Evidence of burial ground at Tuam mother and baby home

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Chris PageBBC News Ireland correspondent

An excavation team said it has found evidence of a burial ground at the site of the former institution for unmarried mothers and their children in Tuam in County Galway.

The agency began the work in July, with the aim of finding and identifying as many remains as possible.

The institution at Tuam came to international attention in 2014, after local historian Catherine Corless discovered there were 796 death certificates for children and babies who died there, but no burial records.

The Office of the Director of Authorised Intervention, Tuam (ODAIT) has published its fourth regular update.

It said it found "graves of child or infant size" at an area on the western edge of the site, where excavations have been carried out under a tent.

It corresponded to an area labelled as "burial ground" on historical maps of the site.

ODAIT said: "Despite these historical references, there were no surface or ground level indications of the potential for a burial ground at this location prior to excavation.

"The presence of burials at this location has now been confirmed.

"The layout and size of the graves is consistent evidence that, at this part of the site, there is a burial ground from the time of the operation of the mother-and-baby institution."

The institution was open from 1925 until 1961.

ODAIT said it recovered four more sets of human remains in the same area, further to the seven which it had found in its previous update last month.

It said "initial assessments" indicated that all eleven remains were of infants and they had been in coffins.

Further analysis is being carried out on the remains.

The excavations under the tent are being carried out by machine and by hand.

The area is about 100m from another part of the site where investigators from a government inquiry found "significant quantities" of remains in underground chambers in 2017.

The institution at Tuam was owned by Galway County Council and run by a religious order, the Bon Secours Sisters.

The order has previously acknowledged that children and infants were "buried in a disrespectful and unacceptable way", and apologised.

It has contributed £2.14m towards the cost of the excavation.

Galway County Council also apologised for "failing mothers and children" after the inquiry report in 2021.

The excavation is expected to continue until 2027, with follow-up work expected to last several more years.

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