seagullsovergrimsby
#cpfctinpotclub
Telegrams would have been sent to express condolences in the event of the death of a monarch or president , these protocols were observed as a mark of respect. Eire was a neutral country , by NOT sending a telegram it would have inferred Eamon de Valera was adopting a pro Allies stance.Except he didn't. There are some faulty sources on the net, such as that. Official daily diaries show that he didn't visit the Germany embassy. They DO show that he sent a telegram, which your faulty source doesn't even claim he didn't - so where did you get that "fact" you claim, again, inacurately from.
de Valera was notable for never signing books of condolence, as it happens - the death of Roosevelt got a telegram too and his non-appearance at the US embassy was a source of media scandal.
Anyway, you said you "believe" he signed it in Dublin, hence my question - where the f*** else could he have signed it if he had?