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       #Post#: 6122--------------------------------------------------
       Re: BABY AGNES DOE: WF, 0-12 months, found in Blair County, PA -
        5 February 1987
       By: Akoya Date: May 31, 2020, 11:41 am
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  HTML https://thebablueprint.com/3794/student-life/baby-agnes-doe-continues-to-inspire-respect-for-life/
       Baby Agnes Doe continues to inspire respect for life
       Annual march to her shrine slated for Sunday
       Myranda Mamat, Staff Writer • January 16, 2015
       The shrine to Baby Agnes Doe still stands today in Oak Grove
       Cemetery in Tyrone.
       It was a cold winter night on a Thursday in February 1987 when a
       dog found the body of a baby abandoned near the backyard of a
       home near Kerbaugh Road in Bellwood. The child had been stuffed
       into a plastic bag and was missing a notable portion of its
       body.
       The baby had been disposed into the woods, police theorized. An
       autopsy determined that the dead body was that of a white female
       infant.
       It was the kind of thing that rocks a small community.
       “I was reading a magazine about finding a baby that had been
       abandoned and then days later I heard about it reading the
       (Tyrone Daily) Herald,” said Knights of Columbus member Pete
       Kreckel, who became a driving force in claiming the baby’s body.
       The St. Gregory Council of the Knights of Columbus in Tyrone,
       which serves St. Matthew’s Parish, asked for permission to give
       the infant a proper burial several months later. The Council had
       chosen the name Agnes for the baby after St. Agnes, who among
       other things is the patron saint of young girls.
       “
       It was a really big story in the news at the time. I remember
       how sad it was that this little baby was dead and that her
       parents just dumped her somewhere.”
       — Nick Lovrich, B-A Health and Phys. Ed teacher
       Baby Agnes Doe was given a funeral and laid to rest in the Oak
       Grove Cemetery in Tyrone on June 20th, 1987.
       “The remains were never identified so in June of 1987 we had a
       Mass for her. The priest that said the Mass at her funeral was
       Father Joseph Strittmatter, and he said ‘If all of us can
       accomplish in our life time what Baby Agnes did in two days of
       her life time …’” recalled Kreckel. “I carried her coffin up the
       steps of St. Matthews Church. We were like Joseph of Arimathea.”
       Bellwood-Antis health and physical education teacher Nick
       Lovrich, who was in eighth grade at the time, was an altar
       server at the funeral.
       “The Knights of Columbus from St. Matthew’s kind of adopted her
       and took care of the funeral service and burial since there was
       no known relatives,” recalled Mr. Lovrich. “It was a really big
       story in the news at the time. I remember how sad it was that
       this little baby was dead and that her parents just dumped her
       somewhere.”
       The Knights found a spot for her in the cemetery where an error
       had been when measuring another spot, making it just perfect for
       her. The spot now has developed into “The Home of the Holy
       Innocent,” which is an area for Baby Agnes and other unwanted
       babies to have a proper grave.
       The site was renovated by Jonathan Hampton in 2006 as part of an
       Eagle Scout project and it now includes a memorial statue and
       benches.
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/BMNhYmb.jpg
       The shrine, called the Home of the Holy Innocents, was renovated
       in 2006. (Emily Wagner)
       The St Gregory Council dedicated the Respect Life Meditation
       area in 1991 to Baby Agnes. They also used Agnes as the focal
       point for the yearly Respect Life March, a 1.25 miles walk from
       St. Matthew’s Church to Baby Agnes’ gravestone, which publicly
       expresses the respect for life in all stages.
       The march will take place once again this Sunday beginning at
       noon, and many Bellwood-Antis students from St. Joseph’s Parish
       are attending.
       Mr. Kerry Naylor, an English teacher and BluePrint advisor at
       B-A, was a part of the first march along with Mr. Lovrich.
       “There were many adults from St. Matthew’s and the community
       there, but what I remember most is how many young people were
       there,” he said. “It felt like you were really a part of
       something, and we were. We were all united in saying we need to
       have respect for human life and dignity.”
       Twenty years after Baby Agnes’s discovery, the Pennsylvania
       State Police renewed the efforts to identify Baby Agnes and had
       it publicized in the local media in hopes that someone would
       come forward, but the identity of Baby Agnes is still unknown.
       Lovrich said his experience with Baby Agnes still affect him
       today.
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/YmvGJ1e.jpg
       The memorial shrine for Baby Agnes Doe at Oak Grove Cemetery is
       the destination of this Sunday’s Respect for Life March. (Emily
       Wagner)
       “Being a parent now I do not know how anyone could do that to
       their child,” he said. “Your job as a parent is to love, care
       and nurture your child, not leave it for dead somewhere. It is
       very special that the K of C still honors her very short life.
       It should make people realize how lucky they are to have their
       life and make their own choices. Baby Agnes did not have a
       chance to make her own choices, someone else did it for her.”
       #Post#: 6123--------------------------------------------------
       Re: BABY AGNES DOE: WF, 0-12 months, found in Blair County, PA -
        5 February 1987
       By: Akoya Date: May 31, 2020, 11:42 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://www.google.com/maps/vt/data=tDtAjdS5VUEOWBT8Qqm1Y3ZW-omuORGV7BF6mOalm4xBE4VlKjcqOHDvF68ZWYH5GktYMlZUPgucZynDioBTdmO_78oB0PmwJKNRSPm67h8WgQmeFvje_i4NyEdAkcMpzQrOTAITzKCDwRNYo-XW_LLJF-rjsVIQK7kXWl31b5x6Mj5HPnpwFEMjNkt-CbLTgEfbUPlKwrOIlKPfX5KwY8eLevyJMf7umdmXaNEngMqUXJsbk6uzkrh5YrZD0lnW4pRFd0bX-egbe4uf3Ba7XUMt37vC6Yc9wPk62o6ybKTyrts[/img]
       #Post#: 6124--------------------------------------------------
       Re: BABY AGNES DOE: WF, 0-12 months, found in Blair County, PA -
        5 February 1987
       By: Akoya Date: May 31, 2020, 11:44 am
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  HTML https://i.imgur.com/dZcDbn1.jpg
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/6iTVbqD.png
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/BEEZpWb.jpg
       #Post#: 6125--------------------------------------------------
       Re: BABY AGNES DOE: WF, 0-12 months, found in Blair County, PA -
        5 February 1987
       By: Akoya Date: May 31, 2020, 11:45 am
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  HTML https://i.imgur.com/arpqDHv.gif
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