4th Quarter 2013 - World Lighthouse Society
Transcription
4th Quarter 2013 - World Lighthouse Society
World Lighthouse Society Promoting, Preserving & Protecting the World’s Lighthouses 4th Quarter 2013 Volume 11, Issue 4 Page 2 World Lighthouse Society CHAIRMAN’S LETTER Dear Members, Let me firstly wish you a good start to the New Year. May you, your families and friends all keep well. A warm welcome on board to all new members of the World Lighthouse Society. I hope you will find many new lighthouse contacts or, even better, new lighthouse friends. As mentioned before, the figurehead and calling card of our Society is our Newsletter. Thanks to our highly engaged and most creative Editor, Donna Suchomelly, the Newsletter has reached a very high standard over the last years. Donna, let me thank you again on behalf of the Executive Board and all our members, for the brilliant and outstanding job you have done again and for spending so much of your time for the benefit of our Society. My thanks also go again to your editorial team. Last but not least let me also thank all the members who have again contributed articles or photographs for our Newsletter. As Donna always says, the Newsletter simply could not exist without you, so please continue to send your contributions. Looking back over the last year, or even the last years, I think we have to ask ourselves the question “what have we reached on our way to our main aim as a world wide organisation for the promotion, protection and preservation of lighthouses, lightvessels and other seamarks?” I personally think we have achieved much but I want to ask how we can go forward and achieve even more. It is time to focus on the future of our Society and the way it will go forward. What we need is to breathe new life into our Society! What we need are new ideas on how to meet our main aim! It is not realistic that we will be able to master this big challenge as the Executive Board alone. What we need is your active participation! So as a first step please let us know your creative and innovative ideas. All proposals will be most welcome and they will be discussed by the Executive Board. Let us make 2014 a year of renewal and regeneration on our way to achieve our main aim. If we are to make 2014 a unique opportunity for change, then there is an urgent need for your support and participation. So let us all work together to make the future of our Society a long lasting success! Jürgen Tronicke (Germany) TABLE OF CONTENTS Letter from the Editor ........................................................ 3 Everyday Heroes ......................................................... 29 Port Ellen Lighthouse ......................................................... 3 Mystery of Lighthouse Photo Solved ............................. 30 176 Years of Lighthouses in Chile .................................... 4 Photo Tour of LV50 Lightship .......................................... 31 Cover Photos ...................................................................... 4 News from the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Found. ...... 34 Clyde Lighthouses in Wartime ......................................... 5 Obituaries .......................................................................... 35 CoastLight.net .................................................................... 6 National Lighthouse Museum Opening ....................... 36 Negril Point Lighthouse, Jamaica ................................... 8 Membership ...................................................................... 38 Lighthouse Postcards ...................................................... 11 Newsletters ........................................................................ 38 Lights Go Out at Orfordness .......................................... 16 Contact Information ....................................................... 39 My Trip to London ............................................................ 18 The Light on Top—Part 20 ............................................... 20 International Lighthouse Heritage Weekend ............. 27 Book Reviews: A Light in the Wilderness ........................................... 27 Belle Tout: The Little Lighthouse That Moved ......... 28 © 2013 World Lighthouse Society Page 3 4th Quarter 2013 LETTER FROM THE EDITOR Dear Members: My best wishes to all of you for a New Year filled with Peace and Joy. A special welcome to our new members: Stan and Margret Butcher (England), Hileri Seery (U.S.A.) and Machelle Dumaine (U.S.A.) We hope you will all become actively involved in the WLS. As I sit here at my computer on this very chilly day in January I can’t help but think back to the year just past filled with so many wonderful experiences and opportunities. I can only hope that 2014 is as good or even better, for all of us. Some people make “resolutions” at the start of a new year. I prefer to mark the start of a new year with a realignment of goals. That is precisely what we, as members of the World Lighthouse Society, are being asked to do by our chairman, Jürgen Tronicke. The time has come for each and every one of us to examine what the WLS means to us and what we can do to make it more than just a quarterly Newsletter. The goals of this Society, “Promoting, Preserving and Protecting the World’s Lighthouses”, are printed on the front cover of every issue of the Newsletter. I think we’ve done a fair job of Promoting our lighthouses, but we need to do much more in the areas of Preserving and Protecting. I’ve often written that this Newsletter would not exist without the assistance of our members, and that is true. However, more importantly, this Society cannot achieve all of its goals without the active participation of more of our members. The World Lighthouse Society belongs to the members and it is our members who will determine how or if we achieve our stated goals. I remember back in 2004 when I first learned about the World Lighthouse Society. Quite honestly, I joined because I wanted a copy of The Lighthouse Encyclopaedia, which was included with membership at that time. However, inside the first issue of the Newsletter I received after joining was a plea from then WLS President Rosalie Davis Gibb, asking for precisely what is being asked of you now. I responded by saying that I’d love to help, but really didn’t know how since I lived so far away. Little did I know where I would be today. After many messages back and forth Rosie persuaded me to try my hand at Newsletter Editor. And here I am still, all these years later. I’ve learned a lot of valuable lessons through my involvement in the WLS. None more important than this: Never underestimate what one person can do to make a difference. We look forward to hearing from you all as we move forward into the New Year. Donna Suchomelly (U.S.A.) PORT ELLEN LIGHTHOUSE The Laird of Islay built Port Ellen lighthouse on the southern Hebridean island of Islay in 1832 as a memorial to commemorate the life of his wife. Lord Walter Frederick Campbell had been an officer in the Scots Guards and later was the Member of Parliament for the County of Argyll. His beloved Lady Ellinor, the daughter of the 7th Earl of Weymss, had died at the age of thirty-six. This fact is recorded on a plaque on the west wall above the doorway of the main tower. It is a PRB lantern fixed to a short mast on the flat roof showing a red, green and white sectored light flashing every three seconds. The focal plane of the light is 20 metres above sea level giving it a range of 15 nautical miles. Peter Williams (Scotland) The twin-towered lighthouse was built on Carraig Fhada rocks at the end of a low rocky promontory jutting out from the shore, to the south west of Port Ellen. The towers were constructed from rubble masonry and lime washed. The keeper lived on the first floor in a room with the comfort of a fireplace with an internal chimney. There is an internal stone stairway to the second floor and a ladder to give access to the flat roof and a fixed oil light. This was exhibited through an oriel window built into the parapet wall of the tower. The light was placed to assist vessels approaching the western entrance of the harbour. The modern light maintained by the Northern Lighthouse Board is automatic. Port Ellen Lighthouse. Creative Commons photo by Thomas Keetley. Page 4 World Lighthouse Society 176 YEARS OF LIGHTHOUSES IN CHILE A few weeks ago, the Maritime Signaling Service of the Chilean Navy commemorated the 176th anniversary of the first lighthouse on Valparaiso bay. This important event was celebrated at Punta Angeles Lighthouse, our head lighthouse. Our first step [toward lighting the coast] started in the 19th century, securing our long coast across the country, especially the commercial route of the Strait of Magellan. This strait connects the Pacific Ocean with the Atlantic Ocean. At that time, the Panama Canal did not exist and maritime transport was mostly by this route. The first effort to establish a lighthouse network was started by Heinrich Siemsen. After that, the Scottish engineer George Slight designed and built a set of lighthouses among which featured the Islote Evangelistas Lighthouse. This lighthouse had a great history, perhaps compared only with the Bell Rock, and is one of the most exposed, isolated and least accessible in the world. From that [beginning], we [now] have more than one thousand maritime signals including manned lighthouses, automatic lighthouses, buoys, beacons, and others. This complete signal network aids navigation and development of our country. Marcelo Aliaga (Chile) Interesting links: The anniversary celebration: http://www.armada.cl/ armada-de-chile-conmemoro-los-176-anos-de-laespecialidad-de-faros/prontus_armada/2013-1108/094421.html Short video about the anniversary: http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=y66unfCMrwE Editor’s Note: Both of the above websites are in Spanish. However you can use Google Translate to get a rough translation of the article in the first link. I was able to understand the main points covered in the article. The video is entirely in Spanish, however there is some good footage of a museum with great displays about the lighthouses of Chile that is worth looking at. Punta Angeles Lighthouse. Creative Commons photo by Claudio Alvarado COVER PHOTOS Front Cover: Orfordness Lighthouse, England. Photo by Patrick Tubby. Story on page 16. Back Cover: Negril Point Lighthouse, Jamaica. Photo by Elinor DeWire. Story on page 8. 