Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[9] [10] The three siblings were stabbed a number of times by a man known to them who used a large bladed object and were taken by ambulance to Children's Health Ireland at Crumlin, but all three were later pronounced dead.
Defence Forces personnel also found remains near Lough Brea Lower. [7] On Tuesday 13 June a bag containing the head and hands of the deceased were found and limbs were also discovered. [8] Gardaí confirmed the remains are those of an adult woman. [8] A man in his thirties was arrested in Wexford in connection with the remains. [8]
Amateur historian Catherine Corless conducted research into babies born at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in her hometown of Tuam, Galway.She collected data for several years, and published several articles in local newspapers in 2010, 2013, and 2014; her research suggested that the bodies of 796 babies and children may have been interred in an unrecorded mass grave at the Tuam Baby Home ...
Margaret Perry was a 26-year-old woman from Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland who was abducted on 21 June 1991. [1] After a tip from the IRA, her body was found buried across the border in a field in Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland, on 30 June 1992. [2] She had been beaten to death. Her murder has never been solved. [3]
On 14 April 1984, a newborn baby boy was found dead with a broken neck and 28 stab wounds. [4] The body was discovered on White Strand beach at Caherciveen, County Kerry. [5] A woman, Joanne Hayes from Abbeydorney, approximately 80 kilometres (50 miles) away, who was known to have been pregnant, was arrested. She and her family confessed to the ...
Alan and Clodagh Hawe both worked in education. Alan Hawe, who was a native of Windgap in the south-west of County Kilkenny, [2] [5] [6] was deputy principal at Castlerahan National School, which is very close to Barconey (Robinson), the townland where the family home was located, while Clodagh Hawe was a teacher at Oristown National School, just south-east of Kells in the north of County Meath.
It was an umbrella body for women's groups. [16] During the 1990s the council's activities included supporting projects funded by the European Social Fund, and running Women and Leadership Programmes and forums. In 1995, following a strategic review, it changed its name to the National Women's Council of Ireland.
Ann Rose Lovett (6 April 1968 – 31 January 1984) [3] was a 15-year-old schoolgirl from Granard, County Longford, [4] Ireland, who died giving birth beside a grotto on 31 January 1984. [5] Her baby son died at the same time and the story of her death played a huge part in a seminal national debate on women giving birth outside marriage.