John Kelly of Killanne

{{short description|Leader in the Irish Rebellion of 1798}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}

John Kelly (Kelly of Killanne) (1773 – c. 25 June 1798){{cite web |url=http://www.kellyclanireland.com/kellys-from-around-the-country/kelly-s-of-leinster/john-kelly-of-killane |title=John Kelly of Killane |website=Kelly Clan Ireland |access-date=25 June 2019 }} lived in the town of Killanne in the parish of Rathnure, west of Enniscorthy, in County Wexford in Ireland, and was a United Irish leader who fought in the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Kelly was obviously well known to rebels and loyalists alike during the short duration of the Wexford Rebellion but very little is known of him outside this time. Research near the rebellion's bicentennial showed that Kelly was a churchwarden at the local St. Ann's for many years before the rebellion.{{cite news |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/many-myths-dispelled-during-1798-anniversary-1.227744 |title=Many myths dispelled during 1798 anniversary |date=21 December 1998 |newspaper=The Irish Times |department=Culture |access-date=28 November 2024}} He was one of the leaders of the rebel victory at the Battle of Three Rocks which led to the capture of Wexford town but was later seriously wounded while leading a rebel column at the Battle of New Ross.

Robert Gogan{{cite book |title=50 Great Irish Fighting Songs |publisher=Music Ireland |year=2005}} describes how Kelly was under orders from the Wexford commander Bagenal Harvey to attack the military outposts around New Ross but on no account to attack the town itself. The rebels outnumbered the government forces and so Harvey sent a messenger to give them an opportunity to surrender. The messenger was shot while carrying a white flag. This angered the rebels who began the attack without receiving the official order from Harvey. Kelly's column of 800 men attacked and broke through Ross's "Three Bullet Gate" and proceeded into the town itself. After initial success, they were eventually beaten back by the government forces and Kelly was wounded in the leg. He was moved to Wexford to recuperate but after the fall of Wexford on 21 June was dragged from his bed, tried and sentenced to death. He was hanged on 25 June 1798 along with seven other rebel leaders on Wexford bridge, after which his body was decapitated, the trunk thrown into the River Slaney and the head kicked through the streets before being set on display on a spike.{{cite book |page=255 |title=The People's Rising, Wexford 1798 |location=Dublin |year=1995 |first=Nicholas |last=Furlong |ISBN=0-7171-2323-5 }}

=Lyrics=

What's the news, what's the news oh my bold Shelmalier

With your long-barrelled guns from the sea

Say what wind from the south brings a messenger here

With the hymn of the dawn for the free

Goodly news, goodly news do I bring youth of Forth

Goodly news shall you hear Bargy man

For the boys march at dawn from the south to the north

Led by Kelly the boy from Killane

Tell me who is that giant with the gold curling hair

He who rides at the head of your band

Seven feet is his height with some inches to spare

And he looks like a king in command

Ah my boys that's the pride of the bold Shelmaliers

'Mongst greatest of heroes a man

Fling your beavers aloft and give three ringing cheers

For John Kelly the boy from Killane

Enniscorthy's in flames and old Wexford is won

And tomorrow the Barrow we will cross

On a hill o'er the town we have planted a gun

That will batter the gateway to Ross

All the Forth men and Bargy men will march o'er the heath

With brave Harvey to lead in the van

But the foremost of all in that grim gap of death

Will be Kelly the boy from Killane

But the gold sun of freedom grew darkened at Ross

And it set by the Slaney's red waves

And poor Wexford stripped naked, hung high on a cross

With her heart pierced by traitors and slaves

Glory-o, glory-o to her brave sons who died

For the cause of long down-trodden man

Glory-o to Mount Leinster's own darling and pride

Dauntless Kelly the boy from Killane

See also

References

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