4th Quarter 2013 Page 5 CLYDE LIGHTS IN WAR TIME The North Carr Light vessel was moved from her home station on the East Coast of Scotland to a War station where she was known as the Clyde Light vessel in 1942. She Dunoon and started to narrow in the approaches to Glasgow. This made it an ideal site to control access to the wharves of Glasgow. An anti-submarine boom defence net with its controlled opening was therefore stretched between the lighthouse and Dunoon on the northern shore with the lighthouse acting as the lookout and control point for the operation of the boom. At this point the river is just over two nautical miles wide. The boom was completely replaced six times during the war, and eight boom defence ships were in continuous service night and day. It cost £1,000,000 and made impregnable the Clyde anchorage, sheltering at times some of the greatest concentrations of shipping the world has ever seen. North Car Light Vessel was positioned about six miles to the southeast of Sanda Island at 55 08º north 05 20º west. She was repainted battleship grey for the duration of her Clyde duty. The vessel was only manned when the Admiralty ordered her to be lit for convoys approaching Tail o the Bank at the entrance to the Clyde estuary where there was an anchorage and make up and dispersal area for the North Atlantic Merchant ship convoys. An incident was recorded when the German U-Boat U1172 under the command of Oberleutnant sur See Jürgen Kuhlmann managed to evade the defences and enter the Clyde Estuary on 15th January 1945. He sighted and torpedoed the Escort Carrier HMS Thane (a US built Ruler Class) as she was passing near to the position of the light vessel. Although sadly ten of the crew of HMS Thane were killed in the action the carrier was saved and towed to Glasgow for repair. Kuhlmann and his crew did not survive to return to Germany for the submarine was depth charged and sunk in St. Georges Channel between Scotland and Northern Ireland by Royal Navy warships on 27th January 1945 when all the crew were lost. During 1945 the light vessel was towed back to her home station on Scotland’s east coast. Further up the River Clyde the Cloche (its Gaelic meaning is “stone”) lighthouse operated by the Clyde Lighthouse Trust played a significant part in the protection of the shipping in the river. The lighthouse was built in 1797 by Thomas Smith for the Cumbrae Lighthouse Trust (which later became part of the Clyde Lighthouse Trust) at a strategic point two miles west of Gourock on the South bank of the river where it changed course ninety degrees between Gourock and Boom defence at Cloche It was natural that in nearly six years of war incidents occurred to relieve the monotony for the men of the guard ships and these incidents were usually associated with the alarm system. So delicately adjusted are the alarms that any contact with the net set off a series of rocket flares and lit up the waterway. More than once a small boat inadvertently touching the boom set off the flare. One night when the alarm was raised the intruder was discovered to be nothing more deadly than an old basking shark. One of the other lighthouses built for the Cumbrae Lighthouse Trust was at Toward Point completed in 1812 by Robert Stevenson. It is sited on the bank of the Clyde six miles south of Dunoon. During the war it was painted grey and fitted with a chequerboard on one of the cottages that acted as a marker for the Toward Coastal Defence gun battery to calibrate their rangefinder; a small but nevertheless important wartime duty for the lighthouse. Images from the collection of the author. Peter Williams (Scotland) Page 6 World Lighthouse Society COASTLIGHT.NET—A GLOBAL SERVICE TO PRESENT LIGHTHOUSE HERITAGE “In 2009 the Norwegian Coastal Administration presented a national plan for the preservation of different aspects of our maritime infrastructure”, says Jo van der Eynden, director of the Norwegian Lighthouse Museum. ”The plan described a significant number of objects to be preserved, but it went one step further. It also described 5 different geographical areas of the coast that they called ‘Representative areas’. In these five geographical areas the goal was not to focus on singular objects, but to try to communicate the complex and interdependent relation between different ATONs [Aids to Navigation], and to show both the historical Lindesnes Lighthouse history The Jan-Robert Jore, project manager and filmmaker digital map based service Coastlight.net reaches people through smart phones, tablets and PC/Macs. The service is conceived and designed to present both the historic and present-day world maritime infrastructure with lighthouses and other aids to navigation, traffic surveillance, ports and maritime history in general through geo-tagged documentary films, photos and text. The targeted audiences are tourists and people travelling, students and schools, museums and the interested general public. A lot of the world’s lighthouses are closed or unreachable to the public. Through Coastlight.net all lighthouses and their history can be opened up for everybody – to see, learn and experience. Director Jo van der Eynden, Lindesnes lighthouse museum, during filming Lindenses Lighthouse- rays of light development of the different aspects of maritime infrastructure as well as presenting how the different objects and installations function together today.” But one difficult question remained: How could this be done? The Norwegian Lighthouse Museum on the southernmost tip of Norway took the challenge and developed the pilot project "Maritime cultural landscape - Lindesnes". 16 documentary films were produced and linked to their geographical location through geo-tagging. A technological platform for net-based distribution to smart phones, tablets and PCs was developed, based on the use of digital maps and geo-tagged documentary films, photos and text. In May 2013 the net based service, kystreise.no, was opened by the Minister for Fisheries and Coastal affairs, Hurricane at Lindesnes lighthouse Page 7 4th Quarter 2013 Lisbeth Berg-Hansen. Developing a technological platform has been one goal for the project, but the development of content for the service has been even more important. Five thematic documentary films have been made, covering topics from aids to navigation and lighthouse history to weather and food from the sea. Short documentary films have been made covering specific geographical places and its maritime history. By using the digital maps and assigning icons to geographical positions, the user of the service can get access to documentary films, photos and text telling the story of that specific geographical location. And the use of the service does not cost anything for the user. Now the kystreise.no project is developing into a nationwide service covering the Norwegian coast. Five museums, from the North Cape to the southernmost tip of Norway are producing documentary films and other content from their geographical area, and 25 more museums in the Network for Fisheries and Coastal Culture are starting to work on their stories from their geographical areas. In June 2013 kystreise.no was presented at the IALA (International Association for aids to navigation and Lighthouse Authorities) conference “Preservation of Lighthouse Heritage” in Athens, Greece. The response was very positive, and one of the concluding action points of the conference was: “The IALA Heritage Working group should investigate the possibility of extending the Norwegian 'Kystreise.no' initiative.” kystreise.no to English, but after Athens we understood that we needed an English language service with a meaningful name all over the world. Our answer was to develop and open the Coastlight.net service. The interest of tourists and the tourism industry will also benefit from this”, says Jore. The geographical extension of the Coastlight.net service is now developing rapidly. France will be first with their lighthouse museum, Musée des Phares et Balises, located together with one of the strongest lighthouses of the world, Le Créac’h, on the island of Ouessant in Bretagne. And more French lighthouses will follow. The Nordic Council of Ministers has asked us to develop plans for the Skagerrak and Kattegat region of Sweden, Denmark and Norway. Coastlight.net was also presented at the ”5th Baltic Sea Region Cultural Heritage Forum” in Tallinn in September 2013 and led to talks with the Baltic sea initiative “South Baltic Maritime Atlas”. Coastlight.net was also presented at the IALA meeting in Paris in October 2013 where representatives from China and Ireland expressed interest in looking into possible cooperation through the Coastlight.net service. "Our aim now is to establish an international network that can contribute to making Coastlight.net a major platform for communicating and promoting our lighthouse and ATON history as a common global heritage" says Jo van der Eynden." We also want to develop Coastlight.net as an international service of qualified information. To achieve this we hope for the active cooperation from IALA representatives in all the member countries and from the World Lighthouse Society." Other interested countries, organisations and lighthouses are asked to contact the Coastlight.net service through Jan-Robert Jore at kystreise@gmail.com. “The response in Athens led us to rethink our goals for an English language version of Kystreise.no”, says Jan -Robert Jore, documentary filmmaker and expert on digital film distribution. “Initially we had planned to just translate all content within Jo van der Eynden (Norway) Coastlight web page Page 8 World Lighthouse Society NEGRIL POINT LIGHTHOUSE, JAMAICA In December 2002, I made a visit to Negril Point Lighthouse, Jamaica. It was a chance to see colonial British lighthouse practices of the nineteenth century combined with the modern-day operations of the Jamaican Port Authority. In addition, I had a chance to study a little Jamaican maritime history, meet a lighthouse keeper working in an idyllic spot on a tropical jewel of the Caribbean at 18° 15’ North latitude, and escape the cold weather in December. Not a bad assignment for a gal who lives in the rainy Pacific Northwest! Jamaica is about 146-miles [235 km] long and 50-miles [80.5 km] wide and has a diverse geography of sandy beaches and a rugged coral reef shoreline giving way to interior mountains with sharply walled valleys carved by rushing rivers and streams. It also has a thriving tourist industry and a colorful history. It’s believed the name Jamaica is a corruption of the native Arawak word xaymaca, meaning “land of wood and water.” These Amerind natives lived quietly until the late 15th century, disturbed only by occasional raids by the aggressive Caribs from South America. Then, in 