What is unverified? It seems to be a widely and long time reported story, here is one from the Tuam Herald.
“Committee and Sisters meet over unmarked mass grave”
Wednesday, 4th June, 2014 10:20am
Story by Siobhan Holliman
A MEETING was to take place last evening (Tuesday) between the Bon Secours Sisters and members of the Childrens Home Graveyard Committee regarding a planned memorial at the unmarked childrens graveyard in Tuam.
Up to 800 children and babies are buried in the mass grave on Dublin Road close to the site of the former mothers and babies home which was run by the Bon Secours Sisters in Tuam between 1925 and 1961.
As frequently reported in The Tuam Herald, for the past two years a local committee has been researching the plot and historian Catherine Corless from Brownsgrove found that death records show that at least 796 children died and were buried at the home.
Galway East TD Ciaran Cannon has called for a Dáil inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the unmarked burial site.
Chairperson of the memorial committee Teresa Killeen Kelly says while the story has caught the attention of the national media and politicians have spoken of their shock, the committees priority remains to have dignity restored to the dead babies by having a plaque with their names erected at the site.
We have commissioned a bronze plaque with the names and this will cost at least 6,500. There is other work that has to be done to improve access to the site. The minimum we need is 15,000 but were nowhere close to that at the moment, she said.
I am waiting for a proper exhumation of the site.
The story of a septic tank filled with corpses of babies is indeed horrific, but if you look through the sources, it is based on hearsay. A burial ground with numerous, unmarked internments is somewhat different - that is what is known as a “pauper’s grave”, and is found in every major city in European countries.