Geneva Barracks

Geneva Barracks
Beairic na Ginéive
Passage East
Much of the remaining stone work can be seen
Site information
TypeBarracks
Location
Geneva Barracks
Location within Ireland
Coordinates52°13′00″N 6°59′00″W / 52.21667°N 6.98333°W / 52.21667; -6.98333
Site history
Built1783
Built forWar Office
In use1783-1824

Geneva Barracks (Irish: Beairic na Ginéive) in County Waterford, Ireland, was a barracks created in 1783 by converting a settlement which had been created for an 18th-century colony (New Geneva) of disaffected citizens of Geneva following the Geneva Revolution of 1782. Built near Passage East, the colony was commissioned by the Irish Parliament and approved by the Crown. After the Genevans abandoned their plans to settle in Waterford, the colony became a military barracks instead. During the Irish Rebellion of 1798, the barracks was transformed into a holding centre for captured United Irishmen rebels, many of whom were executed, transported or conscripted. Today, the only remains of New Geneva are its ruined walls in a grassy field.