THERE is mingled pain and pleasure in reading the
history of the Great Rebellion, as it affected first Scotland, and
then England. There is no feeling but pain and weariness for him who
is so unfortunate as to be compelled to toil through the sad story
of the long-drawn-out struggle, which for ten years desolated
Ireland, and which needed Cromwell’s iron hand and iron will to
bring to an end, so that the weary wretched land might have rest.
Much misery, much bloodshed the great Civil War caused in England:
but it has left a glorious legacy in the memory of Cromwell’s strong
manhood; of Milton’s noble purity of purpose and search after an
ideal in politics; of the manly simplicity of many brave men who
fought and died on either side—Pym, and Hampden, and Falkland; while
we Scots are proud to record the intellectual greatness and moral
worth of Henderson and of Rutherford, and never tire to sing the
praises of that dashing cavalier, “Bonnie Dundee.” There is no
silver lining to the black cloud which forms Irish history at this
time; there is no name among the English and Scots who fought in
Ireland which should be rescued from kindly oblivion; while the one
man of pure life and principle whom the Irish put forward—Owen Roe
O’Neill— lacked that strength and moral force which made men like
George Washington the founders of great nations.
It is fortunately not necessary here to recount at
length the horrors which characterised the revolt of the Irish in
1641, or to relate the confused story of the prolonged civil war
which followed, and desolated the land. For nearly two centuries a
strife of tongues has raged regarding the character of the revolt,
and apologists have been found who have denied the atrocities
committed on the settlers, and done their best to wipe out the
bloody stain which rests on the character of the Irish people. The
difficulty of arriving at the truth regarding this sad portion of
Irish history is very great; for not only are the facts covered over
thick with the fabrications of succeeding generations of
controversialists, but even the original documents of the period are
not to be trusted, many of them being framed for the purposes of
deceit. Recent research has, however, proved, that while the
accounts of the horrors of the revolt have been greatly exaggerated,
the cruelties practised were only too horrible. This must have been
so; for it is to be remembered that in Ireland it was the rising of
race against race, and that the race which rose in rebellion was the
lower in civilisation, and considered that it was suffering under
grievous wrongs at the hands of the Government of their conquerors.
Probably no fairer or more weighty account of the Rebellion of 1641
has been written than that of Mr Lecky, who says—“No impartial
writer will deny that the rebellion in Ulster was extremely savage
and bloody, though it is certainly not true that its
barbarities were either unparalleled or unprovoked. They were, for
the most part, the unpremeditated acts of a half-savage populace.
Wentworth’s government bore hardly on the Ulster
Scots, and there are traces in his letters that he had in view a
plan even more thoroughgoing than dragooning and religious
persecution. He certainly did not like these Irish Presbyterians,
and feared their sternness. There seems to have floated in his mind
some half-formed plan of getting quit of their troubling for ever by
driving them out of Ulster in a body. It was not fated, however,
that Wentworth was to carry out his plan; the Scots were to remain,
and their stem determination to have their own way was destined to
trouble the Irish dictator of the nineteenth as it had done his
prototype of the seventeenth century. Wentworth was by far the
ablest, and therefore the most dangerous, of all Charles I.’s
lieutenants, and when the Long Parliament began its sittings in
1640, he was its first victim. He was impeached and executed, his
death leaving Ireland really without government; for he had
permitted no one near him who was capable of grasping the reins when
they fell from his hands. Wentworth’s rule had been hard on all—on
the Roman Catholics, whether Irish or Norman-Irish, as well as on
the Presbyterians, and he had given fresh sharpness and poignancy to
the remembrance of the many wrongs under which they suffered. To men
smarting under great grievances, the time appeared well suited for a
blow for freedom. The Scottish people had just accomplished a
successful rebellion, and had compelled the English king virtually
to agree to all that it demanded; while England itself was evidently
rapidly drifting into civil war. Ireland, moreover, was almost
devoid of troops, for the army which Wentworth had raised was
disbanded early in 1641; while the Government at Dublin was in the
hands of two Lord Justices, lacking both character and ability. The
northern settlers, besides, were without cohesion, and badly armed.