1494 and 1503, Christopher Columbus visited Jamaica on two separate voyages from Europe, landing on the north shore of the island near present-day St. Ann’s Bay. The visits were exploitive to some degree, involving the repair and provisioning of Columbus’ ships and the claiming of land for Spain. Columbus’ son attempted to set up a Spanish colony. It wasn’t wholly successful, but Spanish influence stuck, and the islanders never forgot Columbus. A monument to him stands in the town of Seville. Not long after Columbus’ visit, pirates found the island’s geographic location perfect for their nefarious activities. The buccaneer Calico Jack lived in the area around Punta Negrilla, on the western tip of Jamaica, along with his pirate girlfriends Anne Bonney and Mary Read. The French captured them all in 1720, and Calico Jack was executed by hanging in Port Royal. Piracy blackened the area, but it’s not responsible for the name Negril, which means “black” in Spanish. Historians believe the black cliffs of the area, or possibly the black eels that live in the sea here, occasioned the name. Whalers used Jamaica as a processing center to cut up and dry their catch. A protected bay north of Punta Negrilla was a favorite spot for this activity and quickly earned the name Bloody Bay for the whale butchery. South of it lay a seven-mile-long stretch of tawny sand - one of the finest beaches in the world - where the whalers could relax, drink rum, and carouse with the natives before heading home to New England with their holds filled with whale oil, the fuel of America’s colonial lighthouses. French, Spanish, and English colonists fought over ownership of Jamaica and alternated occupation of the island for over three centuries. In the process, they founded the island’s profitable sugar industry, assuring Jamaica a stable vertex in the famous Triangle Trade that brought slaves from Africa to work in the cane fields and sent molasses to New England for the production of rum. Slavery was outlawed in Jamaica in 1832, and after years of political and social struggle, the island gained independence from Britain in 1962. Much has changed since explorers, pirates, and whalers occupied the island. Reggae music wafts through the air, vacationers sunbathe and swim nude, women in bright clothing walk the streets and beaches with baskets of fruit and vegetables on their heads, artists offer handmade crafts of jewelry and woodcarving and hawkers sell cigarettes and Ganja, the Jamaican marijuana. Negril’s famous Seven Mile Beach is cluttered with resorts, hotels, restaurants, and bars – a much different-looking place than the pristine beach the rough whalers knew, but equally hedonistic. Outside this artificial Jamaica are the shacks of the locals and their simple farms and cottage industries that provide food and crafts for the tourist markets. During my week in Jamaica, I headed out to enjoy the west coast scenery and visit the old Negril Point Lighthouse, one of seven lighthouses still operated by the Jamaican Port Authority and the first lighthouse seen by ships arriving from the west. I was thrilled when the smiling gentleman who greeted my group at the base of the tower introduced himself as the resident lighthouse keeper. Wilson Johnson told me he had served at two other Jamaican lighthouses for nine years before becoming the keeper of Negril Point Light where he had been assigned for the past eighteen years. He and his family, including six large dogs, lived in one of the keeper’s homes at the base of the tower. Though no services are needed to maintain the beacon itself, Wilson Johnson (shown with me in December 2002) remained on station as a caretaker. He knew enough about the old-style lighting apparatus to put it back in operation if the modern equipment failed 4th Quarter 2013 Johnson arrived at Negril Point Lighthouse only a few months prior to the station’s automation in 1984-85, just long enough to oversee installation of the tower’s self-sufficient electric beacon and learn how to operate and maintain it. The station also got a little facelift and upgrade at this time. The Jamaican Port Authority entrusted Johnson to supervise the sprucing up and automation, and a few years later the solarization of the beacon. Although actual lightkeeping duties were no longer necessary after automation, and one of the keepers was retired, Johnson remained on the compound as a caretaker, giving tours and doing the daily upkeep of the grounds and tower. He told me it was important to have someone living on-site to prevent vandalism and to restore the beacon in the unexpected event it should fail. He knew how to switch it back to kerosene lamp operation if a hurricane hit the island! Following automation, Johnson prudently asked the Port Authority to allow him to keep the old kerosene lamps and acetylene apparatus and many of the station tools, which he made sure to keep in operational order. He also kept the logbooks. He displayed these in the base of the tower, and though there was no money to properly maintain them in the When the lighthouse was humid conditions, at least automated in the 1980s, they weren’t lost or lightkeeper Wilson Johnson wisely misplaced. I took a peek asked to keep the old kerosene in the musty logbooks but lamps. He had them on display in the base of the lighthouse during found nothing beyond my visit in 2002 and explained to daily records of weather and duties. Johnson said my group how they worked. most Jamaican lighthouse logbooks are like this. Keepers were not encouraged to write anything flowery or personal, and many of them were barely literate before the 1940s. He added that he had no talent with words and was glad there was little of it needed in his job. I found him to be a colorful speaker though, impassioned by his unique work. Johnson gave a brief historical talk to my group, as he did for all visitors before taking them up the 103 steps of the iron spiral staircase to the lantern. He asked no fee for this, but I pressed some money into his hand before I left – $200 Jamaican, which was worth about $4 American as of December 2002. He accepted it graciously, and I joked that he might use it buy extra dog food, with so many dogs running about on the station! He quipped that his wife would take it and buy candy for the children. One of the more interesting points in Johnson’s historical Page 9 talk concerned the foundation of the lighthouse, which was designed by Trinity House to withstand earthquakes. The 66foot [20 m] concrete tower sits on a 45,000-gallon [170,343 liter] manmade reservoir of water that cushions it and allows the tower to sway gently when tremors wrack the point. This flexibility is the secret to stability. Earthquakes have struck Jamaica on numerous occasions, most notably in 1692 when the town of Kingston was seriously rattled, and nearby Port Royal was destroyed by the ensuing tsunami. The island’s volcanic origin is to blame. Johnson told me Negril Point Lighthouse went into service under English rule in 1894, the fourth sentinel to be lighted in Jamaica (the oldest is at Port Morant, 1841). The tower was constructed of concrete made with crushed coral, quarried locally, and coated in a protective layer of cement. The beautiful second-order, barrel-shaped Fresnel lens was manufactured in Paris by Barbier & Benard in 1888 and shipped to the point where it was hauled 34-feet [10 m] up the cliff using a derrick. Lit by kerosene lamps, it was later changed to acetylene gas, then electrified, and finally solarized in 1985. Its white beacon flashes once every two seconds. A red panel warns of the reef just off the point to the north. A bell on the catwalk of the lantern was once used to signal the change of watch for the two resident keepers in the era before automation. The keepers’ homes, made of coral blocks, were constructed next to the lighthouse. They are substantial, having weathered numerous hurricanes. In 2002, Johnson’s family occupied both homes. His son and daughter-in-law lived in the smaller house, and Johnson, his wife, and the younger children still at home occupied the larger house. Quaint, striped awnings still keep out the harsh afternoon sun, and two cisterns stand next to the houses. They were once used to store water that was caught on the roofs of the houses during rainstorms. Modern conveniences of plumbing and electricity came relatively late to the station. Johnson thought the entire complex, including the A small concrete dock and seawall are visible in this image taken by D. Ramey Logan in 2008 from just north of the station. The rough coral rock of the shoreline of Negril is evident here. The nutrient rich Caribbean Sea is deep blue and warm - a snorkeler’s paradise. Wikimedia Commons photo by D. Ramey Logan. Page 10 WorldLighthouse Lighthouse Society World Society lighthouse, was electrified about 1960. A connection to the town of Negril’s water supply also was made about this time, and the cisterns were abandoned. Before that, keepers had to be thrifty with water, as rain was the only source. Bougainvillea and other flowers added splashes of color to the compound. A small vegetable garden, some chickens scratching around the yard, and a plantain tree gave evidence of the semi-self-sufficiency of the Johnson family. Wilson Johnson told me he liked to make beer too. Curiously, I could hear a screechy voice in the distance. Johnson laughed and told me it was the family’s pet parrot, Henry, named for none other than the pirate-turned-vice governor, Captain Henry Morgan, more famous as the face on good Jamaican rum. Near the lighthouse are the famous coral cliffs where intrepid tourists jump into the sea. Considering that the mean daytime temperature in Jamaica year-round is 86ºF [30ºC] and the humidity can be oppressive, a refreshing dip must have been commonplace for the early lightkeepers and their family members. Johnson told me there was no air conditioning at the light station, and like as not, there still isn’t. Johnson said the house remained cool because of its coral construction and the pleasant ocean breezes that blow over the point. He also mentioned that fishing was a popular past time with lightkeepers and that his family still fishes regularly off the point. spectrum, and green is the last to disappear over the horizon in a swift salute. I asked Wilson Johnson if he had ever seen it, and he admitted he had seen all manner of optical delights on the ocean horizon. He said his favorite sky tableau was a view of Venus in the west when the New Moon sat near it. “She is a fine lady,” he added with a smile. This validated my hunch that lighthouse keepers have