MISS LIL'S HOUSE TO BE
TORN DOWN
On Lewes Beach, at house
number 485 Lewes Beach, in bad disrepair, a drab
frame house, neighbors to
Ira and Sallie Megee and the widow , 71 year old Hannah
Thompson, a house that
once held huge banquets with expensive wines, and run by one
of the most colorful
characters in Lewes , will soon disappear to make room for a motel.
For twenty years or
more, the residence of Lillian Lawrence, better known as
“Miss Lil”. It was the
rendezvous of ship officers and crewmen that “laid by” Lewes
as they came into the
Delaware Breakwater on way to Delaware River Ports.
As soon as a ship came in
from across the seas in the old days, the Captain and
officers would head for
“Miss Lils” for a huge dinner of roast beef, turkey and wild
duck,
served with the very best
French champagnes.
Miss Lil always had a
half dozen beautiful girls as hostesses to add to the enjoyment
of that first night ashore
after a long voyage. The night after the crewmen who could afford
the cost would be
entertained although less lavish.
Miss Lil was a handsome
mature woman , in 1920 she was 52, born about 1868, more
than likely, in Baltimore.
She dressed in the latest fashion, was driven in town in her buggy
with shiny wheels and a
fringed top. Her horse wore a harness with shiny brass
accoutrements. She was
know to be generous and when a family was known to be affected
by difficult times, she
would send them groceries . Once, when her horse ran away, an
elderly man caught it and
she rewarded hm with a $5 bill, which was then a weeks wages.
In 1920, at age 52, Miss
Lil had left Lewes to establish a larger place of entertainment
in Miami. She was
known to have had a fiery temper, and it was told by her doctor
that
she kept her money between
pages of the Bible, saying it was always safe there as no one
would ever touch that book.
Her hostesses came from
Baltimore and used more makeup than local women and
became know as “painted
women” which Miss Lil resented.
Exact dates of her Lewes
residency in this house are unknown but she came after
1900 to remain to 1920,
when ships no longer stopped at Lewes, other than to pick up a
pilot.
Abstract May 16 22018,
Harrison H., from the W. Emerson Wilson column in the
the Wilmington New
Journal February 20, 1967.
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