The leaders of the Irish determined on a great struggle for
independence. The rising was arranged with great ability, the plan
being consummated largely by the aid of Roman Catholic friars, who
passed from district to district unnoticed. Warning of impending
danger was sent from England to the Lord Justices, but they remained
unmoved; and Dublin Castle itself would have been secured by the
rebels if one of the party intrusted with its surprisal had not
turned traitor on the evening before the outbreak.
It was in Ulster that the greatest fury of the rising
was felt, for it was in the northern province that the land had been
to the fullest extent taken from the original proprietors; religion,
patriotism, and interest therefore alike called on the native
population to attempt to recover supremacy. On the night of the 22d
October 164T, all over Ulster, as if with one accord, the Irish rose
on the English settlers, who lived in most cases in isolated
farmhouses in the midst of an Irish population; while armed bodies,
led by the chiefs of the Irish septs, easily surprised most of the
forts, which were feebly held by small English garrisons. The plan
of the original settlement had been broken through by Wentworth,
when he, out of jealousy of the Presbyterians, disarmed the country,
and so destroyed that system of defence which James I. had wisely
judged necessary for the protection of the settlement. Before the
morning broke all Ulster was ablaze with burning villages and
farmhouses. There followed what must take place in every agrarian
revolt—murder and outrage, even though it may have been true that
“the main and strong view of the common Irish was plunder," and that
the leaders, with some exceptions, deprecated murder, and desired
only the expulsion of the English.
The settlers were driven out of their homes unarmed
and defenceless, many of them stripped of clothing, in a singularly
inclement season, with no place of refuge near at hand to which they
could retreat; while around them flocked, like birds of prey, all
the blackguardism of an unsettled country. It is not necessary nor
desirable to describe the horrors which accompanied the flight of
this miserable crowd— men, women, and children, the aged, scarce
able to walk, the babe at the breast—toward the cities of refuge on
the coast. None dared give them shelter or succour their distress.
Many perished of cold and hunger, many were barbarously outraged and
murdered; while famine and fever carried off in Dublin and
Londonderry and Coleraine not a few of those who had escaped the
perils of the way. One curious point it is very difficult to
determine— how far the Scottish settlers suffered along with the
English. It appears that the leaders of the revolt) desired to
distinguish between the two nationalities, probably rather to cause
diversity of interest than because the Irish had reason to love
Scottish more than English settlers, or because Presbyterians were
more tolerant of Roman Catholics than Episcopalians. It is stated by
one of the bravest of the Englishmen engaged in the defence of the
colony in Fermanagh, that “ in the infancy of the rebellion the
rebels made open proclamations upon pain of death that no Scotchman
should be stirred in body, goods, or lands, and that they should to
this purpose write over the lyntels of their doors that they were
Scotchmen, and so destruction might pass over their families.”1 This
may have been the intention of the Irish leaders, but no such plan
could possibly have been carried out after their followers had
tasted blood, and we know for certain that many Scottish settlers
perished in the uprising, while, of course, very many fell in the
long civil war which followed. The Scottish settlements, as far as
they escaped destruction, seem to have owed their safety to the
thoroughness with which the plantation had been carried out. Thus
the original Scottish colony in North Down did not suffer severely;
while the settlement, by this time probably more Scottish than
English, in South Antrim, and the plantation along the Foyle in
Donegal and Londonderry, escaped with little injury, because in all
these districts the foreign population was stronger than the native,
and because the planters soon took arms in defence of their hearths
and homes.