a front row seat to an amazing, nightly, celestial show! I don’t know if Wilson Johnson still lives on Negril Point. If so, he’d be nearing or at retirement age. Recent pictures I’ve seen of the station show the homes are occupied and wellmaintained. The Jamaican Port Authority likely would keep someone on site to deter vandalism and greet tourists. The 1894 lighthouse is a popular tourist stop and is registered as a Jamaican National Heritage Site. It’s a showpiece in the “Land of Wood and Water,” pirates, reggae, and good rum. Eh mon! All photos by the author except otherwise noted. Elinor DeWire (U.S.A.) Editor’s Note: Follow Elinor’s Blog about lighthouses at elinordewire.blogspot.com and visit her Author Page on Facebook at “Elinor DeWire, Author.” Sunsets here are breathtaking. That may sound hackneyed, but it’s true. I waited and observed it for myself. Myriad tints of pink, lavender, and tangerine colored the sky late in the day, as the sun descended into a long solsticial twilight. I even thought I glimpsed the Green Flash in a clear spot along the horizon to the southwest, a strange and rare optical phenomenon as the sun drops behind a calm, clear sea, departing with a quick flash of green. This occurs because sunlight contains all the colors of the visible The handsome, 20-meter [66 ft] tall tower was constructed of local materials, primarily coral mixed with concrete. It was the fourth lighthouse to be built in Jamaica and still serves shipping The diagonal astragals on the lantern windows are its most notable British signature, intended to create less interference with the beams The second-order barrelshaped Fresnel lens, made in Paris in 1888, has served the lighthouse for over a century. Several evolutions of upgrades have occurred, including acetylene lamps, electricity, and more recently, solarization. Page 11 4th Quarter 2013 LIGHTHOUSE POSTCARDS When I first became interested in lighthouses my way of “collecting” them was to visit them and take photos of them. Then, just in case my photos didn’t turn out as well as I’d hoped, I would purchase a postcard of each lighthouse if there were any available. Sometime when we traveled to various places to see the lighthouses we would stop in antique stores even though we aren’t really antique collectors; we just enjoy finding things from our childhood and seeing what they are worth today. It was during one of these side visits to an antique shop that I found my first vintage lighthouse postcard and I immediately realized the value of these treasures, especially if the images contained on them were of lighthouses that no longer exist. A new hobby was born, and now we regularly look for vintage postcards whenever we come across an antique shop. In addition, about once a year we make a special trip to the state of Maryland, where we found a shop that deals entirely in vintage postcards. Recently my good friend and fellow World Lighthouse Society member Jeremy D’Entremont started displaying some vintage lighthouse postcards from his collection on his Facebook page. I had the immediate reaction of a light bulb going off in my head, and thought, why not start a series in the WLS Newsletter featuring vintage postcards? After all, it might be the only opportunity some of our members have to see some of the world’s lighthouses, especially those which no longer exist. So here we are. I am going to start things off with a few images of some of the postcards in my collection. But I am going to challenge all of you fellow vintage lighthouse postcard collectors to keep this series going by sending me image files of the postcards (front and back) in your collection. If you feel up to even more of a challenge, you can include a few words about each of the lighthouses on the cards, or you can leave that up to yours truly. So, if you are willing to share your collection with the rest of our members, please contact me at the address listed on the Contacts page of this issue. in 1957. The capitol of the country, Papeete, is located on Tahiti, one of the islands in a chain known as the Society Islands. Although most of the navigational aids in French Polynesia are small modern structures, there are some historic traditional towers, but most are no longer used as lighthouses. The tower at Point Venus is one exception. The site was named Point Venus because it is the site of Captain James Cook’s observation of the transit of From the back of the card: Venus in front of the sun on 3 Point Venus Lighthouse. Only June 1769. The lighthouse is lighthouse on the island of Tahiti located in a park at the French Polynesia Built in 1867, Charcoal was used northern tip of Tahiti. before electricity. Columbia View Cards, The notation on the back of P.O. Box 398, my postcard states that the lighthouse was built in 1867. Ocean Park, Washington 98640 However records indicate the light was actually built in 1868 by Thomas Stevenson, one of the famous Stevenson lighthouse engineers from Scotland. Stevenson was also the father of famous author Robert Louis Stevenson. The light was restored and raised by 7 m (23 ft) to a height of 33 m (108 ft) in 1963. The white square tower has six stepped stories below the watch room and gallery and is trimmed in gray. Point Venus Lighthouse is still an active aid to navigation and displays a white flash every 5 seconds at a focal plane of 31 m (102 ft). Now, here are a few postcards from my collection. These are all from outside of the U.S.A. I’ll save those from my homeland for another time. Most of the information about the lighthouses on these cards I found using WLS member Russ Rowlett’s Lighthouse Directory (http://www.unc.edu/ ~rowlett/lighthouse/), and WLS member Lighthouse Digest’s Explorer Database(http://www.foghornpublishing.com/ digest/database/searchdatabase.cfm). Point Venus Lighthouse, Tahiti The island of Tahiti is one of more than 130 islands comprising the country of French Polynesia in the South Pacific Ocean. France started colonizing the islands in 1842, and finally controlled them all by 1889. Once known as French Oceania, the named changed to French Polynesia Current photo of Point Venus Lighthouse. Flickr Creative Commons photo by Pierre Lesage. Morro Castle Lighthouse (Castillo del Morro), Cuba Cuba is the largest island in the West Indies. It was originally a Spanish colony, but was conquered by the United States Page 12 World Lighthouse Society during the Spanish-American War in 1898. U.S. occupation of Cuba ended in 1902. Unfortunately longstanding political difficulties between Cuba and the U.S. have prevented most American tourists from gaining access to Cuban lighthouses. As a result, most information available on the country’s lighthouses has been posted on the Internet by European or Canadian visitors, or by Cuban tourist agencies. On the front of the card: 80 Saint-Nazaire. – La Tour du Commerce á Bonne-Anse. The Commercial Tower at Bonne-Anse. – LL. On the front of the card: Habana:-Farola del Morro. Lighthouse at Morro Castle Current photo of Castle Morro Lighthouse. Flickr Creative Commons photo by Ruben Moreno Montiliu. As an interesting side note, most Cuban lighthouses ore not automated, resulting in the fact that keepers are on site at most of them. Some of the lights are staffed by civilian keepers; however others are very highly restricted military posts. As a result, most of the major lighthouses are well maintained. Current photo of Tour du Commerce Light. Flickr Creative Commons photo by Florent Moritz. the rear light of a range with the Pointe d’Aiguillon lighthouse being the front light. La Tour du Commerce was deactivated in 1897 after the range was moved due to changes in the channel. The postcard view shows the tower’s lantern intact, however it was removed after deactivation and a communications mast was placed on the capped tower. Cherbourg Lighthouse, France El Morro Castle is a familiar landmark located on the east side of the very narrow entrance to Havana’s harbor. A lighthouse was first established here in 1764 and was replaced in 1845 by the unpainted round cylindrical masonry tower that has become Cuba’s best known lighthouse. It sits on the ramparts of the Castillo de los Tres Reyes del Morro, El Morro Castle. The 44 m (144 ft) tower is floodlit at night. It is an active aid to navigation displaying two white flashes every 15 seconds at a focal plane of 44 m (144 ft). La Tour du Commerce, Saint Nazaire, France On the west coast of France, south of Brittany, lies the region known as the Country of the Loire. The relatively low, sandy coast facing the Bay of Biscay includes the lower estuary of the Loire River and the historic port of SaintNazaire, famous for its shipyards. A light was first established on the southwest side of SaintNazaire in 1756. It was replaced by the existing round, white masonry tower in 1857. The 39 m (128 ft) tower was once On the front of the card: 47. – Cherbourg. – Le Phare de la Grande Jetée; Collection A. B. éditeur, Cherbourg; Cherbourg Lighthouse, also known as the “phare de la Grande Jeteé” and the “jeteé nord” (north jetty) was located at the end of the east jetty of the old commercial harbor in the city of Cherbourg, in the Basse-Normandie region of France. Cherbourg has served as an important port since the area was conquered by the Vikings in the 9 th century. 