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Selton Hill ambush

Selton Hill Ambush
Part of the Irish War of Independence
Date 11 March 1921
Location between Mohill and Fenagh, County Leitrim
53°59′24″N 7°51′07″W / 53.990°N 7.852°W / 53.990; -7.852
Result RIC victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Royal Irish Constabulary
(Auxiliary Division)
Flag of Ireland.svg Irish Republican Army
(Leitrim Brigade)
Commanders and leaders
Thomas Gore-Hickman (RIC) Seán Connolly (IRA)
Strength
unknown unknown
Casualties and losses
none 6 dead
1 informer later executed by IRA
Selton Hill ambush is located in island of Ireland
Selton Hill ambush
Location within island of Ireland

The Selton Hill Ambush took place on 11 March 1921, during the Irish War of Independence. An Irish Republican Army (IRA) flying column was ambushed by members of the RIC Auxiliary Division at Selton Hill (a.k.a. Seltan Hill), County Leitrim. Six IRA officers of the Leitrim Brigade were killed.

Seán Connolly was an IRA activist from County Longford, but he was also used by IRA GHQ to organise surrounding areas; first County Roscommon and then County Leitrim. When Michael Collins ordered Connolly into the county, he warned that it was "the most treacherous county in Ireland". As Connolly was running a training camp at Selton Hill in early 1921, his position was given to the RIC. The RIC District Inspector, Thomas Gore-Hickman, had been alerted to Connolly's position by a local doctor who had served in the British Army. The doctor had reportedly been told of the training camp by a local member of the Orange Order.

The events at Selton Hill took place one week after the Sheemore ambush, in which British troops suffered several casualties and at least one fatality. At Selton Hill, a large force of RIC and Auxiliaires, based in Mohill, surrounded and then attacked the IRA camp on 11 March. Six IRA volunteers were killed. The RIC suffered no losses. The IRA dead were Connolly, Seamus Wrynne, Joseph O'Beirne (or Beirne), John Reilly, Joseph Reilly, and Capt ME Baxter.

Ernie O'Malley later claimed the volunteers' bodies were "taken to Mohill by soldiers who shouted 'fresh meat!' as they were driving through the town". O'Malley was quoted as saying "Men from the Bedfordshire Regiment were seen by a badly wounded IRA officer, who survived, to use rifle butts on the skulls of two wounded men." He also stated that the location of the column was given to the local D/I of the RIC by a doctor who had been in the British Army, who received the information by a local Orangeman. The IRA officer who survived was Bernie Sweeney, from Ballinamore, who survived by hiding in a drain, where the cold water prevented him bleeding to death. He was rescued and hidden from the RIC by locals.


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