Charles Coote

Charles Coote

Sir Charles Coote the younger was the son of Charles Coote and Dorothea Cuffe, the former being a veteran of the battle of Kinsale who subsequently settled in Ireland. The younger Coote became an MP for the Irish Parliament a year before the outbreak of the Irish rebellion of 1641.The elder Charles Coote was active in the supression of the Irish insurgents in 1642, until he was killed in action defending Trim in May 1642. After the death of his father, Charles Coote also led forces against the Irish, but was captured defending a stronghold in the Curragh in Kildare by an Irish army led by Castlehaven. He was released during the 1643 cessation of arms. At this time Coote travelled to England with a number of Protestants to agitate for harsh anti-catholic measures and an end to the cessation. In Dublin Archbishop Ussher condemned the extremism of Coote and his fellows, but Coote was unbending. The King however ignored these demands and so Coote joined the Parliamentarians [Meehan, Confederation of Kilkenny,pg 101] .

Coote was appointed commander of Connaught by the Parliamentarians in 1645. Operating from west Ulster he temporarily overran the North-West of the province over the next two years. The execution of Charles I in 1649 Brought local Protestant and Scottish forces in Ulster to join the duke of Ormond’s royalist coalition, thus isolating Coote. He defended Derry against a protracted siege (March-August 1649) with the unlikely assistance of the Ulster army under Owen Roe O'Neill. After the New Model Army under Cromwell captured Drogheda, a force of several thousand Parliamentarians under Robert Venables headed North into Ulster, where Coote joined Venables to destroy the Scottish Ulster Royalists at the Battle of Lisnagarvey. By early 1650 however the Irish Ulster army (now under Heber MacMahon, as O'Neill had died a few months earlier) became active once more, and Coote was again forced on the defensive. After being reinforced, he advanced on the Irish army at Scarrifholis and routed them, killing over 2,000 soldiers and taking no prisoners.

After this, Cootes army attempted to take the formidable fortress of Charlemont, which was defended by the remenants of the Ulster army, but his soldiers suffered huge casulties before the stronghold surrendered. Having largely cleared Ulster, in June of 1651 he advanced on Athlone from the North-West, evading a blocking force. Through this movement the town was gained; the town contained a stone bridge over the Shannon and this action thus opened up Connaught to the Parliamentarian army for the first time. He besieged Galway in the winter of 1651 and it surrendered in April 1652.

Coote inherited the substantial plantation lands of his father in the midlands of Ireland. In December 1659 Coote took part in a coup against the government, seizing Dublin Castle. Charles II enobled him Earl of Mountrath in 1660 as a reward for his support however he died the following year.

Footnotes

*fnb|1 Meehan, Confederation of Kilkenny, pg 101

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