Limerick families

Ladysmith Assault

Boer commandos launched a major assault upon the British defensive line south of besieged Ladysmith before dawn on 6 January 1900. Their principal targets were Wagon Hill and Caesar’s Camp, two positions on the ridge known locally as the Platrand. Advancing through darkness and broken ground, the attackers surprised several forward posts and gained parts of the crest before the defenders could organise effective resistance. Confused close-range fighting followed, with British and colonial troops struggling to distinguish friend from enemy among rocks, scrub and unfinished defensive works.

University Demand

Bishop Edward Thomas O’Dwyer of Limerick delivered a prominent intervention in the continuing dispute over university education for Irish Catholics. He argued that the existing system failed to provide higher education on terms acceptable to the religious convictions of most of Ireland’s population. Catholic students could enter Trinity College Dublin or prepare for examinations through institutions connected with the Royal University, but church leaders maintained that neither arrangement offered a complete university environment shaped by Catholic belief and practice. O’Dwyer presented the question as one of educational equality rather than a request for clerical privilege.