Tuam mother and baby home: the trouble with the septic tank story
Since this has been all over the news, I wanted to post a link to this article from Irish Times.
[url]http://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/tuam-mother-and-baby-home-the-trouble-with-the-septic-tank-story-1.1823393?page=1[/url]
I never used that word dumped, Catherine Corless, a local historian in Co Galway, tells The Irish Times. I never said to anyone that 800 bodies were dumped in a septic tank. That did not come from me at any point. They are not my words.
The story that emerged from her work was reported this week in dramatic headlines around the world.
(SNIP)
Corless, who lives outside Tuam, has been working for several years on records associated with the former St Marys mother-and-baby home in the town. Her research has revealed that 796 children, most of them infants, died between 1925 and 1961, the 36 years that the home, run by Bon Secours, existed.
Between 2011 and 2013 Corless paid 4 each time to get the childrens publicly available death certificates. She says the total cost was 3,184. If I didnt do it, nobody else would have done it. I had them all by last September.
The childrens names, ages, places of birth and causes of death were recorded. The average number of deaths over the 36-year period was just over 22 a year. The information recorded on these State- issued certificates has been seen by The Irish Times; the children are marked as having died variously of tuberculosis, convulsions, measles, whooping cough, influenza, bronchitis and meningitis, among other illnesses.