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they probably have a book of remembrance or something at the hospital as well, that the baby might be listed in. Im sure the hospital will bury the babies at the same place more or less, so i don't think it will be too hard.

I had a baby cremated, so i speak from experience, it was all very regimented and sadly routine, i don't think its too hard a question, they will be used to it.
FM
Hi Tina... my mum is in the same position, she had a baby boy that died in the 9th month she had to deliver him and he was buried.. but I believe the hospital still used an undertaker and back then (42 years ago) they buried babies in with other people.. !! (not saying all babies were) so we are starting with the undertaker but I think the hospital would be a good place to start...
Good luck for your friend, mum always wants to know but just doesn't know where to start, she also feels guilty too that she doesn't know where he is...
pgtips
Tina - I was thinking about round here - our maternity hospital had a small piece of consecrated ground used for still borns - this hospital closed in 1986 and is now a small housing estate   all the paperwork would have gone to the main hospital that took over 15 miles away and i just cant see them bothering to look especially now everything is computerised but  patient files have remained intact 

good luck with this
MrsH
Does anyone remember who posted that fantastic link to a DS thread about a woman who was trying to re-unite some letters she found in a shop with a relative of the writers?

Sorry... but to cut a long story short, depending how much information your friend is willing to share Tina, and if you are registered on DS or knows someone who is, there were some unbelievably brilliant sleuths there who unravelled the story so far!
Xochi
They may have the records... she should start with the hospital.   I worked on the Organ Retention Enquiry following the Alder Hey & Bristol Children's Hospital scandals.

We had to set up helplines for anyone enquiring whether the hospital had any of their relatives organs, our hospital didn't have any retained organs and did not foresee many enquiries... so I 'was' the helpdesk.    I took over 300 calls in the first week... the majority of them were enquiries such as this... people wanting to know what happened to their babies.

Unfortunately for a lot of them, the records just did not go back that far    I could only confirm that they were not retained.    

Products of conception (horrible horrible terminology)... i.e. miscarraiges were cremated at the hospital... with a chaplain's blessing,....

I have never heard of a hospital 'burying' a baby, I know there is no designated consecrated ground in our area's healthcare trust.  I hope I am wrong about this.
 
Can you let us know what  happens?
Dirtyprettygirlthing
I wish ours had Gypsie....  working on that helpdesk was... well, the nature of the enquiries were nothing like we had expected.  Heartbreaking some of them were... I had a 70 year old lady ring me... she had miscarried 50 years ago.... the GP had come out in the middle of the night and taken the baby away with him...  She wanted to know if we could tell her what he would have done with her baby.  We couldn't ... there are no records going back that far...

But what the whole thing highlighted was the sheer amount of women who have not had any form of closure in this kind of thing... just left wondering for decades and decades.

And our hospital cremated (I use the word cremated... they used the word incinerated... I refused to use that word) a lot of premature still borns... it sounds brutal and cruel... but it was just what was done then... there was a chaplain present... but god... having to tell people that...  my stomach has dropped just remembering it.
Dirtyprettygirlthing
well i have a happy story of a sad one.....
when i lost my baby, Southampton Princess Ann for all their faults did everything they could.
We got a choice of a burial or a cremation, we got a certificate, handprints, photos, time alone with the baby.
I went to the cremation and it was a full service with a car and a coffin at our local crematorium. Had we opted for a burial we would have had a plot and a headstone. 
The babys ashes were scattered at the garden of rest they had built especially at the hospital, we could not collect the ashes as it was too small, but they had done so much that was enough.
They also put the name and message in a remembrance book that is open at the hospital with all the other babies

I hope other places are like this these days.
FM
it was Pam... but for me what was worse was the lack of aftercare.. of bereavement services that 'caught' the bereaved and usually bewildered relatives whilst they were at the hospital.   As a result of that helpdesk thing.. we put stuff in place to make sure that didn't happen anymore.  We developed a bereavement suite by the mortuary... and incorporated stuff into the paperwork to make sure people weren't just 'left wondering' or unable to access services.

And the mass 'cremations' no longer take place.
Dirtyprettygirlthing
Gypsie..

Yes,...  even the hospital I worked at did things the way you described now... and have done for years.   My friend lost her baby boy and they too were left with their son... and the whole thing was dealt with sensitively with respect and dignity.

It just not always been that way.... and back then it was less accepted to question doctors and the establishment... so people were just left wondering.
Dirtyprettygirlthing

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