News

The historian discovered that the mortal remains of 796 children and babies who died at the St Mary's mother and baby home ...
Catholic nuns ran an institution there between 1925 and 1961, housing women who had become pregnant outside of marriage and ...
Team of forensic archaeologists and crime scene experts begins excavating to identify remains of about 800 children.
Excavations have begun at the site of a former church-run mother-and-baby home in Ireland, where the remains of around 800 ...
A full forensic excavation on the site of the former mother and baby institution in Tuam, Co Galway, began on Monday morning.
A major excavation of the mass, unmarked grave at the Tuam mother and baby home began on Monday. The excavation of the site ...
Excavations begin today of an unmarked mass burial site at a former mother and baby home in western Ireland suspected of ...
Forensic experts in Ireland have begun a landmark excavation at the grounds of the former St Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in ...
A team of forensic archaeologists and crime scene experts will next week begin excavating and trying to identify the remains ...
A century ago, nuns first began burying hundreds of children in what would become a mass, unmarked grave in Tuam, Co, Galway.
In 2017, an investigation confirmed there were "significant quantities of human remains" buried within the grounds of the ...
In 2014, research led by local historian Catherine Corless indicated that 796 babies and young children were buried in a sewage system at the Co Galway institution across that time period. St Mary’s ...