The Naval Mutinies of 1798  
The Irish Plot to Seize the Channel Fleet
Author(s): Philip MacDougall
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399044615
Pages: 0

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The United Irish plot in 1798 aimed to capture British warships, revealing a lesser-known aspect of Irish rebellion history.

For Ireland, the year 1798 saw a major rebellion breaking out against rule from London, a time in which Britain was in its fifth year of a hard-fought war against revolutionary France. Set in motion by the Society of United Irishmen, an underground organization with links to Paris, the rebellion was eventually crushed by an overwhelming force of arms. In this new, dramatic account, Philip MacDougall shines a light on a little covered aspect of this history: the United Irish plot to capture a number of British warships and the planned use of those vessels in support of the rebellion that broke out in 1798. The means by which those ships were to be taken, not by direct external attack but by mutinous intrigue directed from on board, is fully explored.

While ships blockading the French port of Brest returned to re-victual in Cawsand Bay, with many of the officers on shore leave, it was an ideal time for the plotting of mutinies. United Irishman alongside English and Scottish republicans could safely mix with those on other ships to develop a unified strategy.

This book offers a micro study of how the planned mutiny plot developed and was co-ordinated. Personalities, cliques and idealists are seen as taking leading roles, with attention given to the motivating issues that lay behind those risk takers who knew that failure would result in likely hanging from the yardarm. Based on research from the National Archives, contemporary newspaper reports and the detailed hand written minutes of the courts martial held upon those identified as rebel leaders and some of their supporters (containing the actual words of the people of the lower deck) this is a full and balanced account of the plot which, if successful, would have re-written history.
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The United Irish plot in 1798 aimed to capture British warships, revealing a lesser-known aspect of Irish rebellion history.

For Ireland, the year 1798 saw a major rebellion breaking out against rule from London, a time in which Britain was in its fifth year of a hard-fought war against revolutionary France. Set in motion by the Society of United Irishmen, an underground organization with links to Paris, the rebellion was eventually crushed by an overwhelming force of arms. In this new, dramatic account, Philip MacDougall shines a light on a little covered aspect of this history: the United Irish plot to capture a number of British warships and the planned use of those vessels in support of the rebellion that broke out in 1798. The means by which those ships were to be taken, not by direct external attack but by mutinous intrigue directed from on board, is fully explored.

While ships blockading the French port of Brest returned to re-victual in Cawsand Bay, with many of the officers on shore leave, it was an ideal time for the plotting of mutinies. United Irishman alongside English and Scottish republicans could safely mix with those on other ships to develop a unified strategy.

This book offers a micro study of how the planned mutiny plot developed and was co-ordinated. Personalities, cliques and idealists are seen as taking leading roles, with attention given to the motivating issues that lay behind those risk takers who knew that failure would result in likely hanging from the yardarm. Based on research from the National Archives, contemporary newspaper reports and the detailed hand written minutes of the courts martial held upon those identified as rebel leaders and some of their supporters (containing the actual words of the people of the lower deck) this is a full and balanced account of the plot which, if successful, would have re-written history.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Illustrations
  • Terminology
  • Preface
  • Prologue
  • PART 1. Pathway to Mutiny
    • Chapter 1. The Ships
    • Chapter 2. The People of the Ships
  • PART 2. Liberty and Revolution
    • Chapter 3. Harsh Laws and Discrimination
    • Chapter 4. The Society of United Irishmen
    • Chapter 5. ‘Mankind are naturally friends to each other’
  • PART 3. Ushant: The Key to Irish Independence
    • Chapter 6. The Blockade of Brest
    • Chapter 7. Bantry Bay
  • PART 4. The Diabolical Spirit of Mutiny
    • Chapter 8. Amelia, Haughty and Adamant
    • Chapter 9. All Not Well Within the Fleet
  • PART 5. For the Sake of the United Irishmen
    • Chapter 10. Captain
    • Chapter 11. Organisation and Leadership
    • Chapter 12. Caesar, Defiance, Glory and Neptune
  • PART 6. All the Officers Must be Put to Death
    • Chapter 13. Cadiz! Our Country
    • Chapter 14. Il a mort pour la liberté
    • Chapter 15. Bloody Mutiny
  • PART 7. The Admiralty Takes its Revenge
    • Chapter 16. Hanging, Transportation and the Lash
    • Chapter 17. Trial by Courts Martial
  • Conclusion What Might Have Been – A Personal View
  • Bibliography
  • Discussion of Sources
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