On the last day of
March, 1921, the Third West Cork Brigade flying column, led by Tom Barry, attacked
and destroyed Rosscarbery RIC Barracks.
Having silently entered
the village shortly after 1.00 a.m. they took up a position near the post office,
about thirty yards from the barracks which was surrounded by barbed wire. The upper
windows of the buildings opposite the barracks were then occupied and the rear of the building was also covered. A
small party of I.R.A. men then removed
their boots and carried a 400 lb. bomb, which had been constructed by an ex-British Royal Engineer,
to the front door of the barracks.When the device
exploded most of the blast went outwards and
failed to breach the doorway as had been expected. As the dust settled the garrison opened fire and a fierce battle ensued
between the police and their attackers, with both sides
using rifles and Mills bombs.
After two hours the police had been driven
out of the front ground floor rooms into
those at the back but eventually were forced to the top storey of the barracks
where they continued their defence. When the IRA exploded two smaller bombs in the ground floor rooms the
ceilings collapsed. The floors then
caught fire and within minutes the
entire building was an inferno. Forced
into a single back room, the police garrison had no alternative but to surrender. Before doing so they threw their weapons and ammunition into the flames so
that they would not fall into the
hands of the IRA.
Sergeant Ambrose Shea and Constables Bowles were killed in the attack and it is believed
that and Constable Kinsella died of his wounds some time later. Eight other constables
were wounded. The
police lowered their more seriously wounded members
through a back window and left the barracks by the same route. The bodies of Sergeant Shea and Constables Bowles could not be reached as they lay in the ground floor of the burning barracks where they had been killed early in the attack. The surviving RIC men were not fired on as they took shelter in, amongst other
places, the local Convent of Mercy.
The I.R.A. suffered
no casualties during the attack and dawn was breaking as the retreated from the
town. From then until the truce over two months later Rosscarbery was free of
British forces.
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