| Croppies' Acre | |
|---|---|
The Croppies' Acre, withCollins Barracks behind. | |
| Type | Municipal |
| Location | Wolfe Tone Quay,Dublin 7 |
| OSI/OSNI grid | O 141 344 |
| Coordinates | 53°20′51″N6°17′14″W / 53.347464°N 6.287136°W /53.347464; -6.287136 |
| Area | 1.8 hectares (4.4 acres) |
| Operated by | Dublin City Council |
| Status | Open all year |

TheCroppies' Acre (Irish:Acra na gCraipithe[1]), officially theCroppies Acre Memorial Park, is apublic park inDublin,Ireland. It contains a memorial to the dead of the1798 Rebellion.[2][3][4]
The site, located on the north bank of theRiver Liffey to the south ofCollins Barracks (formerly the Royal Barracks) is traditionally believed to have been used as amass grave for Irish rebel casualties of the1798 Rebellion; they were known asCroppies due to their short-cropped hair. It was also calledCroppies' Hole at the time.[5][6] Some rebels' bodies were also exhibited at the Croppies' Hole, tied topikes.[7]
TheNational Graves Association maintains that it was also used after 1798 to bury veterans of the conflict, including Matthew Tone, brother ofWolfe Tone.[8]Bartholomew Teeling was also supposedly buried at Croppies' Acre after being hanged at Provost Prison,Arbour Hill.[9] However, archaeological investigations have failed to find any human remains and its status as a grave is uncertain.[10][11] The precise site of the burials was long disputed, all being known was that the dead had been buried on marshy ground near the Royal Barracks. Other reports mentioned that the corpses of the executed were thrown into the Liffey as a public deterrent; the river being tidal at this point. In addition, theRiver Liffey was realigned in this area to extend the city's quays. The supposed "Croppies' Acre" was for a long time a soldiers' playing field.[12]
The Memorial Park was designed and laid out in 1998.
It was closed in 2012 by theOffice of Public Works due to anti-social behaviour, including drunkenness and the use of hard drugs. Ownership was transferred toDublin City Council and the Croppies' Acre was reopened in 2016.[13]