When the rebellion broke out, Charles I. was in
Edinburgh, endeavouring to make terms with the Scottish Parliament,
in order to separate the interests of the Covenanters from the
English Puritan party. The news of the outbreak was sent to the King
by Sir Arthur Chichester, Governor of Carrickfergus, and Charles
read the letter to the Scottish Parliament on the 28th October
1641. Chichester’s letter, dated two days after the outbreak,
announced that “certain septs of the Irish” had risen in force, and
that “great fires” could be seen from Carrickfergus. The House at
once appointed a committee to consider the matter, and instructed it
while it awaited fuller news from Ireland to meet, that afternoon,
with Lord Eglinton, and inquire “what shipping the western coast of
Scotland can afford.” The inquiry drew out the answer that shipping
for four to five thousand men could be found from Glasgow to Ayr. By
1st November the King was able to give Parliament more exact
information, which he communicated in person. He read a despatch
from the Lords Justices, informing him that all the north of Ireland
was in rebellion; and asked the assistance of the Scottish
Parliament, desiring especially their help in saving Carrickfergus
and Londonderry. “The President answered, these two places did
indeed very much concern the Scots, that were most numerous in the
north parts of that kingdom. His Majesty replied, if he had not been
a Scotsman himself, he had not spoken that.” The King knew that he
appealed to Scotsmen as such, and that in a matter so important as
the safety of their Ulster kinsmen, they would rise superior to the
intense party hate which then divided Covenanters from Cavaliers.
The Scottish Parliament was not slow in responding,
for on the 3d November, only ten days after the revolt broke out, it
adopted the report of the committee, which recommended that if the
English Parliament would accept their assistance, and were willing
to pay the troops, a Scottish force of 10,000 men should be sent
into Ulster; and further, “that they should supply their brethren in
Ireland with arms out of the common magazine for 3000 men, two parts
muskets and the third part pikes.” The practical difficulty was that
Ireland was a dependency of England, and that therefore the Scottish
Parliament had no right to send troops without the consent of
England. The force was promptly offered, but not so promptly
accepted by the English Parliament, which was at this time entering
on its long struggle over the Great Remonstrance. Ireland was
therefore on this occasion, as it has been so often since,
sacrificed to the contention of English parties; for the English
Cavaliers objected to the employment of an army of Covenanters,
fearing what it might do in case of success in Ireland; while the
Roundheads as strongly protested against the King being allowed to
raise any other force to be sent to Ireland, in case it might be
afterwards used against the liberties of his English subjects.
Meanwhile the news of the rebellion, and the reports
of the atrocities attendant on it, had sent a shudder of rage and
horror through Scotland, in the same way that the tidings of the
Indian Mutiny excited this country during the autumn months of 1857.
The diary of John Spalding of Aberdeen, who was a kind of
seventeenth century James Boswell, and kept jottings from day to day
of what struck him, is full of the prevailing feeling. His evidence
is the better proof that this sympathy was universal in Scotland,
and not confined to one party, from the fact that he himself was
Episcopalian in his leanings, and not therefore of the party which
was supreme in Parliament. “ Great cruelty in Ireland, and mekill
blood spilt of the English and Scottish Puritan Protestants; fire
and sword went almost through the whole land, nor mercy to sex or
kind, young or old, man, woman, or child, all put to death, and
their goods spoiled.” Again, some months later, he writes that the
Irish use “fire, sword, and all manner of cruelty against man, wife,
and bairn of English, Scottish, and Irish Covenanters within their
kingdom, without pity or compassion.” The same annalist tells that
on 27th February 1642, a collection was made in every parish in the
kingdom for behoof of the Ulster Scots, who were forced to flee into
the west parts of Scotland. He adds that out of “this poor paroche
fourscoir poundis were collected.” This flight of great numbers of
Ulster settlers into the parts of Scotland from which they had
emigrated, is corroborated by the Records of the City of Glasgow. In
February 1642, the Council votes a sum from the city funds for
behoof of the refugees. This not proving sufficient, on the 5th
March the Corporation “ordanis ane proclamation to be sent throw the
toune to desyre all these quha will give or contribut any supplie to
the distressed people that com from Ireland, that they cum upon
Wednesday next at the ringing of the bells.” The great excitement
caused in Scotland by the rebellion in Ulster, and the intense
interest shown by the country in the fate of the settlers, prove
conclusively how many in every part of the mother country were
personally concerned for friends and relatives among the settlers in
the North of Ireland.
