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Catholic nuns ran an institution there between 1925 and 1961, housing women who had become pregnant outside of marriage and ...
In the small Irish town of Tuam, Ireland, nearly 800 babies and young children disappeared — their remains hidden in a septic tank beneath a housing estate. Decades later, families are still searching ...
Nearly 800 infants may have died in maternity home run on behalf of government by Sisters of Bon Secours from 1925 to 1961 ...
Research in 2014 by local historian, Catherine Corless, found that there were no burial records for the infants and toddlers.
Excavations have begun at the site of a former church-run mother-and-baby home in Ireland, where the remains of around 800 ...
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Al Jazeera on MSNExcavation of child mass grave at church-run home begins in IrelandTeam of forensic archaeologists and crime scene experts begins excavating to identify remains of about 800 children.
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Al Jazeera on MSNHow were babies’ mass graves discovered in church-run home in Ireland?A local historian’s research led the Irish government to find an unmarked mass grave with remains of about 800 children.
A woman whose sister was among the estimated 796 newborns secretly dumped in a septic tank beneath the St Mary's Mother and ...
The planned two-year probe by Irish and foreign experts in Tuam comes more than a decade after an amateur historian first ...
Tomorrow morning, an excavation will begin in Tuam, County Galway, Ireland, which will likely provide a definitive ...
Nearly 800 babies died at St Mary’s in Tuam, a home for illegititmate children, who were left to die and then dumped as if ...
The excavation that began on the site of the mother and baby home yesterday is making history in a double sense ...
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