Events from the year 1798 in Ireland.
Incumbent
Events
- 25 May
- Carnew massacre: summary execution of 38 suspected rebels by the British Army in County Wicklow.
- Massacre of Dunlavin Green: Summary execution of 36 suspected rebels by the British Army in County Wicklow.
- 26 May
- Wexford Rebellion: United Irishmen mobilise in the north of County Wexford. In the Battle of the Harrow, rebels led by Father John Murphy defeat the Camolin Cavalry.
- Battle of Tara Hill: British forces drive United Irishmen from their position with around 400 of the latter killed.
- 27 May â Battle of Oulart Hill: Wexford rebels led by Father Murphy again defeat the militia.
- 28 May â Wexford Rebellion: Rebels take Enniscorthy.
- 29 May â Gibbet Rath massacre: Summary execution of 300–500 rebels by the British Army on the Curragh of Kildare.
- 30 May â rebels occupy the town of Wexford.
- May â Blessington House, County Wicklow is burnt to the ground by rebels, and will never be rebuilt.
- 1 June â Republican government set up in County Wexford.
- 4 June â Battle of Tuberneering: United Irishmen led by Father Murphy ambush and defeat British forces in north Wexford.
- 5 June â Battle of New Ross: Wexford rebels are defeated by the British Army.
- 7 June
- Carnew is burned by rebels led by Anthony Perry.
- Battle of Antrim: Antrim United Irishmen led by Henry Joy McCracken attack British forces in Antrim town but are defeated.
- 9 June
- Battle of Arklow: Wexford rebels are defeated by the British Army.
- Battle of Saintfield: troops of the British Army are ambushed by rebels in Saintfield County Down. The United Irishmen secure a victory.
- 12-13 June â Battle of Ballynahinch: the British Army defeats rebels in County Down. The rebel leader Henry Munro is betrayed and hanged on 16 June in Lisburn.
- 14 June â Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis, appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
- 19 June â Battle of Ovidstown: British forces defeat United Irishmen led by William Aylmer near Kilcock, County Kildare.
- 21 June â Battle of Vinegar Hill fought in and nearby Enniscorthy. The British regain control of County Wexford.
- 22 June â Thomas Judkin-Fitzgerald, High Sheriff of Tipperary, initiates floggings of those in Carrick-on-Suir thought to support the United Irishmen.
- 22 August â a force of French troops led by General Jean Joseph Amable Humbert lands near Killala in County Mayo and Humbert proclaims an Irish Republic.
- 27 August â Battle of Castlebar: A combined force of French and United Irishmen under Humbert defeats the British militia under General Lake in County Mayo. Effective start of the Republic of Connacht.
- 31 August â Humbert proclaims a Republic of Connacht, with John Moore as president.
- 8 September â the French force is defeated by General Cornwallis at the Battle of Ballinamuck in County Longford. End of the Republic of Connacht.
- 16 September â a force of seventy armed United Irishmen led by James Napper Tandy in the French corvette Anacréon makes a brief and fruitless landing on Inishmacadurn in support of the rebellion.
- 23 September â Battle of Killala: in the last land battle of the rebellion, the British army defeats the remaining rebel Irish and French forces at Killala.
- 12 October â Battle of Tory Island: a British Royal Navy squadron under Sir John Borlase Warren prevents French Republican ships landing reinforcements for the United Irishmen on the Donegal coast; Wolfe Tone is captured.
Arts and literature
Births
- 15 January â Thomas Crofton Croker, antiquary (died 1854)
- 3 April â John Banim, dramatist and playwright (died 1842).
- 28 May â Alexander Workman, politician in Canada and Mayor of Ottawa (died 1891).
- 11 August â Dominick Daly, Governor of Prince Edward Island, later Governor of South Australia (died 1868).
- 26 August â John McClintock, 1st Baron Rathdonnell, politician and Lord Lieutenant of County Louth (died 1879).
- 1 November â Benjamin Guinness, brewer and philanthropist (died 1868).
- 10 December â George Fletcher Moore, explorer and writer (died 1886).
- 13 December â James Henry, physician, classical scholar and poet (died 1876).
- ;Full date unknown
- :*Biddy Early, née Bridget Connors, traditional healer (died 1874).
- :*John St. John Long, quack doctor (died 1834).
- :*Alexander McDonnell, chess master (died 1835).
- :*Richard Turner, iron-founder (died 1881).
Deaths
- 4 June â Lord Edward FitzGerald, aristocrat and revolutionary (born 1763).
- 17 July â Henry Joy McCracken, cotton manufacturer and industrialist, Presbyterian and a founding member of the Society of the United Irishmen (born 1767).
- 6 September â Walter Patterson, first British colonial Governor of Prince Edward Island (b. c1735).
- 30 September â Molyneux Shuldham, 1st Baron Shuldham, naval officer and colonial governor of Newfoundland (b. c1717).
- 19 November â Theobald Wolfe Tone, leading figure in the United Irishmen, died from self-inflicted wound after being sentenced to death for his part in the Irish Rebellion of 1798 (born 1763).
- ;Full date unknown
- :*Boetius Egan, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Tuam (born 1734).
- :*Christopher Hewetson, sculptor (b. c.1737).
- :*Bartholomew Teeling, a leader of the Irish forces during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 (born 1774).
References
Sources
See also