Image from a previous event when A Little Light of Love was carried in relay from Castlebar to the Tuam Baby Memorial Garden in Galway in memory of the 796 babies and children who lost their lives in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home. PHOTO: ALISON LAREDO

Mayo hosts special event in memory of Tuam babies for final time

A special event in memory of all children and babies who are missing from the Tuam Mother and Baby Home is to be held in Mayo on Sunday, September 15, for its fourth and final year before the site closes.

The works are to begin in the coming weeks in preparation for the exhumations of these precious missing children and babies.

A small relay of walkers will carry the lantern from Jack’s Old Cottage in Islandeady, near Castlebar, from 7 a.m. and will travel approximately 62 kilometres to arrive in Tuam for around 7.30 p.m. where it will be reverently placed at the babies’ remembrance site.

Catherine Corless, a local historian in Tuam, was the first to uncover the shocking fact that 796 babies were still missing at the Tuam site and that some of them were interred in a site for a septic tank.

One of the main organisers of the Mayo event said: “We would never have known about these beautiful missing children without the tireless efforts of Catherine Corless and we would not have had a commission of enquiry into mother and baby homes without her work. This walk is also to show appreciation and recognition to Catherine and her family.

“This will be our first year to read all 796 children and babies names at the site in Tuam.

“If anyone wishes to join in this dignified memorial to pay tribute to the children at the Tuam site on the evening of Sunday, September 15, please bring a battery operated candle to brighten up the site.”

There has been a massive level of support for the event over the past three years when it was held in November.

Daniel MacSweeney was appointed as Director of Authorised Intervention by the Government in May. He is charged with overseeing the exhumation process at the former mother-and-baby home in Tuam. He said the nature of the work to be carried out at the burial site in Tuam is such that it will take some time to complete.

Research by local historian Catherine Corless found there were no burial records for 796 children who died in the home between 1925 and 1961. Subsequent investigations determined that there were infant remains in 18 chambers on the site. Initial surveys have identified a range of bones from babies and children, up to the age of around six.

Mr. MacSweeney said he was dealing with "an extremely complex situation" both in terms of location, and the work to be carried out there.

He stated the exhumation and analysis would be done to the highest international forensic standards. But Mr. MacSweeney has cautioned that ‘if there are 796 children, most of whom are under a year old ... there could be in excess of 200,000 bones to be found’.

"We need to track and trace each one of them, as we take it out of the ground, so that we can do the identification and the individualisation of remains, to the extent that that is possible."

After that, efforts will be made to try to ascertain the causes and circumstances of death.

Mr. MacSweeney said it was not known what would be found when the exhumation process began. Work on the site is due to begin later this month.

"So it’s time again to remember these little babies, 796 in all,” said Valerie Jennings of A Little Light of Love, Castlebar.

“This walk has nothing to do with politics or religion, just in remembrance of the beautiful babies, the precious mothers and the brave survivors.

"Some of the mothers are still alive. They have no idea where their babies are. We need to remember them all – innocent babies and their mothers."

Those interested in being involved can get in contact at alittlelightoflovemayo@gmail.com or through the Facebook page Little light of Love.