Essential reading
Over time I will add a list histories of the Irish Yeomanry companies, books written by the men who were there, and more general histories and websites that include the role played by the Yeomanry.
Maurice Fitzgibbon, Arts Under Arms: An University Man in Khaki, 1901.
A detailed and entertaining account of the activities of the 45th (Dublin) Company and the other companies of the 13th Battalion, from enlistment through training, the fighting at Lindley and captivity under the Boer forces.Sharrad H. Gilbert, Rhodesia - And After: Being the Story of the 17th and 18th Battalions of the Imperial Yeomanry in South Africa, 1901.
B. N. Reckitt, The Lindley Affair: A Diary of the Boer War, 1972.
The Hon Sidney Peel, Trooper 8008 I.Y., 1901.
Will Bennett, Absent-Minded Beggars: Volunteers in the Boer War, 1999.
Luke Diver MA, Ireland and the South African War, 1899-1902, Ph.D Thesis, National University of Ireland, Maynooth, 2014.
Journal of the South African Military History Society:
Steve Watt, 'The Lindley Affair: The Capture of the 13th Battalion Imperial Yeomanry by the Boer Forces', Vol.15 No.3 June 2011.
Steve Watt, 'The Imperial Yeomanry' Part 1, Vol.13 No.6 December 2006; Part 2, Vol.14 No.1 June 2007; Part 3, Vol.14 No.2 December 2007.
The Marques of Anglesey FSA, A History of the British Cavalry 1816-1919, Vol.4, 1899-1913, 1993.
The Anglo Boer War website.