ELIZABETH
VIRGINIA CULLEN AGE 79
WILLIAM
P. “BILL” FRANK TRIBUTE
The
Morning News reports Mrs Cullen died last night in a West Chester
home .
She
was for 35 years a new reporter for the News Journal newspapers.
Until
1966 she was still writing special articles out of the Lewes &
Rehoboth
area. She was a Rehoboth resident until 1967 when because of
her
advancing age she move to West Chester to live with her daughter
and
son
in law, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Ryan at 429 North Church Street.
Later
she
moved to the Brandywine Hall in West Chester.
While
a correspondent for Rehoboth Mrs Cullen covered storms and
many ship wrecks and was a history authority. During the 1934
January blizzardwhen telephone and telegraph wire were out she and
Richards Roberts set up a amature radio station in an abandoned
chicken shed to keep contact with Wilmington newspapers, and
despite the low 10 degree temperature scurried about gathering
news.
With
her knowledge of the shore and her persistence she went aboard tug
boats going to assist ships in distress.
Mrs
Cullen wrote folklore and history of Lewes and Rehoboth. She was
known to be an authority on the DeBraak ship wreck.
Elizabeth
Virginia Flannagan was born in Charlottesville, Virginia, daughter
of Broadaus an Lottie Goodyear Flannagan.
In 1913 she and Joseph Cullen were married in Brooklyn and divorced
11 years later. She lived in Columbia, South Carolina where she
was
secretary to two governors , Robert Cooper and Wilson Harvey, and
in
1923 in Savannah she worked for a U. S. Attorney and until 1931 was
on
staff
of Savannah Morning News, until she moved to New Castle to live
with
a sister, Mrs Lewis Booker and wrote about New Castle, Delaware
City,
Middletown and St. Georges. She then moved to Lewes to be the
regular
correspondent and in 1943 moved to Rehoboth. Mrs Cullen was a
Associated
Press representative for Baltimore, Philadlelphia and New York.
She
also was a writer for the WPA and the Delaware Guide.
A
Lewes project she did was restration of the Pilot Town Fountain
of
Youth and use of the Quakertown name. Active in the Red Cross, Lewes
Cotillion,
Soroptimist and all Saints Episcopal of Rehoboth.
Besides
her daughter she is surviced by two granddaughters , one great
grandaughter,
two brothers Eric Goodyear Flannagan & Oscar Broadus
Flannagan
both of North Carolina. Funeral was private.
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