Mohan Sinha
01 Aug 2025, 16:31 GMT+10
TUAM, Ireland: In the 1970s, two local boys in the small Irish town of Tuam made a discovery that would, decades later, shake the conscience of a nation. Chased off an orchard by an angry owner, Franny Hopkins and Barry Sweeney clambered over the crumbling stone wall of the abandoned Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in search of adventure. What they found instead was something darker.
"We jumped down, and I remember the hollow sound my feet made when I landed," recalls Hopkins. Pushing aside overgrown brambles, the boys found a concrete slab. Curious, they pried it open. Inside, instead of buried treasure, lay a tangle of small bones.
Hopkins didn't realize at the time that he had stumbled upon a mass grave. It would take over 40 years—and the tireless research of an amateur historian—to uncover the scale of the horror buried beneath their feet. That patch of land, later confirmed to be a disused septic tank, may contain the remains of nearly 800 infants and young children.
The site, and the atrocities it concealed, have become a symbol of Ireland's painful reckoning with a system that punished unmarried mothers and erased the lives of their children. The shockwaves have reached not just Dublin but also the Vatican, confronting both church and state with a history that has been long denied.
The tragedy of Tuam might have remained buried forever if not for Catherine Corless, a local woman with a keen interest in history. Remembering how children from the home had been ridiculed in her school, she set out to write a modest article for the town's historical journal. What she discovered was anything but modest.
"I thought I was writing a simple story about orphans," Corless said. "But the deeper I dug, the worse it became."
Mother and baby homes were typical in 20th-century Ireland, but Tuam's stood out for its extreme neglect and mortality. Established in 1925 by the Bon Secours Sisters, the home occupied a former workhouse built during the famine years. Over its decades of operation, the home housed unwed mothers—many cast out by their families—and their children, who were often stigmatized and institutionalized.
Conditions inside were grim. Dormitories were overcrowded, heating was poor, and water ran only in limited areas. Women worked without pay, confined to the grounds and separated from their children, many of whom died before reaching their first birthday. The shame of pregnancy outside marriage was so great that women were sometimes delivered to the homes under the cover of night.
Peter Mulryan, one survivor, later discovered that his mother was taken to Tuam when she was six months pregnant—bundled onto a bicycle by order of a local priest who warned her father of the "scandal" she had caused.
The men who fathered the children, whether through consent, coercion, or assault, faced no consequences. The women bore the shame alone and often never spoke of it again.
For some, the truth emerged decades later. Anna Corrigan, raised as an only child, had only a vague childhood memory—perhaps a dream—of an uncle accusing her mother of having two sons. Years after her parents' deaths, she requested her mother's records while researching her father's childhood in an industrial school.
The revelation devastated her: her mother had given birth to two boys at Tuam. Both died there.
"I cried for the brothers I never knew," Corrigan said.
Her brother John, born in 1947, weighed a healthy nine pounds at birth but was described by a government inspector as "a miserable, emaciated child" with possible mental defects. He died two months later during a measles outbreak. Her second brother, William, was born in 1950 and died around eight months later, though his birthdate had been altered, and no death certificate was found, raising suspicions of hidden adoptions.
Ireland's government later confirmed what Corless's work had uncovered: high mortality rates were endemic in these homes. In the 1930s and '40s, some years saw death rates exceeding 40 percent. Nationwide, nearly 9,000 children died in 18 such homes. Tuam recorded the highest percentage—almost a third of all children died before the facility closed in 1961.
When Corless asked about a burial site, she was told there was none. But a local cemetery caretaker led her across the street to the former grounds. There, behind a high wall, a couple living nearby had created a memorial garden—complete with flowers, a grotto, and a statue of the Virgin Mary—over the spot where Hopkins and Sweeney had found the bones.
At first, some believed the remains were from the Famine. But Corless confirmed that the area once housed the home's septic tank, decommissioned in 1937. She now thinks the nuns used it as a burial site for the children.
"It saved them from admitting just how many babies were dying," she said. "Nobody knew what they were doing. Or didn't want to know."
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