IRELAND
Sunday Independent
Majella O’Sullivan
Published 08/06/2014
THE body of a 15-year-old boy who was brutally beaten and died a few days later in hospital lies in a communal unmarked grave. John Pyke had no family to claim his remains or ask why he died days after he was beaten with a leather strap at an industrial school in Tralee, Co Kerry.
Historian, author and columnist Ryle Dwyer, who grew up within a mile of St Joseph’s Industrial School or Christian Brothers’ Monastery, which was demolished in the eighties, said he wasn’t surprised to hear about the discovery of a mass grave near Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Co Galway.
He says when the murder of a child in Tralee went uninvestigated it was not any surprise to hear the burial of children in an unmarked mass grave had been covered up.
John Pyke’s death certificate states: ‘Bilateral Pleural Effusion. Senility Certified.’ This was later amended to read: ‘Bilateral Pleural Effusion. Septicaemia Certified.’
The teenager was first brought up by nuns in Dublin and then sent to the monastery, aged seven.
In February 1958, Pyke was suffering double pneumonia, had lost his appetite and was beaten by Br Conor Lane in the dining hall in front of the other boys for not eating.
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