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From the New York Post: Excavation has begun on a septic tank at a site in Ireland that authorities believe contains the remains of nearly 800 dead babies and children who died at a home for unwed mothers run by Catholic nuns.
Many of the infant remains are feared to have been dumped in the cesspool known as “the pit” at the former institution in the small town of Tuam, County Galway, local historian Catherine Corless told Sky News.
In total, 798 children died at the home between 1925 and its closure in 1961, of which just two were buried in a nearby cemetery, Corless’ research found.
The other 796 children’s remains are believed to be under the site of the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home, which was demolished in 1971 and is now surrounded by a modern apartment complex.
Bon Secours, known locally as The Home, was a maternity home for unmarried mothers and their children, run by a religious order of Catholic nuns.
The report explains that the extent of the horrors surrounding the home was only uncovered in 2014.
Unmarried pregnant women were reportedly sent to stay at the home to give birth, and had to do unpaid work there for a year. When their babies were born, they were taken away from the young mothers and raised by the nuns until they were adopted out to other families.
One social media user noted the injustice of it all, writing, “We locked up victims of rape, we locked up victims of incest, we locked up victims of violence, we put them in laundries, we took their children, and we just handed them over to the Church to do what they wanted,” 💔.”
We locked up victims of rape, we locked up victims of incest, we locked up victims of violence, we put them in laundries, we took their children, and we just handed them over to the Church to do what they wanted,” 💔 https://t.co/SrEKBodncC
— ŽeljkaB (@b_zeljka) June 16, 2025
A chilling documentary by ITV News in early May revealed that thousands of unwed expectant mothers from Britain were deported to Ireland and incarcerated in ‘brutal’ state institutions, then their babies were forcibly adopted out.
Britain’s Forced Adoption Scandal: ‘I was abducted and my baby kidnapped’ under ‘horrific’ British-Irish scheme
ITV News Social Affairs Correspondent @SarahCorkerNews, producer @LKilraine and cameraman @CameraOpJake reporthttps://t.co/44Re4GLtvC pic.twitter.com/3O4JOacRSd
— ITV News (@itvnews) May 6, 2025
An ITV News investigation has also found evidence of falsified birth certificates and allegations of ‘people trafficking’. The children, now adults, often only found out they were British citizens decades later. pic.twitter.com/J1oNfEqfiv
— ITV News (@itvnews) May 6, 2025
ITV News Social Affairs Correspondent @SarahCorkerNews travelled to Dublin to speak to mothers, adult adoptees, and the Irish government as part of our year-long investigation into Britain’s silent forced adoption scandal and the long shadow it continues to cast over so many…
— ITV News (@itvnews) May 6, 2025
What happened at Tuam, Ireland:
In 1925 a former workhouse in Tuam, County Galway, was converted into a mother-and-baby home which would be run by an order of Catholic nuns – the Bon Secours Sisters.
For the next 36 years, it housed unmarried mothers and their children. pic.twitter.com/opC4Ww6K9D— eri, Dr.Eng. (@elicit777_eri) June 17, 2025
A long-awaited forensic excavation at a former ‘mother and baby home’, where the remains of almost 800 babies and children are believed to be buried, will start today in County Galway
Read more 🔗
— Sky News (@SkyNews) June 16, 2025
More details from Grok
The case of the 796 babies found in a septic tank refers to events at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway, Ireland, which operated from 1925 to 1961. Run by the Bon Secours Sisters, a Catholic religious order, the home housed… pic.twitter.com/vzF0gk6wFx
— 𝕏 Analyst (@XAnalyst2020) June 17, 2025
Ireland shocked by horror as authorities exhume remains of 800 babies dumped in cesspool outside Catholic orphanagehttps://t.co/qLmY5M9tRehttps://t.co/m5LSAiumfyhttps://t.co/FNV1BQK6KQhttps://t.co/DT6XJggiBy
— Andrew Orlov (@developer_1c) June 16, 2025
The process of excavating children’s unmarked burials at the site of a former mother and baby institution is commencing in Tuam this morning, years after their existence was uncovered.https://t.co/qMXkNPY7M4
— TheJournal.ie (@thejournal_ie) June 16, 2025
READ MORE from the New York Post.