Battle of Tadcaster

Battle of Tadcaster
Part of the First English Civil War
Date7 December 1642
Location
Tadcaster, Yorkshire
53°53′07″N 1°15′43″W / 53.8852°N 1.262°W / 53.8852; -1.262
Result Royalist victory
Belligerents
Royalists Parliamentarians
Commanders and leaders
Earl of Newcastle Ferdinando Fairfax, Lord Fairfax
Strength
c. 4,000 900–1,500
Tadcaster is located in North Yorkshire
Tadcaster
Tadcaster
Tadcaster within North Yorkshire

The Battle of Tadcaster took place during the First English Civil War on 7 December 1642, when a Royalist force attacked the Parliamentarian garrison of Tadcaster, Yorkshire, which was held by between 900 and 1,500 soldiers under the command of Ferdinando Fairfax, Lord Fairfax. The Earl of Newcastle marched out of York on 6 December, and split his force of 6,000 into two; he took 4,000 infantry down the main York–Tadcaster road to attack the town from the east, while sending a deputy, the Earl of Newport, with a further 1,500 to circle around and trap the Parliamentarians by attacking from the north-west.

Newcastle's infantry engaged the town on the morning of 7 December, but after some initial minor incursions, the battle settled into an exchange of musket fire. Newport's detachment never joined the battle. Fairfax was nevertheless forced to retreat overnight, as he was running short of gunpowder, and Newcastle occupied the town the following day. He subsequently garrisoned a number of nearby towns, and cut Fairfax off from the West Riding of Yorkshire.


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