their presence.
So
on that awful Winter day, Monday, February 25th 1822,
on the hill at Egmont, known as Peggy's Rock, Cornelius
Relihan, John Mahony and Daniel Bresnihan(Breen) were
hanged by the neck until they were dead (according to
their sentence) for the attack on Churchtown Police Barracks
and the murder of 5 police men, a deed which has gone
down in history as The Burning of Churchtown.
The
bodies of the prisoners were taken back to Cork Jail where
they were buried in quicklime in the Jail Yard. The graves
of all executed prisoners is marked today by a fine memorial.
The prison yard is now a part of the grounds of University
College Cork.
Part
3
In
our story so far on the attack on the Police Barracks
at Churchtown, on the night of January 31st 1822, we came
to the evidence for the Defence of the prisoners. We heard
the evidence of John O'Keeffe and we now come to the evidence
of Thomas Haynes who was described as a Sub Constable
of the Police. Haynes did not live in the barracks or
the village. We are told he lived near Biddystree. When
called he swore he remembered the night of the attack
on the Police.
When
he heard of the attack he ran out of his house in fear
of his life, but returned later for his wife and was about
to bring her to Buttevant when he met O'Keeffe in a great
state of alarm. O'Keeffe desired him to stay at his house,
which he did, for a long time. When he decided to go home,
O'Keeffe went along part of the way with him.
EDWARD
WRIXON, OF WALSHESTOWN CALLED
Edward
Wrixon, Esq., told the Court how he had known the Relihans
for 5 or 6 years. They worked for him over a long period
but left him in the year 1818. While he had known them
they conducted themselves properly, and he never heard
they were guilty of anything outside the law. At the end
of Mr Wrixon's evidence, the defence of the Relihans closed.
PATRICK
SHEEHAN CALLED
Patrick
Sheehan was called on the part of John Mahony, who was
his brother in law. He swore that on the night of the
attack he and the prisoner slept together at his (the
witnesses house) which is near Churchtown. Under cross
examination he swore the prisoner had no house and lived
here and there earning a livelyhood. The witness said
he did not know where the prisoner slept the night before
or after the attack, or any other night.
JAMES
BROWNE, CALLED ON BEHALF OF DENIS MOYNIHAN
James
Browne told the Court that he lived not far from the scene
of the attack on the eastern side of the village of Churchtown.
He swore he remembered the night of the attack on the
Barracks, on which night, Moynihan, who was a tailor,
slept in his house, having been employed by him to make
clothes for the children. The tailor worked in his house
for two and a half days and did not leave the house the
next day until 11.30p.m. They went to bed around 9 o'
clock on the night of the attack. The prisoner slept in
a bed with two of James Browne's children. The following
Friday when Browne heard Moynihan was arrested, he said
to a neighbour, that cannot be true as he slept in my
house on the night of the attack.
JOHN
MOYNIHAN CALLED, ON BEHALF OF THE SAME PRISONER
John
Moynihan said he knew the prisoner (Moynihan) for more
than 20 years and never heard anything against his character.
He said that he (himself) was a publican and a teacher
and he did not see the prisoner for six months before.
DAVID
ROCHE ON BEHALF OF DANIEL BRESNIHAN ALIAS BREEN
David
Roche said he remembered the night of the attack on the
Police Barracks at Churchtown. That night he slept at
the house of the prisoner, whose wife was his witness
(the witnesses) daughter and had the cholic. He was asked
when he came to tell this story that he said on Thursday
last. Then the Solicitor General rose, and drew the attention
of the Court to the circumstance that it was only yesterday
this prisoner was charged with having been concerned in
the attack on the Churchtown Police Barracks. The witness
was then sent off the table, and the Judge proceeded to
charge the Jury, who retired, and then returned with a
verdict of guilty, against Cornelius Relihan, John Mahony
and Daniel Bresnihan, alias Breen and acquitted John Relihan
and Denis Moynihan.
