Jemima Nicholas


Jemima Nicholas, also known as Jemima Fawr, was a Welsh heroine during the 1797 Battle of Fishguard.

Early life

Jemima Nicholas was the daughter of William and Elinor Nicholas of Llanrhian, and was baptised in Mathry in 1755. She was a cobbler or a cobbler's wife.

The Battle of Fishguard

In 1797, 1400 French troops, many of them drawn from prisons, sailed from Camaret and landed at Llanwnda in Wales. Armed with a pitchfork, Nicholas led a group of women and rounded up twelve French soldiers who had been drinking, and held them captive inside a locked church overnight. The French surrendered shortly afterwards at the Royal Oak. She was awarded a lifetime pension for her efforts.
A Jemima Nicholas was also involved with rioting in Fishguard in 1824, though she was not convicted of any crime.

Legacy

She died at the age of 82, in 1832. Her grave in Fishguard was marked with a plaque in 1897, on the occasion of the invasion's centennial. She is featured in the Last Invasion Tapestry commissioned by the Fishguard Arts Society. In 2019, a hat said to have belonged to Jemima NIcholas sold to one of her brother's descendants at a charity auction, for ₤5000.
The town of Fishguard had an official Jemima Nicholas re-enactor, Yvonne Fox, until her death in 2010; A new Jemima, Jacqui Scarr, was named in 2013. A children's book about Nicholas, Jemima Nicholas: Heroine of the Fishguard Invasion by Sian Lewis, was published in 2012, as part of a series on Welsh women's history.