Flanagan, Sue
Journalist, author, and photographer Sue Flanagan was born on July 17, 1926, in San Angelo, Texas. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Denver in 1946 and the following year attended a one-year program at the New York Institute of Photography. After returning to San Angelo in 1947, Flanagan worked as a photographer and journalist for the San Angelo Standard-Times until illness forced her to quit in 1949. She later became an advertising manager for a furniture store and the managing editor for Sheep and Goat Raisers Magazine . In the fall of 1952, she accepted a Rotary Scholar International Scholarship and studied English literature at Trinity College, University of Dublin. Upon returning to Texas, she again worked for the Standard-Times, helping to produce its 70th anniversary edition in 1954. Afterwards she served as the coordinator of the volunteer council at the McKnight Tuberculosis Hospital outside of San Angelo. While working at the hospital, she arranged for Attorney General Will Wilson to dedicate a new chapel there and subsequently became his administrative aide during the late 1950s. From 1960 to 1963, she ran the Capitol Press Bureau for the Wichita Falls newspapers, the Times and Record News, until she quit to work on a book about Sam Houston.
During her time with the attorney general’s office, Flanagan became interested in the letters of Sam Houston and began traveling and staying in places he visited. Her photographs of these places ultimately turned into a book, entitled Sam Houston’s Texas, which the University of Texas Press published in 1964. In 1965, she received a grant to write a book on cattle trails in Texas, eventually published in 1974 under the title Trailing the Longhorns .
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2016-08-18 08:08:48 am |
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2016-08-18 08:08:48 am |
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