Wilful Neglect of Children In Baltimore
Published on May 1, 2005 By theknitter In Current Events
The Investigation Committee - REPORT INTO BALTIMORE INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
"I have no time really to wait for three or four [or] five years for a finding . . . I only hope that somebody has the courage to take on board these things." These words come from the transcript of a hearing of the Child Abuse Committee at which a former pupil of the Baltimore Fisheries School (Baltimore School) recounted on oath his experiences of life in that institution in the 1940s. At the time of hearing, the witness was seventy-one years of age and he had experienced medical problems.
......... life in Baltimore School as recounted by the witnesses was so harsh and deprived by the standards of today as to verge on the unbelievable, were it not for the fact that a contemporaneous record is available to give credence to the testimony....
......... The evidence of the witnesses in relation to life as they experienced it in Baltimore School, although occasionally more graphic, is closely mirrored in the inspection reports which have survived....
......... appalling accommodation they were living in: the large dirty dormitories; the poor quality beds with flea infested and urine saturated mattresses and bedding....
......... Even by the standards of the time, the lack of hygiene and the unhygienic practices described by the witnesses seem remarkable. On bathing day the bath water was changed after five or six boys had bathed. There were no toothbrushes or toothpaste, combs, soaps or personal towels. The clothing and the bedding was verminous. There were outbreaks of scabies....
......... on the inadequacy of the food. The witnesses recalled that the pupils were not merely hungry, they were literally starving. They were compelled to supplement their diet by eating raw vegetables and vegetation, potatoes, turnips, mangolds, carrots and sorrel, by eating barnacles at the seashore and by scavenging, begging and stealing in the village of Baltimore....
......... Many of the witnesses commented on their lack of physical stature, which they believed was attributable to the inadequate diet they received in their formative years in Baltimore. Over half a century later, the Committee noted that the lack of physical stature was still observable....
......... The physical hardship and deprivation described by the witnesses was observed and reported on in the course of the general and medical inspections carried out by the departmental medical inspector....
......... the method of enforcing discipline employed in Baltimore School, both in the classroom and in the school generally, was the infliction of physical punishment....
......... its frequency and its severity was suggestive of a regime in which infliction of severe physical punishment in the classroom was systemic....
.......... A significant feature of the evidence was the fear which the enforcement of discipline engendered in the pupils. Witnesses testified that in later life, they had nightmares about being beaten....
.......... From their hesitancy to recount their experiences and from their reticence about articulating the details, it was patently obvious that they were not accustomed to discussing such matters, although some had attended a counsellor, a psychologist or a psychiatrist....
........... witnesses demonstrated a convincing and clear recollection of the core events. The evidence was characterised by idiosyncratic, unsolicited detail....
........... there was credible evidence from a significant number of witnesses that they were subjected to gross sexual abuse, including anal and oral intercourse, by him. There was also credible evidence of attempted sexual abuse and sexual advances which were successfully rebuffed. There was consistency between the accounts of the witnesses, each of whom gave his evidence to the Committee in private....
........... The Committee's findings are based only on evidence which would be admissible in a court and the standard applied is proof on the balance of probabilities....
........... The Committee is satisfied that the witnesses were honest and truthful. While not corroborative of each other in the strict sense, the evidence of the witnesses is characterised by similarity of fact and consistency. The Committee is also satisfied that, far from having any ulterior or secondary motivation for giving evidence to the Committee, the motivation of the witnesses was wholly altruistic: it was to ensure the children of today and tomorrow do not experience what they experienced in childhood.
My Comment
Well this Report certainly puts to bed the idea that survivors of the Institutions are lying. Although the Report does not mention the names of the abusers it makes it very plain that abuse, abuse in all its contexts, was rampant and systemic. Any and every misdemeanour was punished severely. Sexual abuse was a major feature too of control of the children.
FULL REPORT:> Link

Comments
on May 01, 2005

Really you have got to cull these legal documents. They are meant for court filings and not blogs. Just take a few seconds to cut and paste the more petenient bits out of these and couple them with your own commentary (no matter how limited) and you will call more attention to your cause in one article than you will with 1000 articles written like this one.

on May 01, 2005
I've only posted one page of a 12 page report .... is that not a cull? ....
on May 01, 2005
This is really fascinating .... and here's me thinking Ireland was holy place
on May 03, 2005

I've only posted one page of a 12 page report .... is that not a cull? ....

Not really... Take the 9-11 report as a good example. The thing was massive, so instead of posting the first page of the report most writers who wanted to make a point or two would have gone through and taken out particularly interesting passages and quoted them (with commentary usually).

This makes for far more interesting reading (and tons more readers) than posting a very dry page that really doesn't make much of a point about your topic. The commentary is also key. Blog readers generally want not just the facts of an issue but we tend to want the posters opinions and analysis of these facts. Which is more interesting :

A. A list of battles during the 100 years war

or

B. Highlights of 2 or 3 decisive battles with a bit of background context and some pithy commentary from someone who has studied those battles and come to some conclusions

While there may be 1 or 2 people out of a 1000 who prefer A most blog writers actually want the readership of the other 998 folks who like option B. Tell us what you think and we will be far more likely to tell you what we think.

on May 03, 2005
Hi greywar

Thanks for the advice ... I agree completely, basically I was just regurgitating an apparently dry official document if judged by the first page , and I have summarised from the Report and used quotes/findings and added my own views.

I will work harder in the future .... and redo my other posts. Thanks Again.

The Knitter