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Sinéad de Valera

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President
  
Éamon de Valera

Succeeded by
  
Rita Childers

Nationality
  
Irish

Spouse
  
Éamon de Valera (m. 1910)

Party
  
Fianna Fáil

Preceded by
  
Phyllis Ryan

Resting place
  
Political party
  
Fianna Fáil

Education
  
University College Dublin

Sinéad de Valera Sinead De Valera Original Press photo from the 192039s or 3 Flickr

Full Name
  
Sinéad Ní Fhlannagáin

Born
  
3 June 1878Balbriggan, Dublin, Ireland (
1878-06-03
)

Died
  
7 January 1975, Santry, Republic of Ireland

Books
  
Irish Fairy Tales, More Irish Fairy Tales, The Enchanted Lake: Cla, Twelve Short Masterpie

Similar
  
Éamon de Valera, Arthur Griffith, Cathal Brugha

Sinéad de Valera (née Ní Fhlannagáin; 3 June 1878 – 7 January 1975) was First Lady of Ireland from 1959 to 1973, as the wife of former Taoiseach and 3rd President of Ireland, Éamon de Valera.

Contents

Sinéad de Valera wwwglasnevintrustieinternalcimg0nxaou62pg5p

Background

Sinéad de Valera Sinad de Valera sineaddevalera on Myspace

She was born Jane O'Flanagan in Balbriggan. Her father, Laurence, was a carpenter and was a native of Kildare who moved to Balbriggan and married a local girl, Margaret Byrne. The couple emigrated to New York City where their daughter, Mary, was born in 1871. The family had returned to Balbriggan by 1873 and Sinéad was born there in 1878. She trained as a teacher and worked first in Edenderry, before taking up a post at a national school in Dorset Street, Dublin in around 1901. The 1901 census records her as 'Jane Flanagan', living with her parents and three siblings at 6 Richmond Cottages in Dublin.

Marriage and children

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In her spare time, she taught Irish at the Leinster College of the Gaelic League in Parnell Square. One of her Irish students was Éamon de Valera, then a teacher of mathematics. On 8 January 1910, they were married. Together they had five sons, Vivion, Éamon, Brian, Ruairi and Terence (Terry), and two daughters, Máirín and Emer. On 9 February 1936, Brian, then aged twenty, was killed in a riding accident in the Phoenix Park.

Sinéad de Valera Extract The passionate and inspirational women of the Irish

Due to a combination of his imprisonment, political activities, and fundraising tours of the United States, the family saw relatively little of Éamon de Valera in the 1916-23 period. He was also away from home frequently during the early years of his political career. Sinéad de Valera played little or no public role during her husband's fifty years in public life.

Literary output

Sinéad de Valera wrote thirty one books for children in both English and Irish. Among her works were plays such as Cluichidhe na Gaedhilge (1935) and story collections such as The Emerald Ring and Other Irish Fairy Stories (1951), The Stolen Child and Other Stories (1961), The Four-leafed Shamrock (1964) and The Miser's Gold (1970).

Death

Sinéad de Valera died on 7 January 1975, at the age of 96, the day before what would have been the de Valeras' sixty-fifth wedding anniversary. Éamon de Valera died just under eight months later, on 29 August 1975, aged 92. The couple are buried together, along with their son Brian, at Dublin's Glasnevin Cemetery.

References

Sinéad de Valera Wikipedia