Certainly, we took steps to economize before vacationing in Ireland. We followed a friend's advice to check out the real estate website daft.ie, rather than scramble for a room in a hotel or B&B. The online service lists short- and long-term rentals available in houses and apartments around the country, with lots of photos, maps, and the like.
With only a bit of Internet digging, and one trans-Atlantic phone call, we found a centrally located one-bedroom apartment, modern and clean, with a small but serviceable kitchen and bath for 1,600 euros for four weeks. That's about $2,500, but a far better number than, say, a basic room at the Shelbourne. If you can find one, they start at 199 euros a day, more than $300, or about $8,400 for four weeks.
Still, we splurged for tea breaks at the Shelbourne about four times. The cost entitled us to rest in the comfortable lounge, use the sparkling restrooms, and witness a slice of Ireland not found at our humble digs several blocks away.
It was at the Shelbourne that the first Constitution of the Irish Free State was hammered out between February and May 1922, and ratified that June. Historians say it brought peace with Britain after the 1916 Easter Uprising, and set off discord among the Irish that lasted until last year when Northern Ireland Protestants and Catholics agreed to share government, and the border crossings between the two states were taken down.
It was curious that Irish nation building took place in a hotel, as opposed to the United States' Independence Hall in Philadelphia. That gem of a Christopher Wren spire knock-off always seemed so elegantly austere when I was a boy learning about the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
When I chaperoned my daughter's class trip to visit the hall a few years ago, we discovered that much of it had been restored over the years.
I wondered whether Ireland's foundation hall had suffered the same fate.
So, we climbed the Shelbourne's central stairwell up one flight, turned right, and two doors down on the left was the "Constitution Room," the former room 112. There was no guard, no guided tour, nothing but us and the room.