

This pavement is crisscrossed by cracks known as grykes and underneath the pavement there are huge caves and rivers that suddenly flood when it rains. It contains dozens of megalithic tombs and celtic crosses and a ruined Cistercian Abbey from the 12th century, Corcomroe.
You can find villages abandoned since famine times and green roads on which you can walk for miles without ever seeing a car . And if you go in springtime you will find rare wildflowers such as gentian and orchids and bloody cranesbill.
O'Brien's Tower stands proudly on a headland of the majestic Cliffs. From the Cliffs one can see the Aran Islands, Galway Bay, as well as The Twelve Pins, the Maum Turk Mountains in Connemara and Loop Head to the South.
April 1927, Eamon de Valera with his mother, Catherine Coll.
Eamon circa 1937 in his office at the government offices.
January 1941 inspecting troops on O'Connell Street, Dublin on the 25 anniverssary of the 1916 Easter Uprising.
January 1948, Eamon attending the funeral of Yeats.
21st February 1948 a scene during the general elections in Eire. The poster displays Eamon de Valera's head and reads The Head of a MAN whose splendid life-story makes your being able to vote for him, a proud privilege.
1950 state function attended with wife Sinead.
1950- Eamon and Sinead de Valera with Dr. Douglas Hyde.
1963 Eamon meets US President John F. Kennedy.
1964- Eamon with U.S. President Lyndon Johnson.
14 October 1882 - 29 August 1975
Eamon De Valera with Pope John XXIII.
Eamon de Valera passed away 29 August 1975, a few months after his wife Sinead.
A closer look at the tombstone of the grave in which Eamon, Sinead and their son are buried.