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Mass grave reveals new clues 18.08.10

HISTORIANS in the US have found new evidence about the mass deaths nearly 180 years ago of 57 Irish immigrants including a number believed to be from Inishowen.
It had previously been thought the group, who died just weeks after starting work on the Philadelphia and Columbia railroad, in 1832, were cholera victims.
But four skulls unearthed from the mass grave now suggest the men suffered blows to the head and at least one may have been shot.
The young men, with an average age of 20, left famine-ravaged Donegal, Tyrone and Derry, in search of a new life in America. Their names include John Ruddy, 18, from Co Donegal; George Doherty from Co Donegal; William Devine from Co Donegal; Daniel McCahill from Co Donegal and George Quigley from Co Donegal.
It is understood the deaths may have been linked to strong anti-Irish feeling among the affluent.
Dr William Watson, of Immaculata University and his twin brother, Frank, have spent the past eight years trying to solve the mystery of the men's deaths at Malvern, Pennsylvania.
Dr Watson said at least four of them had died violent deaths and this proved "this was much more than a cholera epidemic".
The Watsons believe some of the men had sailed from Ireland to Philadelphia four months before their sad demise. They now hope to recover all the remains, identify the men and give them a proper burial, either in the US or Ireland.
"We see this more as a recovery mission. We do have a cemetery that has agreed to take them from this ignominous place where they are now, into a proper burial - a very nice suburban cemetery on the outskirts of Philadelphia, where, ironically, a lot of the elite of Philadelphia railroad society are also buried," said Dr Watson.
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