4th Quarter 2013 Page 13 The white conical masonry lighthouse was established on July 1 1838. It was 7 m (23 ft) tall with a focal plane of 10 m (33 ft) and had a fixed red light until it was changed to a flashing red light (two flashes every 10 seconds) on August 15, 1901. The light was discontinued in 1937. Unfortunately this light no longer exists and it is not known whether the light was demolished at that time or destroyed during WWII. Smeaton’s Eddystone Tower, Plymouth Hoe, England Celebrated engineer John Smeaton designed the third Eddystone Lighthouse, completed in 1759, to mark the infamous Eddystone Rocks. The Eddystone Rocks are an extensive reef lying approximately 12 miles south-southwest of Plymouth Sound, one of the most important naval harbors in England. The rocks, submerged at high spring tides, were so feared by mariners entering the English Channel they would often avoid them by hugging the coast of France. Recent photo of Smeaton’s Tower by Karl Agre, M.D. Smeaton’s Tower, standing at 22 m (72 ft) high, was opened to the public on 24 September 1884. It has been painstakingly restored to its original glory and is open to visitors who may climb the tower to the lantern room for fantastic views of Plymouth Sound and the city. Lindau Bodensee Lighthouse, Germany On the front of the card: Plymouth, The Hoe Slopes. On the back of the card: O.F. (Stengel 7 Co., Ltd.) Post Card Publ., London E. C. The first Eddystone tower, completed in 1698, was the first lighthouse to be built on a small rock in the open sea. The steel tower was destroyed during a storm in 1703. It was replaced by a wooden tower in 1709 which stood until it, too, was destroyed by a fire in 1755. Smeaton’s design for a new Eddystone tower was based on the shape of an oak tree, for strength. His design marked a major step forward in lighthouse design by using a technique involving the securing of granite blocks together using dovetail joints and marble dowels. He also pioneered the use of a form of concrete that will set under water to help stabilize the foundation. When completed in 1759 the tower was lit with an array of 24 candles. In the 1870s cracks were discovered from undermining by the sea of the rock on which the lighthouse stood, so it was decided to dismantle the top two-thirds of the tower and rebuild it on a new base at Plymouth Hoe as a monument to Smeaton. The remaining stump of the tower still stands on the Eddystone Rock close to the current lighthouse. On the back of card: Wiro – Künstlerkarte Ges. geschüzt; Lindau-Bodensee, Hafeneinfahrt. The back of this card also includes a message written in German. The Bodensee, also known as Lake Constance, is a large lake in southern Germany through which the Rhine River passes on its way out of Switzerland and continues northward into western Germany. The northern shore of the lake is in Germany, the southern shore is in Switzerland, and the eastern end of the lake is in Austria. Navigation on the lake is limited to ferries, excursion boats and pleasure craft. The Lindau Lighthouse was built in 1856 at the end of the west mole sheltering the town’s harbor. The round stone tower stands 33 m (108 ft) tall and is an active aid to navigation displaying a white flash every three seconds at a focal plane of 35 m (115 ft) when triggered by radio signals from arriving ships. Page 14 World Lighthouse Society Current photo of Lindau Bodensee Lighthouse. Photo by Priska Kerner-Blunschi. The lighthouse was originally built and operated by the railroad until it dropped its ferry routes and sold its facilities. The town of Lindau acquired the lighthouse in 2010 and opened it to the public as a museum. Current photo of Vanäs Lighthouse. Flickr Creative Commons photo by Elena. Málaga (La Farola), Spain Vanäs Lighthouse, Lake Vättern, Sweden On the front of the card: Málaga. – La Farola; On the back of the card: Ed. Domingo del Rio. – Málaga On the front of the card: Lake Vettern. Sweden. On the back of the card: Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, Stockholm 3642 Lake Vättern (Vettern) in southern Sweden is Europe’s sixth largest lake at 130 km (81 mi) in length, but only about 31 km (20 mi) wide. Vanäs Lighthouse guides vessels westbound on the Göta Canal across the lake to Karlsborg. The canal is an inland waterway connecting Göteborg on the Kattegat to Mem on the Baltic Sea. It crosses Lake Vättern on its way from the larger Lake Vänern to the Baltic. Although most vessels traveling these waters are recreational, there is some commercial traffic on the canal. Vanäs Lighthouse, located on a promontory on the east side of Karlsborg, is an active aid to navigation. The 8 m (26 ft) tall white octagonal pyramidal tower was established in 1892. It has a characteristic of three white or green flashes every nine seconds, depending on the direction, and its lantern roof is painted green. The city of Málaga is the second most populated city of Spain’s Andalusia region and is the southernmost large city in Europe. It lies on the Costa del Sol (Coast of the Sun) in southern Spain along the coast of the Mediterranean, east of the Strait of Gibraltar. The Port of Málaga, one of the busiest ports on the Mediterranean Sea, is the city’s seaport and has been operating continuously since at least 600 BC. The lighthouse at Málaga, affectionately known as La Farola, is located on the east side of the harbor. Built in 1817 by Joaquín M. Pery y Guzmán, it is one of the oldest and most historic lighthouses in Spain. The 37 m (125 ft) white round masonry tower rises through the center of a two story keeper’s house. The lighthouse has had a very eventful history. In 1898 it was damaged by an earthquake and was not completely repaired until 1913. It was damaged again by artillery in the 1930s during the Spanish Civil War, resulting in extensive repairs in 1939. In recent years GPS and radar have been installed. The light continues to be an active aid to navigation with a characteristic of four white flashes in a Page 15 4th Quarter 2013 3+1 pattern every 20 seconds. It’s third order Chance Brothers Fresnel lens, installed in 1922, is displayed at a focal plane of 38 m (125 ft). The tower is floodlit at night and is a familiar symbol of Málaga’s waterfront. The lighthouse on the last card in the series is a mystery, at least to me. The text on the back of the card appears to be Asian, giving one clue to its identity. I welcome any information from readers that could help me to identify the light and its location. Please contact me at the address on the Contacts page if you have any information that can lead to the identification of this lighthouse. Now it’s YOUR turn! If you have any vintage lighthouse postcards you are willing to share, any comments about this series or additional information about the lighthouses shown above, please let me know! Donna Suchomelly (U.S.A.) Current photo of Málaga Lighthouse. Flickr Creative Commons photo by Franz Van Pelt. Mystery Postcard Mystery Postcard – Front La Plate Lighthouse, France Photo by Graham Rabbitts Mystery Postcard - Back Talacre Lighthouse, Wales Photo by David Wilkinson Page 16 World Lighthouse Society LIGHTS GO OUT AT ORFORDNESS Happisburgh lighthouse became operational in 1791 and holds the title of being the oldest operational lighthouse in East Anglia. Until recently the oldest operational Trinity House lighthouse in the region was at Orfordness in Suffolk, which was built in 1792 and became operational in 1793. This summer there was a major change in the lighthouse scenery of East Anglia; on the night of Thursday 27th June 2013, Orford Ness shone a navigational light for the last time. There has been a lighthouse on Orfordness since 1637, making a total of 376 years of a navigational light being displayed on the shingle spit. Over this period of time many lighthouses on the Ness have been washed away by the sea due to the never ending coastal erosion and the storms that batter the coast. Orfordness Lighthouse was one of the first to use oil to produce the light. This technology produced a more powerful light, but ultimately led to two lighthouses on the Ness burning down; one in 1730, and its replacement in 1731. A system of higher and lower lights was used at Orfordness, frequently with the lower lights being abandoned before they were ultimately claimed by the sea. The remaining tower would then be used as the lower light with a new higher light being constructed as a replacement. In 1789 a great storm caused the lower light (built in 1732) to 1720 Orfordness Lighthouse, circa b ecome unsafe, 1840. This structure was used as the leading it to being High Light from 1720 to 1793; as the Lord Low Light from 1793 to 1889; and was abandoned. Braybrooke (the first) abandoned in 1889 Image from the funded the building of collection of Patrick Tubby the current 1792 tower (designed by William Wilkins) as a high light, to be used in conjunction with the surviving high light (built in 1720), which would then assume the role of the low light. The 1792 tower, 30 metres tall, was built in brick, with 163 steps from the base of the tower to the lantern. MDCCXCII was carved in the stone above the entrance door to the lighthouse tower and can still be seen today. The tower gradually and elegantly tapers towards the lantern room, and is rendered and painted white with two red bands. Originally two cottages for the lighthouse keepers and their families adjoined the lighthouse tower – one on the east side of the tower and one on the west. Both were two storeys high and each dwelling had a black chimney at the far end. In 1836 an Act of Parliament resulted in compulsory purchase of the lighthouse. Lord Braybrooke (the second) handed over the lighthouse and all entitlement to light dues to Trinity House for the compensatory sum of £13,414. From 1st January 1837 both the High Light (the 1792 tower) and the Low Light (the 1720 tower) at Orfordness were managed and m aintained by Trinity House. Soon after Trinity House t o o k o v e r responsibility for the lighthouses new keepers’ dwellings were built next to the Low Light to house the keepers and their families. A new lens was also installed at the 1792 Orfordness Lighthouse, circa 1940. This lower light in 1838. structure was used as the High Light from 1793 to 1889, operated as a single lighthouse from 1889 to 2013, and was discontinued in 2013. Image from the collection of Patrick Tubby. The higher and lower lighthouse system continued to operate until 1887 when another great storm caused such damage to the land that surrounded the Low Light that it had to be abandoned to the sea. Trinity House decided not to build another Lower Light on the Ness, but to build a new lighthouse at Southwold, 17 miles to the north. Following the loss of the 1720 tower on the Ness, improvements were made to the 1792 lighthouse. In 1888 a red and green sector was established at Orfordness by installing filters in the lantern room. The character of the light was also changed to occulting - whereby a clockwork mechanism eclipsed the light for 3 seconds every 40 seconds. In 1914 the red and green sectors were removed from the lantern room and a separate sector light was put in place that shone through windows midway up the tower. The red and green sectors were created by a red filter being placed on one window and a green filter on the other. This system remained in place until the time of decommissioning in June 2013. Also in 1914 a new revolving optic was installed, which resulted in the character of the lighthouse showing as a flash every 5 seconds. Three catadioptric lenses floated on a bath of mercury and a clockwork mechanism with 4th Quarter 2013 weights in a tube running down the centre of the lighthouse was used to keep the optic turning. During the First World War the lighthouse at Orfordness only displayed a light (which had been dimmed) when instructed to by the Admiralty so as to ensure that it was not used as a navigational aid