A clipping of a photograph of Éamon de Valera opening the Irish Republican Prisoners’ Dependents’ Fete at Shelbourne Park in Dublin. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Independent’ (30 September 1920).
A clipping of an article quoting Éamon de Valera’s response to criticisms from Fr. P.J. Brennan, a priest in Castleisland in County Kerry. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Independent’ (30 March 1922).
A copy of a pamphlet titled ‘Éamon de Valera states his case / The following interview with Commandant Eamonn De Valera, I.R.A., is reprinted from the Christian Science Monitor, Boston, U.S.A., May 15th, 1918’. (Dublin: Sinn Féin, 1918).
A copy of a pamphlet titled ‘Éamon de Valera states his case / The following interview with Commandant Eamonn De Valera, I.R.A., is reprinted from the Christian Science Monitor, Boston, U.S.A., May 15th, 1918’. (Dublin: Sinn Féin, 1918).
A clipping of an article referring to the possibility that Éamon de Valera may give a lecture in Denver, Colorado, in May 1939. The invitation to de Valera was given by the Catholic Library Association. The clipping is taken from the ‘Denver Catholic Register’ (9 February 1939).
A clipping of an article titled ‘Mr de Valera and Mr Bernard Shaw’. The article refers to a dispute between the two men over British requests to use the so-called ‘Treaty Ports’ in Ireland. (Volume page 88).
A clipping of a photograph of Éamon de Valera with Archbishop Daniel Mannix, Fr. E.J. Flanagan, and Bishop Daniel Foley. The photograph was taken in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1920. It is noted in the caption that Fr. E.J. Flanagan (the founder of the orphanage and educational centre known as Boys Town in Nebraska) was due to visit Ireland. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Press’ (6 June 1946).
A clipping of a photograph of Éamon de Valera with his half-brother Fr. Thomas Wheelwright, a Redemptorist priest. The clipping is taken from the ‘Irish Press’ (6 December 1945).
A clipping of a report on Éamon de Valera’s tribute to Thomas Ashe in a speech in Ennis, County Clare. Reference is also made to the remarks of Michael Fogarty, Bishop of Killaloe. The clipping is taken from the ‘Weekly Freeman’ (6 October 1917).
An image of Éamon de Valera on the steps of Ennis Courthouse following his victory in the East Clare by-election in July 1917.