The garrison at Clonmel changes as the …
Years: 1650 - 1650
April
The garrison at Clonmel changes as the arrival of the Puritan army through Kilkenny becomes imminent.
The town's Mayor John Bennet White had written in November, 1649, to the Duke of Ormond seeking military assistance.
Colonel Oliver Stephenson and part of the old Confederate army, mostly from County Clare, had taken up quarters.
The southern Confederates are not fully trusted by the townspeople, particularly after the fall of Carrick on Suir due to treachery.
Ormond had arrived in person at the end of the month and the Clare men had been replaced by experienced soldiers from Ulster under Hugh Dubh ("Black Hugh") O’Neill, a veteran of siege warfare in the Thirty Years' War.
Under his command are fifteen hundred soldiers from the Irish Ulster army, mostly from the modern counties of Tyrone and Cavan.
These two regiments had served under Owen Roe O'Neill and are now led by his nephew.
They are accompanied by two troops of cavalry under Colonel Edmond Fennell of Ballygriffin, County Cork.
O'Neill had sent reinforcements to some outlying fortifications at Ballydine, Kilcash and 'Castle Caonagh' (Mountain Castle).
Even before the siege commences, provisioning the new influx is causing difficulties, Ormond proving unable to adequately supply them.
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People
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Topics
- Three Kingdoms, Wars of the
- Cromwellian Conquest of Ireland
- Interregnum, English (First)
- English Civil War, Third
