Battle of Sedgemoor

Battle of Sedgemoor
Part of the Monmouth Rebellion

Battle of Sedgemoor memorial
Date6 July 1685 (O.S)
LocationWestonzoyland Near Bridgwater, Somerset, England
Result Decisive Royal victory
Belligerents
Royal army of James II Rebel army of James Scott
Commanders and leaders

Louis de Duras,
John Churchill,

Henry FitzRoy
Duke of Monmouth,
Lord Grey of Warke,
Benjamin Hewling
Strength
3,000 4,000
Casualties and losses
200 1,300 killed
320 executed
750 transported

The Battle of Sedgemoor was fought on 6 July 1685[1] and took place at Westonzoyland near Bridgwater in Somerset, England.

It was the final battle of the Monmouth Rebellion and followed a series of skirmishes around south-west England between the forces of James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, and troops loyal to James II. Victory went to the royalists and about 500 prisoners fell into their hands. Monmouth escaped from the battlefield but was later captured and taken to London for trial and execution.

Many of Monmouth's supporters were tried during the Bloody Assizes. Many were transported abroad, while others were executed by drawing and quartering.

Background

It was the final battle of the Monmouth Rebellion between the troops of the rebel James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, who was attempting to seize the English throne from his uncle James II of England. James II had succeeded to the throne on the death of his brother Charles II on 2 February 1685; James Scott was Charles' illegitimate son.

After Monmouth landed from the Netherlands at Lyme Regis in Dorset,[2] there had been a series of marches and skirmishes throughout Dorset and Somerset. Eventually Monmouth's poorly equipped army was pushed back to the Somerset Levels, becoming hemmed in at Bridgwater on 3 July. He ordered his troops to fortify the town. The force was made up of around 3,500,[3] mostly nonconformist, artisans and farmer workers armed with farm tools (such as pitchforks).[2]

The royalist troops led by Louis de Duras, 2nd Earl of Feversham, and Colonel John Churchill were camped behind the Bussex Rhine at Westonzoyland. The infantry forces included 500 men of the 1st Regiment of Foot (Royal Scots), two battalions of the 1st or King's Royal Regiment of Guards (Grenadier Guards) led by Henry FitzRoy, 1st Duke of Grafton, 600 men of the Second Regiment of Guards and five companies of the Queen Consort's Regiment (Kings Own Royal Border Regiment). The Horse and Foot, the Royal Train of Artillery was camped along the road to Bridgwater. The Royal Cavalry, with seven troops, 420 men of the Earl of Oxfords, the Kings Regiment of Horse (Blues and Royals), the King's Own Royal Dragoons and three troops of the King's Horse Guards (Lifeguards) made up the army.[4]

The battle

The Duke eventually led his untrained and ill-equipped troops out of Bridgwater at around 10:00 pm to undertake a night-time attack on the King's army. They were guided by Richard Godfrey, the servant of a local farmer, along the old Bristol road towards Bawdrip. With their limited cavalry in the vanguard they turned south along Bradney Lane and Marsh Lane, and came to the open moor with its deep and dangerous rhynes.[5]

James Scott, the rebel commander

There was a delay while the rhyne was crossed and the first men across startled a royalist patrol. A shot was fired and a horseman from the patrol galloped off to report to Feversham. Lord Grey of Warke led the rebel cavalry forward and they were engaged by the King's Regiment of Horse which alerted the rest of the royalist forces.[4] The superior training of the regular army and their horses routed the rebel forces by outflanking them.

Capture and aftermath

Monmouth escaped the battlefield with Grey and headed for the southern coast, disguised as peasants. They were captured near Ringwood, Hampshire.[4] He was taken to the Tower of London, where he was, after several blows of the axe, beheaded.[2]

A letter written by the 1st Earl of Shaftesbury in 1787 provides more detail as to Monmouth's capture:[6]

The tradition of the neighbourhood is this: viz. That after the defeat of the Duke of Monmouth at Sedgemoor, near Bridgewater, he rode, accompanied by Lord Grey, to Woodyates, where they quitted their horses; and the Duke having changed clothes with a peasant, endeavoured to make his way across the country to Christchurch. Being closely pursued, he made for the Island, and concealed himself in a ditch which was overgrown with fern and underwood. When his pursuers came up, an old woman gave information of his being in the Island, and of her having seen him filling his pocket with peas. The Island was immediately surrounded by soldiers, who passed the night there, and threatened to fire the neighbouring cotts. As they were going away, one of them espied the skirt of the Duke's coat, and seized him. The soldier no sooner knew him, than he burst into tears, and reproached himself for the unhappy discovery. The Duke when taken was quite exhausted with fatigue and hunger, having had no food since the battle but the peas which he had gathered in the field. The ash tree is still standing under which the Duke was apprehended, and is marked with the initials of many of his friends who afterwards visited the spot.
The family of the woman who betrayed him were ever after holden in the greatest detestation, and are said to have fallen into decay, and to have never thriven afterwards. The house where she lived, which overlooked the spot, has since fallen down. It was with the greatest difficulty that any one could be made to inhabit it.

