Battle of Dalnaspidal

The Battle of Dalnaspidal occurred on 19 July 1654 during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. It was one of the last engagements in the war bringing an end to the Royalist rising of 1653 to 1654.

Battle of Dalnaspidal
Part of Wars of the Three Kingdoms

Dalnaspidal
Date19 July 1654
Location
Dalnaspidal near Loch Garry, Scotland
Result English Parliamentarian victory
Belligerents
Scottish Royalists
Clan MacGregor
Clan Robertson
England
Clan Campbell
Commanders and leaders
Earl of Glencairn
John Middleton
Sir Thomas Morgan
Archibald Campbell
Strength
1,200 foot
800 horse[1]
Unknown
Casualties and losses
300 horse captured.[1] Unknown
Dalnaspidal
Scotland

Prelude

The Earl of Glencairn raised the Clan MacGregor from Rannoch. He would have no difficulty recruiting them because one of their opponents was the Earl of Argyll, a Campbell, one of their hereditary enemies. Alexander, the 12th chief of Clan Robertson led his men from Fea Corrie. Both forces met above Annat and marched up the old path to Loch Garry.

Battle

On the evening of 19 July 1654, Thomas Morgan surprised John Middleton at Dalnaspidal near Loch Garry on the Drumochter Pass. The Royalist horse had become separated from the foot. When Morgan's superior forces advanced towards them, most of Middleton's cavalry fled, leaving the infantry unprotected. As Morgan's cavalry continued to advance, the Royalist infantry also turned and ran.[2]

Aftermath

The fight at Dalnaspidal broke the Royalist insurrection in the Highlands. Although wounded, Middleton managed to escape into the mountains, but he was never able to gather a substantial force again.[3] Monck wanted all the leaders of the uprising put to death, but the Protector and Council promised a pardon to all those who submitted (see Cromwell's Act of Grace). William, Earl of Glencairn surrendered to General Monck in September 1654. Middleton escaped back to the Continent and rejoined Charles II at Cologne early in 1655.

Citations

  1. Baker 2005, p. 65.
  2. Baker 2005, pp. 65–66.
  3. Baker 2005, p. 66.

References

  • Baker, Helen (August 2005), The Glencairn Uprising, 1653-54 (PDF), Department of Linguistics, Lancaster University for their Newsbooks at Lancaster project.

Further reading

  • Plant, David (28 February 2007), Glencairn's Uprising, British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website, retrieved 6 September 2013
  • Plant, David (7 December 2009), John Middleton, c.1608-74, British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website, retrieved 6 September 2013
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.