A forensic team has started the process of excavating the site of a former “mother and baby home” in Tuam, Ireland, in a search for the remains of nearly 800 babies and children.
The ghastly operation will take place where the home – which closed over 60 years ago – once stood after it was revealed that as many as 798 children died there between 1925 and 1961.
As per The Guardian, Catherine Corless, a local historian in County Galway, Ireland, was the first to sound the alarm about the harrowing past of the institution. Corless’ research uncovered the names of 798 infants who are believed to have been buried at the home, some in a disused septic tank.
Excavation crews began sealing off the site yesterday (June 16), ahead of digging for the remains next month.
“There are so many babies, children just discarded here,” Corless told Agence France-Presse.
Corless alleges that many of the youngsters who died at the institution were discarded in a septic tank referred to as “the pit”. Just two of the suspected 798 children were officially buried in a nearby cemetery, with the rest presumably lying in a mass grave without a coffin or gravestone, and with no record of their burial.TUAM, IRELAND – JUNE 15: A general view of the remembrance garden on the former site of the Bon Secours Mother and Baby home can be seen on June 15, 2025 in Tuam, Ireland. From 1925 to 1961 hundreds of children died at the St Mary’s Mother and Baby home, a maternity home for unmarried mothers and their children, in Tuam, County Galway. It was run by the Bon Secours order of Catholic nuns and this type of home was common across Ireland for many decades. Test excavations at the site took place in 2016 and 2017 and a mass burial site was found in a former sewage tank containing the remains of 796 babies and toddlers, ranging in age from 35 foetal weeks to two to three years. Work will finally begin tomorrow morning on the excavation of the site and exhumation of the bodies of the children buried beneath the garden and playground area of the former Bon Secours Mother and Baby home site. (Photo by Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)
Corless first published her findings in 2014, though research at the site of the former “mother and baby home” dates back to 1975, when two 12-year-old boys discovered the aforementioned septic tank, said to have been filled with human bones.
So-called “mother and baby homes” were facilities to which young women and girls pregnant out of wedlock were sent to give birth in, rather than in hospital or at home. They acted as orphanages and adoption agencies for most of the 1900s and were ran by religious orders.