When at last, in the end of January 1642, terms were
arranged between the English and Scottish Parliaments,2 the Scottish
authorities had no difficulty in finding at once a portion of the
troops which they wished to send to Ulster. Scotsmen had been
fighting for a generation on both sides of the great Thirty Years’
War, and many of these “soldiers of fortune” had returned home when
the war broke out between Scotland and King Charles in 1638. The
Scottish Estates had now three regiments which had not been
disbanded after the King’s surrender—two stationed near Edinburgh
and one in Aberdeen, where it had been sent to overawe the northern
Episcopalians. These regiments were at once ordered to Ireland,
while after the manner of the time, certain noblemen received
commissions to raise other regiments to follow. There exist two most
vivid sketches of the character of these troops, who were mostly
professional soldiers, trained in the wars of the Continent. In
Scotland they had been led against Charles by men of genius and high
enthusiasm, and had behaved well; in Ireland their leaders had no
spark of genius, and discipline soon became slack. We can therefore
easily understand why they accomplished but little, and were not an
unmixed blessing to the northern settlers. Let one of their
commanding officers, Major Turner, speak for himself: “I had
swallowed without chewing, in Germanie, a very dangerous maxime,
which militariemen there too much follow, which was, that so we
serve our master honnestlie, it is no matter what master we
serve” —quite the code of morals for a soldier of fortune. Here,
too, is an account of how the regiment in which Turner served, Lord
Sinclair’s, had behaved while posted at Aberdeen: “This regiment did
no good, but maikill evil, daylie deboshing, in drinking, nicht
walking, combatting, sweiring, and brocht sindrie honest women
servants to great misery.” The Scottish army of Ulster was placed
under the command of David Leslie, “newly created Earl of Leven, for
his successful rebellion against the King;" and the advanced-guard,
which crossed from the western ports to Car-rickfergus on the 14th
April 1642, was led by his lieutenant, Monro, who, like Leslie, and
most of the army, officers and privates, had been trained on the
Continent in the Thirty Years’ War.
But long before the Scottish forces landed at
Carrickfergus, the Ulster settlers had recovered from their first
panic, and had formed themselves into regiments for mutual defence.
It is a fact, that if the Irish leaders intended to respect the
lives of the Scottish settlers, it was the latter who formed the
greater portion of this militia. From the open country of Cavan,
Armagh, Tyrone, Londonderry, and Fermanagh, the rebellion swept the
English and Scottish settlers; “for the wild Irish did not onlie
massacre all whom they could overmaster, but burnt tounes, villages,
castles, churches, and all habitable houses, endeavouring to reduce,
as far as their power could reach, all to confused chaos.” Enniskillen
was saved by the bravery of its people, who again, fifty years
later, showed the stuff of which they were made. Londonderry and
Coleraine were safe, while the south of Antrim and north of Down,
and the settlement on the borders of Tyrone and Donegal, had been
rescued from plunder. From these districts as centres the settlers
attacked the Irish. In the east, the regiments were commanded by
Chichester and Lord Conway, and by the natural leaders of the Scots,
Lord Montgomery, and Hamilton, Lord Clannaboye; in the west the
settlers of West Tyrone and East Donegal rallied round two very
capable Scotsmen, Sir William and Sir Robert Stewart, who proved in
the war that was to follow, dashing partisan leaders.1 To these
troops arms were sent by both the English and Scottish Councils,
while the settlers supplemented this supply by purchasing arms.
