Battery, Ranelagh, Co. Westmeath

Co. Westmeath |

Coastal Defenses

Battery, Ranelagh, Co. Westmeath

A D-shaped earthwork sitting in rough pasture beside the River Shannon is not the kind of monument that announces itself.

There is no interpretive panel, no ruin with a name people recognise, just a tree-covered bank of earth and stone, perhaps seventy metres at its longest, that once pointed artillery westward across the Irish midlands. What makes it quietly odd is the logic of its existence: a fortification built on the edge of Athlone in the 1790s, watching for a French invasion that never came.

The battery was constructed around 1795 by the British Army on land known as Ordnance Grounds, at a point where the Shannon flows south from Lough Ree into Athlone town. The Athlone Canal runs roughly forty metres to the west. The site sits at about forty-five metres above sea level, and its position, just one hundred and fifty metres from the river, was clearly chosen with the waterway in mind. A free-standing battery of this kind typically consisted of a raised gun platform protected by an earthen parapet, here defined by a ditch and two ramps forming the characteristic D-shape, with the straight face to the east and a polygonal western face made up of three equal linear sections. That western orientation is significant: the structure was designed specifically to defend against attack coming from the west, meaning any force that might advance along the river corridor from the direction of Connacht. The threat driving all of this was France. During the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the possibility of a French landing in the west of Ireland was taken seriously by British military planners, particularly after the attempted Hoche expedition at Bantry Bay in 1796. By 1837, when the first edition Ordnance Survey six-inch map was made, the battery was still prominent enough to be annotated by name, and a triangular structure labelled "Guard Ho." is shown straddling its straight eastern side. No trace of that building survives today.

The earthwork is still visible, now softened by tree cover, and a related earthwork lies roughly one hundred metres to the north within the same former ordnance grounds. A separate military complex sits about five hundred metres to the south-south-west, suggesting the battery was once part of a broader defensive arrangement along this stretch of the Shannon.

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