by the enemy. In 1936 Orfordness lighthouse became a rock station due to the tightening security surrounding the Ness. This meant that families of the keepers no longer lived at the lighthouse and keepers were relieved after a month of duty. During the Second World War, as in the First, the lighthouse was only lit when orders were received to do so. The lighthouse was also painted in green and brown camouflage colours. Sadly In 1940 a lighthouse keeper was killed by an explosive whilst thought to be beachcombing (many east coast beaches were mined during the War to deter enemy beach landings). In 1941 the lighthouse was machine gunned causing damage to the tower, but noone was injured. The tower was also damaged in 1944 due to a flying bomb landing nearby. It is also recorded that during the War damage had been caused to the tower by shrapnel from an anti-aircraft battery on the shingle ness itself. In 1959 electrification of the lighthouse started. Demolition of the adjoining keepers’ cottages also started in 1959, commencing with the east cottage followed later by the west cottage. Many of the other buildings and the boundary wall were also demolished at this time. Evidence of where the cottage buildings joined the lighthouse tower can still be seen today. Inside the tower there also remain recesses where there used to be access to the cottages on either side - the doorways were blocked up when the cottages were demolished. In 1964 Orfordness Lighthouse was fully automated. The keepers were withdrawn on 20th September 1965 and the station was monitored remotely from Harwich. Since then the 1792 tower has stood a lonely vigil watching the sea Page 17 edge ever closer as each day passes. To appreciate how old the current Orfordness Lighthouse is, it is interesting to consider that in 1792 when the current lighthouse was being built the other major events in that year included the laying of the cornerstone of the Presidential residence, The White House in Washington; in France, King Louis XVI and Queen Mary-Antoinette were imprisoned, followed by the abolition of the French monarchy. In the United Kingdom, King George III was the reigning monarch and John Smeaton (designer of the third Eddystone lighthouse) died. Orfordness Lighthouse has been present through many historical events and technological advances, but ultimately nature is the most powerful force of them all and it will ultimately claim the tower in the coming years. Considering the historical and local significance of Orfordness Lighthouse, it is important that for its remaining years the lighthouse’s future is managed. In September 2013 it was announced that a new company had now taken over the ownership of the lighthouse. The Orfordness Lighthouse Company is planning to ensure that public access can continue for as long as possible. The company is also planning to be involved in the discussions regarding the future of the historical fixtures and removable contents of the lighthouse including its large first-order optic. It is hoped that some artefacts from Orfordness Lighthouse can be preserved even if the lighthouse tower itself cannot. Southwold Lighthouse dates from 1889, and also has a more recent connection to the current Orfordness Lighthouse. Whilst the demise of the last Low Light at Orfordness led to the building of a lighthouse at Southwold in the 1880s, the demise of the current tower at Orfordness has ultimately led to a new revolving light being installed at Southwold. Prior to the decommissioning of Orfordness, adaptations and improvements to Southwold lighthouse were made to compensate, including increasing the range of the light at Southwold from 17 to 24 nautical miles—and for the first time in its history, a revolving light (giving one flash every 10 seconds). Over the past few years I have visited Orfordness many times and trekked across the shingle to see the lighthouse. Each time I have visited I have seen it in many different weather conditions, each time being completely different. I was also fortunate enough to see inside the lighthouse prior to its decommissioning and am also privileged to have had one of my Orfordness Lighthouse photographs feature in the Trinity House calendar in 2012. From the very first time I visited the Ness, Orfordness Lighthouse became my favourite. Unfortunately in the next few years I will have to find another favourite as the lighthouse will ultimately succumb to the sea and experience the same fate as most of its predecessors. When this does happen, I for one will be sad to see it go. Orfordness Lighthouse, August 2007. The wing cottages were demolished some 56 years ago. Its similarity to Happisburgh Lighthouse is no coincidence since both towers were designed by William Wilkins in the 1790s. Photo by Patrick Tubby Ruth Drinkwater (England) Page 18 World Lighthouse Society MY TRIP TO LONDON 16TH SEPTEMBER 2013 Editor’s Note: The following article, by WLS member Peter Humphrey, tells about his recent visit to London during which he spent some time visiting some of the city’s hidden lighthouses, as well as other sites. I wish I had known of some of the hidden lighthouses before my own trip to London in July. Thanks, Peter, for sharing this information with us. I know I’ll be better prepared for my next trip across the pond! the lighthouse showing windows and railed gallery. This trip happened because I had to get a small parcel to London and a visit to Christie’s in South Kensington was required. It was cheaper for me to hand courier this than send by courier service from Plymouth. In fact the return train journey worked out less than half price of the courier. However, for those wishing to find something a little different and lighthouse related, then perhaps this little expedition may entice you to London. So, with a little careful planning and knowing I would have some spare time for exploring in London after my first stop, I sought out some places that I wanted to visit again. Having already visited Trinity House and St Catherine’s Dock with the wooden lightship together with Trinity Buoy Wharf previously, (By the way these are a must if you haven’t done them, or a second visit as there is always something else to see you missed the first time.) With my tickets pre-booked in advance to make the most savings I arranged my itinerary for the day to visit three lighthouses. In fact, I planned five stops using the London Underground, of which I have found fascinating since a young boy. I always prefer to travel on the Underground, especially on this occasion as it gave me maximum free time. I had not been able to pre-book my Underground tickets as I had conflicting prices on the internet so, I decided to purchase on the day. Having arrived in Paddington 15 minutes late due to line maintenance the other side of Reading, I made my way to the Underground; first stop South Kensington. Having done my business here I then walked back down Old Brompton Road to the corner where there is a Lamborghini Show Room, ‘Owens’. Having pressed the bell for entry I was allowed in. There were five on display, all different colours and sporting an impressive 12 cylinder engine in the rear. For those who don’t know, you can see the engine through a glass panel. I took a few photographs and then I was on my way to Moorgate, so back down the Underground. This was to find 52 Moorgate, which is the ‘Habib Bank’ and here on the corner of this building is a replica of Eddystone Lighthouse (Douglas Tower), which happens to be my favourite lighthouse having had the privilege of landing on it twice. This was an exciting challenge as I had tried to find this lighthouse before on various occasions and failed. It is approximately six feet tall with the diameter of the base being around eighteen inches and made of Portland stone. The detail is excellent with a ladder up to the entrance of Close-up showing a sailing ship coming around the lighthouse and the steps leading up to the entrance Eddystone Lighthouse in Moorgate, London The whole structure looks very impressive from street level and I’m lead to believe the lantern once lit up. On the side of the recessed alcove at the base are masts and rigging with a sailing ship. Be careful not to miss this one as when walking by it is on the corner just above Moorgate Place alleyway. Do go through to the other side as this, I believe, was the original front and known as Oceans Building. If you look up you will see a lot more sculptures, all maritime related items such as ships and heads possibly of Neptune or Poseidon with crowns made out of sails. The building is dated around the early 20th century and just above the top floor is an open book, again made of Portland stone, with Roman numerals MCMXXIII on the pages which suggest the building was completed in 1928. My next stop was King’s Cross. When you come up from the Underground you are confronted with fantastic buildings displaying brilliant architecture. Very outstanding and, right opposite King’s Cross station entrance, is this remarkable building, The Oysterhouse Lighthouse, which many have said represents some American buildings of similar style coming to a sharp point. I think the Americans copied us, actually, but that’s another story. It is said that when the building was constructed fresh oysters were sold there and because of this it became famously known as the Oysterhouse (oysters were the fast food of the day). Suzanne Bullock has made reference to this particular building in [the Association of Lightkeepers’] Lamp97 and found some interesting facts. Lighthouses became popular eatery signs; just look at some of the fast food outlets of today. There is a lighthouse restaurant just outside Southampton built like a lighthouse. There have been many speculations of what it [the Oysterhouse Lighthouse] used to be, such as a helter-skelter 4th Quarter 2013 Page 19 [fairground ride]; and a camera obscura, although there were no means of making this open to the public. Others have said it was just architectural license. Perhaps someone may find the original documents one day and then we may find out. Here way above street level stands this unique lighthouse. The actual date of the building is unknown but experts suggest it was built around 1884. The building has been granted Grade II status which is marvelous as this will now stand The Oysterhouse opposite King’s Cross Station undergoing a major forever. My visit here was a refurbishment programme during little disappointing as the 2013 whole area is undergoing major refurbishment, with the square of King’s Cross and St Pancras mainline and Underground stations, costing a mere £550 