A number of English settlers, including a…
February 1642 CE
A number of English settlers, including a Dr. John Maxwell, the Protestant bishop of Killala, had surrendered to Irish authorities at Castlebar, in the hope of saving their lives.
After staying at Shrule Castle in the company of the third Viscount Mayo for more than a week, the group is given a safe-conduct escort with orders to take them fourteen miles toward the border of County Mayo and County Galway, where other forces will assume the escort duty and escort them on to the Galway fort.
After provisioning the Maxwell family with horses, Lord Mayo sets out for Cong on February 18, 1642, Mayo hands over his prisoners at Shrule, on the border, as his authority only exists in County Mayo.
Edmond Bourke, an Irish Catholic soldier who leads the escort duty, and a cousin of Lord Mayo, then directs his men to begin killing their settler charges.
Estimates of the dead range from less than thirty to as many as sixty-five.
Survivors are taken to Headford by monks from Ross Errilly.
Though Mayo tries to save some prisoners, and has to be driven away, he will be executed in 1652 by an English Cromwellian inquiry into the killings that is held after the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland.