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On this day: Great Horton's Francis House reopens as children's home
On this day: Great Horton's Francis House reopens as children's home

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

On this day: Great Horton's Francis House reopens as children's home

On this day in 2015, the Telegraph and Argus reported that a newly refurbished children's home had opened in Bradford to support young people with learning disabilities. The facility, Francis House, on Hollybank Road in Great Horton, was reopened by Christian charity Catholic Care after nine months and £70,000 worth of renovation, marking the first children's home opened by the charity "for around 20 years." Carol Hill, director of Catholic Care, said at the original time of reporting in 2015: "We have had the home since the 1970s, but we've given it a new lease of life as there was a great need for a service for children with learning disabilities, particularly those with autism." The home was to cater for "up to six children, aged six to 17" with some form of learning difficulty, such as autism. The refurbished facility included bedrooms, a playroom, a chill-out room, and an enclosed garden with trampolines, slides, and a splash pool. Then-Lord Mayor of Bradford, councillor Joanne Dodds, officially opened the home on July 17, 2015. More information about Catholic Care is available at

How hundreds of Irish babies came to be buried in a secret mass grave
How hundreds of Irish babies came to be buried in a secret mass grave

Yahoo

time13-07-2025

  • Yahoo

How hundreds of Irish babies came to be buried in a secret mass grave

No burial records. No headstones. No memorials. Nothing until 2014, when an amateur historian uncovered evidence of a mass grave, potentially in a former sewage tank, believed to contain hundreds of babies in Tuam, County Galway, in the west of Ireland. Now, investigators have moved their diggers onto the nondescript patch of grass next to a children's playground on a housing estate in the town. An excavation, expected to last two years, will begin on Monday. The area was once where St Mary's children's home stood, a church-run institution that housed thousands of women and children between 1925 and 1961. Many of the women had fallen pregnant outside of marriage and were shunned by their families - and separated from their children after giving birth. According to death records, Patrick Derrane was the first baby to die at St Mary's – in 1915, aged five months. Mary Carty, the same age, was the last in 1960. In the 35 years between their deaths, another 794 babies and young children are known to have died there - and it is believed they are buried in what former Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Enda Kenny dubbed a "chamber of horrors". PJ Haverty spent the first six years of his life in the place he calls a prison - but he considers himself one of the lucky ones. "I got out of there." He remembers how the "home children", as they were known, were shunned at school. "We had to go 10 minutes late and leave 10 minutes early, because they didn't want us talking to the other kids," PJ said. "Even at break-time in the school, we weren't allowed to play with them – we were cordoned off. "You were dirt from the street." Read more from the survivors, relatives and campaigners who helped reveal the secret of Tuam after a decades-long wait for the truth. The stigma stayed with PJ his whole life, even after finding a loving foster home and, in later years, tracking down his birth mother, who was separated from him when he was a one-year-old. The home, run by the nuns of the Bon Secours Sisters, was an invisible spectre that loomed over him and many others in Tuam for decades – until amateur historian Catherine Corliss brought St Mary's dark past into the light. Interested in delving into her family's past, Catherine took a local history course in 2005. Later, her interest turned to St Mary's and the "home children" who came to school separately from her and her classmates. "When I started out, I had no idea what I was going to find." To begin with, Catherine was surprised her innocuous inquiries were being met with blank responses or even suspicion. "Nobody was helping, and nobody had any records," she said. That only fed her determination to find out more about the children at the home. A breakthrough came when she spoke to a cemetery caretaker, who brought her to the housing estate where the institution once stood. At the side of a children's playground, there was a square of lawn with a grotto – a small shrine centred on a statue of Mary. The caretaker told Catherine that two boys had been playing in that area in the mid-1970s after the home was demolished, and had come across a broken concrete slab. They pulled it up to reveal a hole. Inside they saw bones. The caretaker said the authorities were told and the spot was covered up. People believed the remains were from the Irish Famine in the 1840s. Before the mother-and-baby home, the institution was a famine-era workhouse where many people had died. But that didn't add up for Catherine. She knew those people had been buried respectfully in a field half a mile away - there was a monument marking the spot. Her suspicion was further raised when she compared old maps of the site. One, from 1929, labelled the area the boys found the bones as a "sewage tank". Another, from the 1970s after the home was demolished, had a handwritten note next to that area saying "burial ground". The map did seem to indicate there was a grave at the site – and Catherine had read the sewage tank labelled on the map had become defunct in 1937 so, in theory, was empty. But who was buried there? Catherine called the registration office for births, deaths and marriages in Galway and asked for the names of all the children who had died at the home. A fortnight later a sceptical member of staff called to ask if she really wanted them all – Catherine expected "20 or 30" - but there were hundreds. The full list, when Catherine received it, recorded 796 dead children. She was utterly shocked. Her evidence was starting to indicate who was likely to be underneath that patch of grass at St Mary's. But first, she checked burial records to see if any of those hundreds of children were buried in cemeteries in Galway or neighbouring County Mayo – and couldn't find any. Without excavation, Catherine couldn't prove it beyond doubt. She now believed that hundreds of children had been buried in an unmarked mass grave, possibly in a disused sewage tank, at the St Mary's Home. When her findings broke into an international news story in 2014, there was considerable hostility in her home town. "People weren't believing me," she recalled. Many cast doubt - and scorn - that an amateur historian could uncover such an enormous scandal. But there was a witness who had seen it with her own eyes. Warning: The following sections contain details some readers might find distressing Mary Moriarty lived in one of the houses near the site of the institution in the mid-1970s. Shortly after she spoke to BBC News, she passed away, but her family have agreed to allow what she told us to be published and broadcast. Mary recalled two women coming to her in the early 1970s saying "they saw a young fella with a skull on a stick". Mary and her neighbours asked the child where he had found the skull. He showed them some shrubbery and Mary, who went to look, "fell in a hole". Light streamed in from where she had fallen. That's when she saw "little bundles", wrapped in cloths that had gone black from rot and damp, and were "packed one after the other, in rows up to the ceiling". How many? "Hundreds," she replied. Some time later, when Mary's second son was born in the maternity hospital in Tuam, he was brought to her by the nuns who worked there "in all these bundles of cloths" - just like those she had seen in that hole. "That's when I copped on," Mary says, "what I had seen after I fell down that hole were babies." In 2017, Catherine's findings were confirmed - an Irish government investigation found "significant quantities of human remains" in a test excavation of the site. The bones were not from the famine and the "age-at-death range" was from about 35 foetal weeks to two or three years. By now, a campaign was under way for a full investigation of the site - Anna Corrigan was among those who wanted the authorities to start digging. Until she was in her 50s, Anna believed she was an only child. But, when researching her family history in 2012, she discovered her mother had given birth to two boys in the home in 1946 and 1950, John and William. Anna was unable to find a death certificate for William, but did find one for John – it officially registers his death at 16 months. Under cause of death it listed "congenital idiot" and "measles". An inspection report of the home in 1947 had some more details about John. "He was born normal and healthy, almost nine pounds (4kg) in weight," Anna said. "By the time he's 13 months old, he's emaciated with a voracious appetite, and has no control over bodily functions. "Then he's dead three months later." An entry from the institution's book of "discharges" says William died in 1951 – she does not know where either is buried. Anna, who set up the Tuam Babies Family Group for survivors and relatives, said the children have been given a voice. "We all know their names. We all know they existed as human beings." Now, the work begins to find out the full extent of what lies beneath that patch of grass in Tuam. The excavation is expected to take about two years. "It's a very challenging process – really a world-first," said Daniel MacSweeney, the head of the operation, who has helped find missing bodies in conflict zones such as Afghanistan. He explained that the remains would have been mixed together and that an infant's femur - the body's largest bone - is only the size of an adult's finger. "They're absolutely tiny," he said. "We need to recover the remains very, very carefully – to maximise the possibility of identification." The difficulty of identifying the remains "can't be underestimated", he added. For however long it takes, there will be people like Anna waiting for news - hoping to hear about sisters, brothers, uncles, aunts and cousins they never had the chance to meet. Details of help and support with child bereavement are available in the UK at BBC Action Line Timeline: Irish mother and baby homes controversy Pre-excavation work begins at mass burial site Irish PM to apologise over mother-and-baby homes Tuam babies whistleblower 'optimistic for closure' 'I need to know what happened to my brothers'

Tuam: How hundreds of babies and toddlers came to be buried in an unmarked mass grave
Tuam: How hundreds of babies and toddlers came to be buried in an unmarked mass grave

BBC News

time12-07-2025

  • BBC News

Tuam: How hundreds of babies and toddlers came to be buried in an unmarked mass grave

No burial records. No headstones. No until 2014, when an amateur historian uncovered evidence of a mass grave, potentially in a former sewage tank, believed to contain hundreds of babies in Tuam, County Galway, in the west of investigators have moved their diggers onto the nondescript patch of grass next to a children's playground on a housing estate in the town. An excavation, expected to last two years, will begin on area was once where St Mary's children's home stood, a church-run institution that housed thousands of women and children between 1925 and 1961. Many of the women had fallen pregnant outside of marriage and were shunned by their families - and separated from their children after giving to death records, Patrick Derrane was the first baby to die at St Mary's – in 1915, aged five months. Mary Carty, the same age, was the last in the 35 years between their deaths, another 794 babies and young children are known to have died there - and it is believed they are buried in what former Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Enda Kenny dubbed a "chamber of horrors". PJ Haverty spent the first six years of his life in the place he calls a prison - but he considers himself one of the lucky ones."I got out of there." He remembers how the "home children", as they were known, were shunned at school."We had to go 10 minutes late and leave 10 minutes early, because they didn't want us talking to the other kids," PJ said."Even at break-time in the school, we weren't allowed to play with them – we were cordoned off."You were dirt from the street." Read more from the survivors, relatives and campaigners who helped reveal the secret of Tuam after a decades-long wait for the truth. The stigma stayed with PJ his whole life, even after finding a loving foster home and, in later years, tracking down his birth mother, who was separated from him when he was a home, run by the nuns of the Bon Secours Sisters, was an invisible spectre that loomed over him and many others in Tuam for decades – until amateur historian Catherine Corliss brought St Mary's dark past into the light. Discovering the mass grave Interested in delving into her family's past, Catherine took a local history course in 2005. Later, her interest turned to St Mary's and the "home children" who came to school separately from her and her classmates."When I started out, I had no idea what I was going to find."To begin with, Catherine was surprised her innocuous inquiries were being met with blank responses or even suspicion."Nobody was helping, and nobody had any records," she only fed her determination to find out more about the children at the home.A breakthrough came when she spoke to a cemetery caretaker, who brought her to the housing estate where the institution once stood. At the side of a children's playground, there was a square of lawn with a grotto – a small shrine centred on a statue of caretaker told Catherine that two boys had been playing in that area in the mid-1970s after the home was demolished, and had come across a broken concrete slab. They pulled it up to reveal a they saw bones. The caretaker said the authorities were told and the spot was covered believed the remains were from the Irish Famine in the 1840s. Before the mother-and-baby home, the institution was a famine-era workhouse where many people had that didn't add up for Catherine. She knew those people had been buried respectfully in a field half a mile away - there was a monument marking the spot. Her suspicion was further raised when she compared old maps of the site. One, from 1929, labelled the area the boys found the bones as a "sewage tank". Another, from the 1970s after the home was demolished, had a handwritten note next to that area saying "burial ground".The map did seem to indicate there was a grave at the site – and Catherine had read the sewage tank labelled on the map had become defunct in 1937 so, in theory, was empty. But who was buried there?Catherine called the registration office for births, deaths and marriages in Galway and asked for the names of all the children who had died at the home.A fortnight later a sceptical member of staff called to ask if she really wanted them all – Catherine expected "20 or 30" - but there were hundreds. The full list, when Catherine received it, recorded 796 dead was utterly shocked. Her evidence was starting to indicate who was likely to be underneath that patch of grass at St Mary' first, she checked burial records to see if any of those hundreds of children were buried in cemeteries in Galway or neighbouring County Mayo – and couldn't find excavation, Catherine couldn't prove it beyond doubt. She now believed that hundreds of children had been buried in an unmarked mass grave, possibly in a disused sewage tank, at the St Mary's Home. When her findings broke into an international news story in 2014, there was considerable hostility in her home town. "People weren't believing me," she recalled. Many cast doubt - and scorn - that an amateur historian could uncover such an enormous there was a witness who had seen it with her own The following sections contains details some readers might find distressing Mary Moriarty lived in one of the houses near the site of the institution in the mid-1970s. Shortly after she spoke to BBC News, she passed away, but her family have agreed to allow what she told us to be published and recalled two women coming to her in the early 1970s saying "they saw a young fella with a skull on a stick".Mary and her neighbours asked the child where he had found the skull. He showed them some shrubbery and Mary, who went to look, "fell in a hole".Light streamed in from where she had fallen. That's when she saw "little bundles", wrapped in cloths that had gone black from rot and damp, and were "packed one after the other, in rows up to the ceiling". How many?"Hundreds," she time later, when Mary's second son was born in the maternity hospital in Tuam, he was brought to her by the nuns who worked there "in all these bundles of cloths" - just like those she had seen in that hole."That's when I copped on," Mary says, "what I had seen after I fell down that hole were babies." In 2017, Catherine's findings were confirmed - an Irish government investigation found "significant quantities of human remains" in a test excavation of the site. The bones were not from the famine and the "age-at-death range" was from about 35 foetal weeks to two or three now, a campaign was under way for a full investigation of the site - Anna Corrigan was among those who wanted the authorities to start she was in her 50s, Anna believed she was an only child. But, when researching her family history in 2012, she discovered her mother had given birth to two boys in the home in 1946 and 1950, John and was unable to find a death certificate for William, but did find one for John – it officially registers his death at 16 months. Under cause of death it listed "congenital idiot" and "measles". An inspection report of the home in 1947 had some more details about John."He was born normal and healthy, almost nine pounds (4kg) in weight," Anna said. "By the time he's 13 months old, he's emaciated with a voracious appetite, and has no control over bodily functions."Then he's dead three months later."An entry from the institution's book of "discharges" says William died in 1951 – she does not know where either is who set up the Tuam Babies Family Group for survivors and relatives, said the children have been given a voice."We all know their names. We all know they existed as human beings."Now, the work begins to find out the full extent of what lies beneath that patch of grass in Tuam. 'Absolutely tiny' The excavation is expected to take about two years."It's a very challenging process – really a world-first," said Daniel MacSweeney, the head of the operation, who has helped find missing bodies in conflict zones such as explained that the remains would have been mixed together and that an infant's femur - the body's largest bone - is only the size of an adult's finger."They're absolutely tiny," he said. "We need to recover the remains very, very carefully – to maximise the possibility of identification."The difficulty of identifying the remains "can't be underestimated", he however long it takes, there will be people like Anna waiting for news - hoping to hear about sisters, brothers, uncles, aunts and cousins they never had the chance to meet. Details of help and support with child bereavement are available in the UK at BBC Action Line

Stoke-on-Trent bungalow could be turned into children's home
Stoke-on-Trent bungalow could be turned into children's home

Yahoo

time28-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Stoke-on-Trent bungalow could be turned into children's home

A detached bungalow in Birches Head could be turned into a children's home. A change of use planning application for the property on Earlswood Road has been submitted to Stoke-on-Trent City Council. The applicant, Egret Care Ltd, wants to create a home for a child aged between eight and 18. The planning statement reads: "Egret Care Ltd. is a dedicated and experienced provider of residential care, specialising in supporting children with mild to moderate learning difficulties, Special Educational Needs (SEN), behavioural challenges, and mild disabilities. READ MORE: Mystery of missing Stoke-on-Trent doctor solved 12 years after he vanished READ MORE: Stoke-on-Trent street where 'dumbstruck' families celebrating £250,000 cheques "The submitted proposal will provide a care home facility for one child, with the child living there as its permanent residence. The child will be cared for by two members of staff during the day, supported by a house manager. "Two staff members will also be present overnight, with one sleep-in member of staff and one waking staff member. Staff will operate on a shift pattern, typically rotating every two to three days. "The premises will be regulated by Ofsted. The child occupying the premises will range between eight and 18 years of age and will have access to structured care, education and emotional support and 24 hour supervision." Get daily headlines and breaking news emailed to you - it's FREE

Durham Police objection sees Raven Court children's home refused
Durham Police objection sees Raven Court children's home refused

BBC News

time20-06-2025

  • BBC News

Durham Police objection sees Raven Court children's home refused

Plans to convert a house into a children's home have been turned down amid objections from residents and County Council's planning committee rejected proposals for a home for three children on Raven Court in Shildon, County Police had objected, saying the location was unsuitable, while residents said its proximity to a nature reserve posed a risk to the children and put pressure on Taylor, from applicants The Family Tree Group, said it would have given youngsters the chance to "grow up in a home, not a facility". The property backs onto Middridge Vale, which itself backs on to a large nature reserve that is in some parts covered by dense woodland, which police advised posed a "great risk" to children who went missing from force also said there was a higher level of crime and anti-social behaviour in the area and so thought the location of the property was "not suitable for looked-after children". Letters of objection Residents said there had been heightened anxiety for the wellbeing of the area since the application was submitted, the Local Democracy Reporting Service Craddock, a single mother-of-two, said: "The proximity of this house to the nature reserve is a risk to all the children in the home and puts massive pressure on police services."We are not unreasonable people, it just doesn't work."In total, 117 letters of objection were Mr Taylor disputed the concerns, saying the facility would have been supported by trained carers 24/7."The police are stereotyping the children as criminals but they are victims," he members praised the applicant's intentions to support vulnerable children but said the police force's concerns were too serious to Elizabeth Pears said: "We are not working on the assumption that all of these children are going to be trouble. "But what has concerned me is the fact that the police believe that these children will not be safe there."That is the main reason that I'm not happy with it." Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

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