Irish military history

Shannon Retreat

Limerick became one of the principal centres of Jacobite resistance after William III’s victory at the Boyne on 1 July 1690 forced the Irish army to abandon the eastern approaches to Dublin. James II departed for France, but most of his surviving soldiers remained under arms and withdrew westwards towards the River Shannon. Some gathered around Athlone, which guarded an important crossing into Connacht, while the larger concentration developed around Limerick. The city’s walls, river position and access to the western counties offered the Jacobites a defensible base from which the war might continue despite the loss of Dublin.

Veteran Dies

Lieutenant-Colonel Abraham Boulger, one of Ireland’s earliest recipients of the Victoria Cross, died at Moate, County Westmeath, on 23 January 1900, aged sixty-four. Born at Kilcullen, County Kildare, on 4 September 1835, he entered the British Army and rose from the ranks during a long career of active service. His reputation rested principally upon his conduct during the Indian Rebellion of 1857, when, as a young lance-corporal in the 84th Regiment of Foot, he repeatedly placed himself in exposed positions during the campaign associated with Cawnpore and the relief and defence of Lucknow.

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