The Treaty Stone on Clancy’s Strand is traditionally believed to have served as the table upon which the Treaty of Limerick was signed on 3 October 1691. Concluded after the Siege of Limerick, the agreement ended the Williamite War in Ireland. Its military articles permitted Patrick Sarsfield’s Jacobite army to depart for France in the Flight of the Wild Geese, while the civil articles promised protections for Catholics. These promises were later undermined by the Penal Laws. Originally a mounting block outside the Black Bull Inn, the stone was placed on its decorated pedestal by Mayor John Rickard Tinslay in 1865.