million. Looking through the scaffolding you can make out the lighthouse. It is complete with its wrought iron railings, porthole windows and from the gallery you can look out to the busy King’s Cross corner down below. The whole area is fantastic now; the Oysterhouse will take a little longer. I will need to book another visit. While you are here it’s well worth just looking around and just looking up, as there are many buildings with towers trying to look like lighthouse lanterns. Take a stroll down Gray’s Inn Road and you will come across a building front trying to look like a lantern room. No doubt many of you will recognise what I’m saying and be able to relate this to a particular lighthouse you have visited. Now making your way back up to King’s Cross you get a magnificent view of St Pancras The Travelodge in Gray’s Inn station and The St Pancras Road showing the lantern Renaissance Hotel (5 star), well known for its Victorian Gothic architecture and opened in 1868. It is believed that it took over 60 million bricks to complete this structure. The station is now the terminus for Eurostar. At the southern end of the building stands a marvelous bronze statue and there is one of the former Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman. It actually commemorates the poet’s successful campaign to save the station from demolition in the 1960s. At the base of the large bronze are smaller statuettes relating to the building and the tube. This is well worth a visit. My next stop would be Walthamstow, to visit the Lighthouse Methodist Church. This was to take a little longer as I had to catch the tube at King’s Cross and head east on the Circle Line to Barking. There I had to change to the Hammersmith and City Line which would then take me overground to Walthamstow Queen’s Road station. Having arrived here in good time I made my way down Walthamstow Lighthouse Church Markhouse Road and around a few corners. Then I eventually came across my prize. This church with its lighthouse tower is in excellent condition and I believe underwent a complete refurbishment a few years back. Constructed around 1892 and completed the following year, it replaced an earlier iron hall. It was built like a lighthouse at the request of Captain King who unfortunately died the same year as completion. There is a light in the lantern room which is illuminated when there is a service to begin. The light was decided instead of having bells ringing out, and this would let the congregation know that the service would begin shortly. Having completed my successful excursion to visit three London lighthouses it was time to return to Paddington. Having returned all in good time I decided, as my train would not be here for a while, I would relax, have a drink and a meal and take in the day’s events. On leaving London I felt I had achieved exactly what I had set out to do. It was an excellent day and I was lucky to miss some of the heavy showers that came down together with hail stones. Pete Humphrey (England) A close-up of the tower at King’s Cross before work began street level; on the corner was a shop selling oysters Page 20 World Lighthouse Society THE LIGHT ON TOP—PART 20 Sark Lighthouse: 15 June 1975 to 29 August 1980 settled down. The pubs had quite changed too. I cannot recall who we relieved other than Bert Tromans, the PK [Principal Keeper]. When I got to the lighthouse I found that my other keeper was Geoff Gurden, a Yorkshireman through and through and a man I was eventually to rely upon with gratitude. He was a product of a northern art college, and had a talent not only with the brush but with his hands and voice. He now lived on the island, having married Brenda, a girl working locally who came from the Bristol area. She worked in the local chemist -cum-book shop. Sark lighthouse, 1975-80 Editor’s Note: “The Light on Top” was written by Harold Taylor, a WLS member and retired Trinity House light keeper. In this issue we continue with excerpts from Harold’s memoirs. Subsequent issues of the Newsletter will include additional excerpts as a series of articles. Many thanks to Harold for graciously sharing his memoirs with us. My arrival on Sark was not as momentous as for some. I had been there before, but there were a lot of changes that had taken place. There was now a bus of sorts to take people up the hill instead of horse and cart. People joined the carts after reaching the top. There was even a cafe on the approach to Creux Harbour. I recognised some of the islanders like John Pierre. There were however a lot of new people who had arrived in the intervening years and Visitors on the island transport I renewed several acquaintances my first turn off and made new. Some of those I had known in the past were able to recall me after a good nudge, but most were not. The Mermaid pub was still owned by the same fellow; Pat Taylor, who now had a grown family. His establishment had expanded also. The Beau Regarde pub was still owned by the same family, but was open now on a more regular basis. The Bel Air was run by a Guernsey brewery with a manager. The others such as the Sablonnerie, the Stocks and the Dixcart now seemed to rely mainly on residential trade. The Stocks were in the process of being taken over by new owners. When the relief arrived Bert had a new hand, he was Peter Bridle who had been a lightship man and transferred. He had married into the family of one of the local pubs at East Cowes. I do not recall whether my replacement crew joined on the next relief or not, but one replacement was Paul Lee. The three of us got on famously. Geoff and I had got into the habit of playing Scrabble after lunch and at changeover of the midnight watch each day. Paul could not spell, but he had some idea of what he wanted to do, and as we did not stick rigidly to the rules we were prepared to help him out. He admitted that he neglected school, and it became apparent that not only was his spelling bad, but he could not string many words together. I think he realised his handicap and later thanked both of us for helping him and he put his mind to educating himself after he left our company. He became a very able writer of material for his interest in birds and nature generally. He gave us a run for our money in Scrabble, with a little help, whilst Geoff and I were more or less equal. Between us we were a good and accommodating trio. Paul had little interest in drink, and a great desire to birdwatch. We discovered that there was an active bird-ringer on the island, Philip Guille, and he soon became enmeshed in this hobby as Paul was anxious to gain a licence. So except for days when it was my day off and I needed shopping, Paul had all the days to himself, as we knew that except for special occasions he would not go out at night. Geoff of course being a family man with his wife on the island, we allowed to have the evenings off even if he should be on duty. He always did his morning duties, but Page 21 4th Quarter 2013 The lens at night The lens was sometimes sent home in the afternoon if the weather was not suitable for either of us others to go out. It did not need three people to sit around and do nothing. My own activities were adequately satisfied. I had my usual days off which sometimes led to me being late for lunch. I normally tried to make it but there was a persuasive set of local friends which prevented this at times. Then two evenings a week I went out to organised card activities. One in the village hall was whist, the other in a cafe. During the winter this one became a euchre game. When the cafe changed hands it was not so homey so we removed to one of the family's home. It was not so convenient but it worked quite well. Through going to the local church I also got invited out to musical Sunday evenings with some of the more elite of the expatriates, whereas the other activities were mixed, but mainly islanders. I gained another interest, or shall we say an occupation. I became quite friendly with the owners of the Beau Regarde tavern. I cannot quite recall how it came about. The real owner was Ma Falles; her eldest son who was my age was mentally deficient due to a fall or kick from a horse. There was a daughter Reg (Regina) older than me who ran the pub, whilst Stan was a younger son who ran a small business which was based at the pub. During a visit one day a brother-in-law who lived in the other end of the building which was run as a guesthouse, arrived with some lengths of timber and I got dragged into a conversation about renewing the weatherboard to the doors of some chalets. These were used to house summer workers and friends staying overnight The result of this was that I was asked to do the job. In going there to do so I usually went to the bar first or even entered the premises via the bar. Thus I learned that before the lunch time rush had finished the girl who did the bar work was too drunk to carry on, and so Reg took over. She was responsible for running the kitchen and feeding the tours that visited during the afternoon. Finding that she had a tame keeper on tap, she began to use me as the barman, while she went up to bed before the afternoon rush began. Thus, I did not get a lot of my intended work done. I did not care as I enjoyed meeting the people who came in, local or visitor. That summer was good for me and I got into a good working relationship with the whole of the family and friends. Mrs. Falles was in her nineties, and the following year moved into a nursing home in Guernsey where she eventually died. There was a tragedy before that however, for Reg went to bed one afternoon and never woke up. She was a well qualified woman, having been an accountant with a London firm. She was forced to give that up to support her mother, running the pub. Stan had only recently returned to the island. Poor old Ma Falles felt the loss of her daughter badly, and again I would spend a lot of the time I should have been working, talking to her in the sitting room which led off between the bar and the kitchen. It gave some of her carers a break to do other things and I could also keep an eye on the bar. It was unfortunate in several ways as Stan was now effectively in charge and he was irresponsible despite being the official guardian of William the elder son. It was a great cross for Ma to bear and in many ways the business went downhill, mainly because Stan engaged a disreputable gang of toe-rags as staff. They took him and the premises for a ride and encouraged all types of degenerates and hippies. I met with Pete in the Mermaid bar one evening. The reason for me being in the pub at the same time as him, when we were not on the