
In the shadow of a windswept hill in County Wexford, 20,000 Irish souls—farmers, priests, and firebrands—clutched their pikes and stared down the barrels of the British Empire's cannons. It was June 21, 1798. Dawn broke with thunderous grapeshot, shattering the fragile dream of a free Ireland. This was no mere skirmish; it was the desperate roar of a nation rising against chains forged in bigotry and blood.
Drawing on forgotten diaries, battlefield archaeology, and the haunting strains of rebel ballads, Vinegar Hill plunges you into the heart of the 1798 Irish Rebellion's bloodiest hour. Witness Father John Murphy, the fire-eyed priest who turned plowshares into swords, leading a ragtag army of 16,000 against General Gerard Lake's ironclad legions. Feel the chaos of the Slaney River bridge, where a fleeting stand bought thousands their lives—only for the hills to echo with the screams of the fallen, their bodies piled like cordwood in reprisal's wake.
But this is more than a tale of defeat. Amid the smoke and slaughter, Vinegar Hill unearths the unyielding spirit that birthed Irish nationalism: the women who mended wounds and hurled stones, the Protestant-Catholic alliance that defied divide-and-rule tyranny, and the Scullogue Gap escape that scattered embers of resistance across the emerald isle. From the mud-churned camps of Enniscorthy to the gallows of Tullow, where leaders met their end with defiant hymns, discover how one hill became the anvil on which the forge of freedom was hammered.Gripping as a midnight raid, scholarly as the digs unearthing rebel bones, Vinegar Hill: The Last Stand of the Wexford Rebels is your portal to a rebellion that still whispers in Ireland's winds. Perfect for fans of The Year of Liberty or Pale Kings and Princes, this vivid chronicle reminds us: in the face of empire, even the vanquished can etch eternity.
Available now in ebook format — reignite the flame of 1798
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