Curragh Camp

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The Curragh Camp is an army base and military college located in The Curragh, County Kildare, Ireland. It is the main training centre for the Irish Army.

Historically a military assembly area (being chosen by Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnel as a muster point for the cause of James II in the Glorious Revolution) it is so named as it had been used for soldiers to camp on under canvas tents for centuries.

The first permanent military structures were built in 1855 by British soldiers preparing for the Crimean War.

In the following decade Queen Victoria visited to inspect troops, and as her son (Edward VII the then Prince of Wales) was serving at the camp.

In 1879 the first of the "modern" barracks (Beresford Barracks) was built at the camp, and seven new barracks were subsequently constructed through the turn of the century.

The camp was the location of the Curragh incident in 1914. It was also used as a military detention centre where civil war prisoners and, later, members and suspected members of the Irish Republican Army were interned on various occasions between the 1920s and the 1950s. It was also used to intern Allied and Axis personnel who had found themselves in Ireland during World War II.

The Curragh Camp is now home to the Defence Forces Training Centre of the Irish Defence Forces, housing the Command and Staff School, the Cadet School, the Infantry School, and the United Nations School.

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