After the battle about 500 of Monmouth's troops were captured and imprisoned in St Mary's Parish Church in Westonzoyland, while others were hunted and shot in the ditches where they were hiding. More were hung from gibbets erected along the roadside. The royalist troops were rewarded with Feversham being made a Knight of the Garter, Churchill promoted to Major-General and Henry Shires of the artillery receiving a Knighthood. Other soldiers, particularly those that had been wounded, received allowances ranging from £5 to £80. Some of the wounded were amongst the first to be treated at the newly opened Royal Hospital Chelsea.[4]

The king sent Lord Chief Justice Jeffreys to round up the Duke's supporters throughout the south west and try them in the Bloody Assizes at Taunton Castle and elsewhere. About 1,300 people were found guilty, many being transported abroad, while some were executed by drawing and quartering.[7] Daniel Defoe, who would later write the novel Robinson Crusoe, had taken part in the uprising and battle. He was heavily fined by Jeffreys, losing much of his land and wealth. Two brothers Benjamin Hewling, a commander of a troop of horse, and William Hewling, lieutenant of foot, were among those condemned to death.[8][9][10] Benjamin Hewling was hanged rather than drawn and quartered following a payment of £1000 by his sister.[11][12]

James II was overthrown in a coup d'état three years later, in the Glorious Revolution.

The Battle of Sedgemoor is often referred to as the last battle fought on English soil, but this depends on the definition of battle, for which there are different interpretations. Other contenders for the title of last English battle include: the Battle of Preston in Lancashire, which was fought on 14 November 1715, during the First Jacobite Rebellion; the Second Jacobite Rebellion's Clifton Moor Skirmish, near Penrith, Cumberland, on 18 December 1745; and the skirmish known as the Battle of Graveney Marsh in Kent on 27 September 1940. The Battle of Culloden fought on Drumossie Moor to the north east of Inverness on 16 April 1746 was the last pitched battle fought on British soil.[13]

Cultural references

The Battle of Sedgemoor is depicted in detail at the climax of plot in Arthur Conan Doyle's historical adventure novel Micah Clarke.

The Battle also appears in Blackmore's Lorna Doone, where the hero arrives on the battlefield as the battle is finishing, and is then escorted home by King's soldiers to safety.

Likewise, The Royal Changeling (1998), by John Whitbourn, describes the rebellion with some fantasy elements added. The Battle of Sedgemoor both opens and concludes the novel.

The Sealed Knot re-enactment society have re-enacted important parts of the rebellion's campaign, on the 300th anniversary in 1985, and again in 2005. For the first re-enactment, the folk trio Strawhead produced an album of various songs from the time and written especially, entitled 'Sedgemoor'. This album is often regarded as one of their finest.

A collection of poems (Sedgemoor) exploring this crucial, but neglected, episode in English history was written by poet and academic Malcolm Povey and published by Smokestack Books in 2006. The poems move between 1685 and the present, from England to Kosovo and Iraq, highlighting "the continuing cruelties of empire and hierarchy".

Povey's book received widespread praise, especially for its originality: "Not many poets try something as different and ambitious as this. It deserves to be widely read."[14]

The battle is commemorated in Val Wake's poem "Dead Willows Mourn". Val Wake, the Australian born journalist and author, lived in Westonzoyland from 1973 to 1979.[15]

A mural depicting the battle can be found on display at Sedgemoor motorway services on the North carriageway of the M5.

Events surrounding the battle occupy the first few chapters of Rafael Sabatini's novel Captain Blood.

The battle is also included/mentioned in the beginning of the 1935 movie Captain Blood, starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland.

References

  1. "Battle of Sedgemoor". UK Battlefields resource centre. Archived from the original on 4 December 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  2. 1 2 3 "Monmouth's rebellion and the Battle of Sedgemoor". Historic UK. Archived from the original on 2 November 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  3. "Battle of Sedgemoor". UK Battlefields Resource Centre. Archived from the original on 4 June 2008. Retrieved 21 June 2008.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Whiles, John (1985). Sedgemoor 1685 (2nd ed.). Chippenham: Picton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-948251-00-9.
  5. Vale, Jessica. "Monmouth Rebellion - Battle of Sedgemoor". Somerset Timeline. Retrieved 21 June 2008.
  6. "History of Monmouth Close". Notes and Queries. 6: 82. December 1849. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  7. "The Battle of Sedgemoor". Britain Express. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  8. Critchley, Macdonald (1998). John Hughlings Jackson: The Father of English Neurology. OUP. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-19-512339-5.
  9. "Monmouth Rebellion — Bloody Assize". Somerset Timeline. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  10. Toulmin, Joshua (1822). The history of Taunton, in the county of Somerset. Printed for J. Poole. p. 512.
  11. Lavenas, Tilly. "The Last English Uprising". Dorset History. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  12. Chung, Sunny. "The Bloody Assizes". The Glorious Revolution. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  13. "The Making of the Union". Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  14. Review of Sedgemoor in the Penniless Press, issue 24
  15. "Dead Willows Morn". AuthorsDen.com. Retrieved 25 February 2009.

Further reading

Coordinates: 51°06′56″N 2°55′42″W / 51.11556°N 2.92833°W / 51.11556; -2.92833

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