JOE DAISEY
CAPE HENLOPEN LIGHTHOUSE
ATTENDANT
Salisbury Daily Times,
Sunday, September 20, 1970. Dick Cullen, Staff :
Joe Daisey, an everyday
man, sits in his front porch rocking chair, watching TV and smoking
a cigaret, recalls vividly
the Cape Henlopen Lighthouse which served the the entrance to the
Delaware Bay for more than
165 years. A ray of light for mariners.
At age 86, Mr. Daisey is
the only surviving employe of the lighthouse, lives alone in Lewes.
His wife, Clara Ella
Edwards Daisey, died of cancer in 1956 as did his daughter.
Katherine
Campbell Daisey, in 1968.
Katherine was the last child to be born in the famed lighthouse.
Joe Daisey is diabetic,
blind in one eye and hard of hearing, but does not let these
minor
shortcomings interfere with
his daily routine. He says he cant do today what his used to be
able to do, but he makes
out. He doesn’t tell sea stories, just the facts, and prides
himself
in telling the truth. His
stories are long, factual and riddled with turn of the century
jargon.
The story of his departure
from the civil service job follows. His tenure at the lighthouse
began December 24th,
1911 and ended December 26, 1919 ended with a 'stormy'
confrontation with the
lighthouse keeper about keep duty for Christmans. Yes we had a
bloody fight , he punching
me in the short ribs and me punching him in the face. I almost
knocked him down the
spiral steps but grabbed him in time and pulled him aside.
I left my post, drew my
resignation and mailed it. A Short time later I got a letter from
the
Coast Guard which informed
me I had been temporarily suspended. I wrote back that I had
quit and that as that.
Mr. Daisey disputes the
story that the lighthouse fell during a nor' easter, April 13
1926.
He tells that he and his
wife were at the beach fishing, on a sunny day, water calm, hear a
thunderous roar and looked
toward that direction to find the lighthouse slipping down the
sand dune into the sea.
Joe Daisey explained that
Lewes residents were not too disturbed at the lighthouse fate as
it had been abandoned by
the Coast guard in 1924 as safety reasons and that it was just a
matter of time until it;s
fall.
Joseph Martin Daisey was
born in Box Iron, Maryland, near Snow Hill, 14 January 1885
and died in Lewes 1
February 1972. He had been a waterman most of his life.
His wife was Clara Ella
Edwards and they had a daughter born 1913 , Katherine , who died
at age 55.
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