Former Iran hostage dies in equestrian accident

Published: Monday, May 10 2004 12:00 a.m. MDT

RECTORTOWN, Va. (AP) — Elizabeth Ann Swift Cronin, one of two women held hostage for 444 days after the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran, in 1979, died Friday in a horseback riding accident. She was 63.

Cronin was the ranking political officer at the embassy when Iranian students angered by American policies seized the compound. She and Kathryn Koob, then director of the Iran-American Society, were kept largely separated from the 50 men also taken captive.

After her release in January 1981, she continued her State Department career with postings in Greece, Jamaica and London and served as a deputy assistant secretary of state for overseas citizens services. She retired in 1995.

The Washington Post quoted a family friend as saying Cronin was riding with her husband, Paul, when her horse stumbled after clearing a jump and she fell from the saddle.

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