Geneva’s Armory: Form and Function
By John Marks, Curator of Collections and Exhibits
We walk by buildings every day without questioning their appearance, whether or not we know architectural styles. Sometimes we stop seeing buildings altogether. The Armory comes to mind because I recently spent several months on a committee to plan a Veterans Day event there. Anyone over the age of three years old will look at the Armory and say/think, “Castle!” Why?
Built in 1892, the Armory initially looked like many other public buildings of its time: red brick, rough stone foundation, and lots of arched doorways and windows. The tower was a little unusual but not unheard of.
New York armories were all designed the same. There was an administration building in front, and an attached drill shed behind it. (The drill hall looked like, but should never be called, a gymnasium.) The Geneva armory drill shed is visible in back and to the left.
Geneva’s National Guard unit, the 34th Separate Company (later Company B), quickly outgrew its building. The state legislature authorized an expansion which was completed in 1906.
The castle or fortress appearance, adopted earlier in other towns and cities, was no accident. The 1890s and 1900s were times of immigration, labor unrest, and concern about Socialists and Communists trying to organize new immigrants and workers. State militias were activated to protect citizens however the government saw fit, by preventing violence or breaking strikes. Armories were built in the center of towns and cities to reassure citizens, and remind agitators, that the militia was on the job.
The Geneva armory, like others, was built to function defensively if necessary. Look at the south (left-hand) tower. The base rises in toward the building while the top windows of the tower jut out. If attackers attempted to scale the foundation, defenders in the tower had a clean shot at them. Likewise, the casellations (pattern on top of the tower) and narrow windows provided protection for soldiers shooting down at the street. Larger armories had iron gates that locked in front of the main doors for extra protection against mobs.
Sometime after 1906 the top of the north tower was altered to match the south tower, and a porch was built over the main entrance. The last addition to the building was the garage to the north, sometime after World War II.
Being in town and city centers, older armories were often built on small lots with little room for expansion. Changes in military vehicles and equipment required more storage space; by the 1960s, many urban armories were abandoned for new buildings on the outskirts of town. Some found new uses, many were demolished. Geneva is fortunate to still have this building on Main Street.
In reading the latest Arcadia Press book, ‘The History of Geneva 1940-1970’, it stated that Italian POWs were kept at the Armory 1943-45. Is there any documentation of this?
Yes. We have photos in our Oakley collection and there are notices in the newspaper of the time. You may find a bit more in the WWII blog posts we wrote in 2015. There is an account of the entire war, including the POWs in the book Close to the Heart of the War, Geneva in WWII. It is available for purchase at the museum in Geneva or from our online gift shop here: https://historicgeneva.org/products/close-heart-war-geneva-world-war-ii-kathryn-grover/
Having grown up nearby (Penn Yan) I was always in awe of this structure. As a young boy during the Vietnam Conflict, I imagined CANNONS being atop the towers. Now that I have read this page, I see that I wasn’t that far off?
You cut out a lot of history about the Geneva National Guard even the last time we got deployed it goes far deeper than what you think. I could trace some military unit back to the to the Rangers unit. You left a lot out. Go back to go back to the library and do your homework.
This is a short history of the armory building and not intended as a comprehensive history of the National Guard unit. That would, as you indicate, require more time and space.