The outbreak of the
United Irish rebellion in May 1798 achieved its greatest success in
County Wexford and for a time
County Waterford was threatened. However, the
rebel defeat at
New Ross on 5 June prevented the break-out of Wexford rebels and discouraged Waterford rebels from taking to the field. The barracks then became a temporary holding centre for rebels and never held less than 1,000 prisoners by the summer of 1798. The prison at Geneva Barracks quickly became notorious for its atrocious conditions and ill treatment of prisoners. P.M. Egan describes Geneva and the story related by Mary Muldoon in his 1895 book
Guide to Waterford: Upon closer examination finding, as it is alleged, the remains of the blood of the numerous heads which were stuck on these walls, spoken of as still to be observed, the interest attached to the place becomes rather intense. Going among the peasantry of the neighbourhood, we were not long in having our ears regaled with the almost breathless and weird tale of Mary Muldoon. 'Well, 'avourneen, a fine young man who drove into the barracks in '98, and made join the sogers. The poor fellow didn't like the iday of goin' agin his own kith and kin, and maybe some day rise a gun to shoot of 'em. So he asked the officer, was there nothing to keep him but the high wall built all round. The officer, jokin' I suppose, said if he got over that wall he'd give him his liberty. So would that, he made one spring, and up on the wall wud him. Well wasn't that officer a bad fellow, he up wud his gun and shot the poor boy on the wall, and many a day after his poor mother, a widow, came to see where his blood was spilt on the same wall, where it remains to the present day'. Most prisoners held who were not sentenced to death and executed were
transported to
Australia or
impressed into the
Royal Navy. However, emissaries of the
King of Prussia were allowed to select the fittest men from among the prisoners to serve in the
Prussian Army in part as payment for services rendered by his
Hessians auxiliaries in suppressing the rebellion.
Thomas Cloney, one of the rebel leaders at the battles of
Three Rocks,
New Ross and
Foulksmills, was confined at Geneva Barracks while under sentence of death which was later commuted to exile by General
Lord Cornwallis. He later claimed that the scars of the manacles put on him during his time in New Geneva were visible decades later. The barracks gradually fell into disuse in the years following the end of the
Napoleonic Wars and were finally closed in 1824. Today only the outer walls and some partially buried remains give note to the impressive size of the Genevan buildings. ==References==