On
that same day more than 30 persons came up for sentence
from different parts of County Cork. With the Churchtown
prisoners were two men who were found in arms near Charleville,
they were Patrick Walsh and William McDonnell. Before
the Judge passed sentence on the prisoners, night had
fallen and the Court had to be accommodated with candles.
The Judge addressed the prisoners and told them they had
been found guilty of a crime of a very heinous nature
under the Whiteboy Act, that of Assembling in Arms to
the Terror of the Kings Peaceable Subjects.
The
Judge said that at that moment he was not going to say
much, as he would have the occasion by and by when he
would come to pronounce the sentence of death.
I
must here mention that the two Charleville men were among
the more fortunate ones. Patrick Walsh and William McDonnell
escaped the death sentence and instead they were sent
to prison for one year after being twice publicly whipped.
THE
SENTENCE ON THE WHITEBOY PRISONERS
The
usual form was gone through by the clerk of the Crown,
informing then that tey had been found guilty by a jury
of their own county, and anything to say why sentence
of death should not be passed against them, to which there
was no answer.
The
Judge said it was his painful duty to pass that sentence
upon them which inevitably must follow the crimes of which
they had been found guilty. It was, said the Judge, a
frightful situation to be placed in, to have to pass sentence
on those unfortunate men. They had been found guilty of
a crime of a most revolting nature, and all tending to
subvert the tranquility of the countryside, and to place
the lives and the properties of all peaceful residents
in danger.
The
Judge said that where ever a shadow of a doubt existed
he always leaned to the side of mercy. He ordered that
those recommended to mercy should be immediately tended
to.
THE
EXECUTION OF THE CHURCHTOWN PRISONERS
The
three prisoners sentenxced to death for the attack on
the Police Barracks at Churchtown and the murder of Constable
Hugh Collogan, and other Policemen, were, Cornelius Relihan,
John Mahony and Daniel Bresnihan, alias Breen. They were
sentenced to be hanged at the most convenient spot nearest
the scene of the crime. On Sunday morning they were conveyed
from the County Jail, in Cork City, under the care of
the High Sherriff of the county, and a strong military
escort, on their way to Churchtown.
They
reached Mallow that evening where they spent the night.
On Monday morning they left Mallow early on the final
stage of their journey to Churchtown. The prisoners were
strongly guarded and accompanied by Rev. Fr. John Kiely,
Parish Priest of Mitchelstown, who it is said was a native
of Churchtown Parish. Also in the procession was Rev.
Thomas England, Catholic Chaplain to the County Jail.
The
gallows was erected at the top of the hill then known
as Peggy's Rock, which is known today as Flannery's Quarry
about a mile south from Churchtown, on the road to Buttevant
near a spot well known as Buffer's Cross. Father King
P.P., Mitchelstown addressed the unhappy men in Irish
and he also addressed the people present in a very feeling
address, he exhorted them at awful moment to make atonement
for, and confess, their offences, but they all protested
their innocence of the crime for which they were about
to suffer, and in this declaration they persevered to
the last.
THE
AUTHORITIES WERE DISAPPOINTED
On
the day of the executions of the Churchtown prisoners
the men of the district were all absent from the scene.
Some of the women were at the scene but only in small
numbers. What was then considered extraordinary was the
fact that not one of the local gentry were present. The
High Sherriff of County Cork was more than disappointed
that the gentry of the county did not evince their sense
of the attrocity of the deed by giving the authorities
the aid and influence of their presence.
So
on that awful Winter day, Monday, February 25th 1822,
on the hill at Egmont, known as Peggy's Rock, Cornelius
Relihan, John Mahony and Daniel Bresnihan(Breen) were
hanged by the neck until they were dead (according to
their sentence) for the attack on Churchtown Police Barracks
and the murder of 5 police men, a deed which has gone
down in history as The Burning of Churchtown.
The
bodies of the prisoners were taken back to Cork Jail where
they were buried in quicklime in the Jail Yard. The graves
of all executed prisoners is marked today by a fine memorial.
The prison yard is now a part of the grounds of University
College Cork.
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