There is a proof of this in the Register House of Edinburgh, in the
shape of a quaint bond, whereby Mure of Caldwell became security
that his kinsman Lord Clannaboye would pay for 400 muskets at 10
pounds Scots each, which he had purchased from the “Scottish War
Office. During the winter of 1641-42, these forces more than held
their own against the Irish, and after Monro’s arrival in April
1642, they were able, in conjunction with him, to push southwards,
and retake and garrison Newry. In the west, too, the Stewarts
recovered the command of much of Tyrone and Londonderry counties,
and relieved Coleraine, which had been hardly pressed. Thus the
principal Scottish settlements were freed, and many who had fled to
Scotland, either from Wentworth’s tyranny or after the rising of
October 1641, began to return to Ulster. One peculiar effect the
rebellion had on the North of Ireland—it swept away the Church
established by law, the bishops and most of the parish clergymen
having perished or fled. In its place, the Scottish army proceeded
to establish a Presbyterian Church. It would appear that it was the
custom for each regiment to have an ordained minister as chaplain,
and to elect from the officers a regular kirk-session. In June 1642,
the clergy and elders attached to the Scottish regiments met as a
Presbytery at Carrickfergus, and, in conjunction with a number of
the Scottish residents of Down and Antrim, petitioned the General
Assembly of the Church of Scotland, which met at St Andrews in July,
to send over a number of ministers. The Assembly consented, and
appointed certain members who had been settled as ministers in
Ireland before Wentworth’s persecution, to proceed on a mission to
Ireland. This mission the Assembly repeated next year; and in 1644,
a larger deputation was sent to carry the Solemn League and Covenant
to Ireland and to present it to the people. The Assembly’s
deputation on this occasion proceeded all through Ulster, as far
south as Sligo and Enniskillen, and both troops and settlers,
English as well as Scottish, adopted the Covenant in great
numbers. It is evident that the great majority of the settlers left
in Ulster were Presbyterians; for not only would the Scots be so
almost without exception, but very many of the English who had
immigrated since 1610, belonged to the Puritan party.
Meanwhile the operations of Monro’s little army were
sadly hampered for want of supplies. It is doubtful whether his
force ever reached the stipulated number of 10,000, although it is
certain that 4000 men joined it in the autumn of 1642. The
arrangement between the two Parliaments had been that the English
should pay the Scottish troops; but by the autumn of 1642, England
was plunged in civil war, and the money which had been raised for
the war in Ireland was seized to carry on war against Charles. The
Scottish regiments, therefore, fared very badly, and at times seem
to have been driven to live on the country in which they were
settled. The campaign of 1643 was not a brilliant one, although
ground was recovered. The winter found the troops very
discontentedthey had received almost no pay since they landed, and
when news came of the proposed expedition into England in support of
the Parliament, three of the regiments were no longer to be held
back, but returned to Scotland against orders. The Ulster settlers
were greatly alarmed at the prospect of being left unprotected
should the rest of the Scottish troops also go; but fortunately a
supply of money and of provisions arrived at Carrickfergus in April
1644—a portion of the food being a free gift of 3000 bolls of meal
from the shire of Ayr. About the same time, too, the Dutch showed
their sympathy with the cause of Protestantism in Ireland by making
a collection in all the churches of Holland by order of the
States-General: they transmitted to Ulster four shiploads of
provisions and clothing, which were distributed among both people
and soldiery.
Thus once more Presbyterianism was re-established in
the North of Ireland, and rapidly strengthened its organisation,
until, in 1647, there were thirty regular congregations in Ulster.
Meanwhile the war dragged its slow length along, devastating the
country horribly, and causing terrible loss of life, with changing
fortune, and ever-varying parties, until Cromwell crossed in 1650,
and in one dreadful campaign crushed the opposition of Catholic and
Presbyterian alike, and established the rule of the English
Parliament. At first Cromwell’s Government pressed hardly on the
Ulster Presbyterians, and many of the settlers were scheduled for
transportation into Leinster and Munster on account of their having
opposed the army of the Commonwealth. Cromwell relented, however;
the orders for transportation were not carried out, although lands
seem to have been found for some of the Commonwealth soldiers in the
northern counties. Government allowances were made to the
Presbyterian clergy; and under Cromwell’s strict rule the North of
Ireland seems to have recovered steadily from the terrible blow of
the Rebellion of October 1641. |