
Put a guard on alcohol and commissioned a hundred green, white and orange (to ensure they didn’t attempt any rash action that might lead to violence) Making regular patrols placed a permanent guard to monitor the senior officers In firm control, the mutineers doubled the guard distributed the task of The Union flag was removed from a bungalow occupied by the rebels and replaced with a hastily sewn Tricolour. McGowan, Paddy Sweeny and James Davies as the other members. They elected seven soldiers to be their committee: Joe Hawes and Patrick Gogarty – two of the original protesters – along with John Flannery as messenger to the officers and Jimmy Moran, J.A. A rebel muster took place with around 300 participants. Urging Hawes to lead them, the crowd of Connaught Rangers released all the protesters from the guardroom and rallied as many other soldiers as they could. Rebel British soldiers form a committee and take over the Jullundur barracks The other senior officers, along with NCOs hurried away as the rank and file soldiers realised they had the upper hand and could take over the whole barracks. Instead, they swarmed over to Hawes and his friends, leaving Deacon distraught. Humiliatingly for Deacon, when he now attempted to order B Company to move on, they refused to leave. Hawes, a private and therefore on the lowest rung of the military hierarchy, nevertheless stepped forward, uncowed and defiant, and confronted the senior British officer: ‘All the honours in the Connaught flag are for England and there are none for Ireland but there is going to be one today and it will be the greatest of them all.’ A resulting attempt to isolate Hawes was thrown back by the mutineers marching off in good order back to the prison with their hero safely among them. The colonel then offered to forget the whole matter if the protestors returned to their bungalows. The guardroom today, where the mutiny of the Irishmen in the British army is still remembered in India.ĭeacon then had the protestors line up in front of the sitting men and proceeded to harangue the rebels, attempting to shame them with the great history of the Connaught Rangers working himself up to tears with the regiment’s proud record all their various honours.

Mutiny in a sentence plus#
With that action, the discipline of the remainder of the company shattered and twenty-nine more members of C Company, plus the (armed) duty guard himself joined the protest. Another soldier stepped out of line, Jimmy Moran, and announced that he wanted to join his comrades in the guard room. This left forty-six soldiers of the company who formed up for parade at nine a.m., with Hawes, Gogarty, Sweeney and Lally conspicuously absent. At that time, half of C Company, fifty men, were away in the Solon barracks (guarding an important route from Delhi to Simla). Soon after the protest had begun, excited groups of soldiers gathered here and there in barracks talking about the stand being made by their four comrades. This initial action, however, rapidly changed from being one where a few individuals would prefer imprisonment and the risk of execution to continuing in their role as British soldiers to a full-blown mutiny of hundreds of men.

Then reporting to the guardroom, the protesters voluntarily asked to be arrested for being ‘in sympathy with Ireland.’ Joe Hawes and the start of the mutiny of the Connaught Rangers in Jullundur 1920 If they were going to die, they wanted to the true reason to be made known to their families. The four men wanted Flannery to have their addresses in Ireland in case their protest would led to their immediate execution. Massacre of Indian civilians had been carried out by British Indian soldiers less Their garrison was only ninety kilometres from Amritsar, where a Point that they were doing in India what the Black and Tans were doing in He had spoken about this with hisĬolleagues (plus another man, William Daly) the night before and had made the Proclaimed by troops with bayonets drawn.

Hawes had been on leave in Clare in October 1919 and had seen a hurling match Joe Hawes, one of the leaders of the mutiny, in the uniform of the Munster Fusiliers
