The Battle of Sedgemoor
History-
The Battle of Sedgemoor was the last and decisive engagement between the Kingdom of England and rebels led by the Duke of Monmouth during the Monmouth rebellion, fought on 6 July 1685, and took place at Westonzoyland near Bridgwater in Somerset.
The Duke eventually led his troops out of Bridgwater at around 10:00 pm to undertake a night-time attack on the King's army.
They were guided by Richard Godfrey, the servant of a local farmer, along the old Bristol road towards Bawdrip.
With their limited cavalry in the vanguard, they turned south along Bradney Lane and Marsh Lane, and came to the open moor with its deep and dangerous rhynes.
There was a delay while the rhyne was crossed and the first men across startled a royalist patrol.
A shot was fired and a horseman from the patrol galloped off to report to Feversham.
Lord Grey of Warke led the rebel cavalry forward and they were engaged by the King's Regiment of Horse which alerted the rest of the royalist forces.
The superior training of the regular army and their horses enabled them to rout the rebel forces by outflanking them.
After the battle, about 500 of Monmouth's troops were captured and imprisoned in St Mary's Parish Church in Westonzoyland, while others were hunted and shot in the ditches where they were hiding.
More were hanged from gibbets erected along the roadside.
Monmouth escaped from the battlefield with Grey and they headed for the south coast disguised as peasants.
They were captured near Ringwood, Hampshire.
Monmouth was taken to the Tower of London, where he was, after several blows of the axe, beheaded on 15th July 1685
Many of Monmouth's supporters were tried during the Bloody Assizes .
Many were transported abroad, while others were executed by drawing and quartering.
Hauntings -
When you visit here the first thing that you are likely to notice is the two huge trees that seem to be watching over the memorial stone that commemorates the lives lost on both sides.
The stone reads: ‘To the glory of God and in memory of all those who doing the right as they gave it fell in the battle of Sedgemoor 6th July 1685'
The raw emotion of this blood stained battlefield, turned mass burial site can still be felt and not surprisingly, there are spirits here too.
The local farmers have often reported seeing galloping horsemen racing across the field and also eerie disembodied voices urging them to come on over the River Carey!
A ghostly band of soldiers are said to haunt the area around King's Sedgemoor Drain, and some have reported the cries of “Come on over!” floating across the landscape.
Some have also claimed to have seen the shivering form of Monmouth making a cowardly retreat from the battle.
Perhaps one of the most haunting ghost stories of this place is that of the young girl who was forced to look on as her lover was executed after the opposing troops promised he would be spared if he could out run the horses, only to go back on their word when he did just that.
Her heart broken, the girl drowned herself in the river.
Since that time, her spirit has been seen accompanied by the sounds of “running feet, laboured breathing and galloping hooves”.
Source - Wikipedia, History UK
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