- Captain Gallagher
Captain Gallagher (died 1818) was an Irish highwayman who, as one of the later
Irish Rapparees , led a bandit group in the hills of the Irish countryside during the late 18th century.Born in
Bonniconlon ,County Mayo he lived with his aunt inDerryronane, Swinford for much of his early life and raised near the woods ofBarnalyra . As he reached early adulthood, he and three or four others began raiding mail coaches as well as wealthy landowners and travelers throughout eastern Mayo and parts of southernCounty Sligo and westernCounty Roscommon .His attacks on landowners were especially widely known and, in one reported incident, Gallagher and his men raided the home of an extremely unpopular landlord in
Killasser and forced him to eat half a dozen eviction notices he had recently drawn up for nearly half a dozen tenant farmers before escaping with silver and other valuables.Although successfully evading British patrols for some time, he was finally apprehended by authorities in the parish of
Coolcarney (or possiblyAttymass ) near the foothills of theOx Mountains while recovering from an illness at a friend's home during Christmas.He had been informed on by a neighbor whom Gallagher had formerly helped after sending a message of Gallagher's wereabouts to the British commanding officer at
Foxford . Immediately sending for reinforcements fromBallina ,Castlebar andSwinford , a force of 200 soldiers was sent after Gallagher and, upon their arrival, proceeded to surround the home where the highwayman had been staying. Gallagher, by then in poor health and not wishing to endanger his host or his family, surrendered to the British. Taken back to Foxford, he was tried and convicted before being taken to Castlebar where he was executed.Shortly before his execution, he had claimed to the British commanding officer that his treasure had been hidden under a rock in the woods of Barnalyra. After Gallagher's execution, the officer led several cavalryman to Barnalyra and, upon a long search of thousands of rocks within the area, they reportedly recovered a jewel hilted sword. It has been speculated that Gallagher may have been hoping to lead them to the site in the hopes his men would be able to rescue him from their hideout near the Derryronane-Curryane border although the treasure was never recovered.
External links
* [http://www.stand-and-deliver.org.uk/highwaymen/gallagher.htm Stand and Deliver! - Captain Gallagher]
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