24 January 1900

Summit Disaster

For Limerick, whose city and county belonged to the recruiting region of the Royal Munster Fusiliers, reports from Spion Kop carried immediate human significance even though that regiment did not fight upon the summit. During the night of 23–24 January 1900, British troops commanded by Major-General Edward Woodgate climbed the steep hill in Natal as part of Sir Redvers Buller’s renewed attempt to relieve besieged Ladysmith. The attackers surprised a Boer outpost and secured part of the summit before dawn, but mist and darkness concealed the true shape of the ground and the stronger positions lying beyond them.

Civic Compromise

Mayor John Daly was returned unopposed when Limerick Corporation assembled for its quarterly election of civic officers. The council then proceeded to choose three qualified burgesses whose names would be submitted for appointment as City High Sheriff. The principal contest appeared likely to involve the serving sheriff, Thomas H. Cleeve, and John F. Power. Their disagreement arose from the proposed amalgamation of the Waterford, Limerick and Western Railway with the Great Southern and Western Railway, an issue that had united much of the Corporation, harbour administration and commercial community in organised opposition.

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