same rota, was by way of convenience. If I remained in Guernsey overnight I would have to pay lodgings. I would be on my own. If I were able to get across to the island I would have a free bed on the floor of the lighthouse store. I would have a convivial evening with people I knew and I would be on hand so that the keeper going ashore could get away on the first boat, giving him a better chance of getting home, otherwise he would not get to the airport until about 2 p.m. The savings also provided one with a little money to finance the month, and was also an opportunity to discuss with the keeper one was relieving any problems they might have Page 22 World Lighthouse Society encountered during the previous month. I have often been asked what makes a good keeper. This is very difficult and complex. I think a person who is self-reliant is 50% of the need. Another is to be fairly conversant and intelligent enough to either know how things work, or deduce how they do; to be content in one’s own company and not craving someone else’s ear to bend. I have likened the recruiting of keepers to plastering mud on a wall. Some sticks and most fall off. Unfortunately not all that sticks is really compatible. There is usually one element missing and that is the one to be amiable to your companions and be as helpful whilst being so. Probably less than a quarter of all keepers who stayed in the job met those requirements. Perhaps some will say I did not. However, my main aim in carrying out my job was to do it efficiently and eliminate any of the unnecessary and prehistoric procedures that I encountered, making the job easier and simpler to carry out for myself and those around me. One was always due for shocks. I returned after a good night out, to be met by Geoff, who said that the central heating had broken down. Any attempts by him had failed to restore it. I made my own try and after undoing some couplings found that I was getting water out of the supply pipe. I therefore left investigation till the following morning. If I describe the set-up perhaps it will help you understand what had happened. The oil store was on the lower stage of the lighthouse, and beneath my bedroom. On shelving around two sides of this room were seven square vertical tanks holding about 200 gallons of fuel each. All these tanks except one were coupled together to feed the central heating boiler; the other fed direct to the stand-by lighting engine. There were individual taps from each tank that fed into this fuel line. To fill these tanks when the lighthouse was built in 1922, they had hit on the ingenious idea of taking a pipeline down from the top of the island straight into the oil store. Instead of carrying the oil can by can down the 200 steps to facilitate this, there was a sump at the top of the steps in which the oil was poured. It then travelled down this pipe underground at first until it met the flight of steps where the pipe now became the hand rail. On entering the oil room the pipe was above the tanks, but a draw off pipe was situated over each tank with a stop valve. When I checked all the tanks the following day I found that they all had water in them up to near the draw off level, but the tank which was open and directly into the fuel line had water in up to tap level. My first task was to drain all the water out of the boiler pipeline. Having cleared the line I now had to clear the water in the tanks which I did using the same method that I had used at the Hanois, by means of suction and siphon. When this was accomplished all was reconnected and supply to the boiler restored and put into successful operation. The next was to deduce how the situation had occurred. My reasoning decided that the exposed iron pipe down the steps due to fluctuations of temperatures probably accrued condensation within them, which gravitated downhill and either led straight into the tanks or was flushed into them every time that oil was poured down. What I did to overcome this was to drain all oil out of the first receiving tank, by using it up first, then taking the tank out of service. Having done this, I then opened the valve over the first tank so that any water percolating down would drain into this first tank. When a supply of oil in future was received the valve over the first tank would be closed allowing only the other six to be filled. This proved my theory, because over a short period of time quite a bit of water gathered in the one tank. I passed this information on to the Superintendent when he next visited and he approved my recommendation that until a leak off pipe was fitted this tank was to remain empty of fuel. I have told of one of my past times on the island. Geoff had quite a different one, but then he was engaged in many. His main one was to help in the cycle hire shop owned by John Jackson, a mainlander who had married a local girl and set up several businesses. On his days off Geoff would work there all day in the season, but only half day if he was on duty, morning or afternoon. He also worked on restoring the cycles during the winter in preparation for the following summer. In this manner he was able to put a bit of work my way. Many of these cycles were 3-speed, which were always becoming damaged, but they did not have the time to deal with them, so they were hired out jammed in a single gear. I was asked one day if I knew anything about these gears. Being game for anything I took on the job. Soon after I went to Sark there was a project to build a residential shack for visiting mechanics. Up till then they had always slept in the storeroom at the base of the tower next to the engine room. It was a very makeshift affair, but then visiting staff did not stay long in theory. Being able to get to and fro to the island, they were able to leave as soon as they had finished their particular job. The fact that they were reluctant to leave such a paradise was not taken into consideration. So it was not unusual for these workmen to assume the same habits that they did on a tower, not opening their toolbox till they had been on station a week and then wanting a holiday after they had done a day’s work. No wonder out-station workers were unwelcome. The idea conceived was to put a Portakabin on the cliff side. One idea being to bring it in by helicopter, but as there were rules about over flying the island, special permission would be needed. DLF personnel from Penzance arrived and excavated a shelf on which to place it. When I came back from a leave the building was in situ. Soon after it was in position there were complaints that it was an eyesore. In my opinion there was not a lot of justification in this as it was as good a construction as about a quarter of the dwellings on the island. It only made another square box on the cliff side, the lighthouse being one and the house immediately above it the other. The house belonged to John Valentine and was a square box like structure built on top of a German gun emplacement, 4th Quarter 2013 which was now the water storage tank. Eventually Trinity were required to bring the Portakabin lower down the cliff, but I am sure I do not know what improvement that made except John and his wife Ursula would no longer be looking down on its roof. Again, the question of how to do the job cropped up and helicopter was the preferred option. I believe, however, it was taken to pieces and re-erected. Around this time I had been suggesting to Trinity a use for some of our catchment water which we could not drink, and was stored in the storage tanks in the old engine room. We still had to use a lot of catchment water, because a bore hole which had been provided at the top of the cliff had missed the water and only drew up about 3 gallons per day. This was insufficient for all our uses, although it probably met all our cooking and drinking needs. We now had a flush toilet, which was new since I had been there as an SAK [Supernumerary Assistant Keeper]. We manually pumped this up daily from the old catchment tank. In times of drought it did not produce enough for the toilet. I had suggested the erection of a tank on the roof above the toilet that could be topped up from the disused engine tank and the dirty water could be made good use of. Trinity came up with a better idea eventually. They engaged a local plumber to install water tanks where the cabin had originally been erected. With a set of electrically controlled floats and a single suction pipe fitted with non-return valves they tapped both catchment tanks to give a supply of water to the cabin and our toilet A firm of plumbers had been called in when I had complained of the inefficiency of our central heating. The only response I had got from my own Superintendent was for me to drain the system down. I knew enough about plumbing that it was not as simple as that. I think what turned the tables was when I asked him if I could use the cabin for my quarters when there were no workmen on station, as the cabin was warmer than my own room in the winter. The plumbers were on the job for about a week as the radiators were so silted up having been fed by catchment water for so long. My room still did not get the full benefit it should. I did have the oil room below me into which the cold east wind blew. I think it was during my first year on Sark that the Superintendent instructed that the bank grass be trimmed. The lighthouse property stretched from the lighthouse to just below Valentine's house, so this was over a hundred feet of steep slope. The steps bounded it to the north, but to the south there was almost no limit by way of fencing. I started the cutting and developed severe hay fever, so much so that I lost my voice. I had always suffered from a sneezing allergy, but since I had been in the service it had virtually disappeared with the clear air of my surroundings. It was not only grass that brought on the allergy. I suppose my system was not used to the pollens of Sark and it reenacted my distress. It took me a long time to subdue it, and many years since, I have not been as clear as I had become. Page 23 In the intervening years, Pete Bridle was replaced by Tony Wibberley on Bert's watch. I met him on one of the reliefs and introduced him to the girl who became his wife. She worked at the Mermaid, and by the time I got back on station they were engaged. She was a pleasant girl. In fact she had invited me out when I first arrived, to show me around the island. Later Bert had another crew change, this was Dave Sleight, a fellow I had had with me for a time on the Needles, a steady and reliable bloke. Bert was very lucky to have such a good crew. I was not so fortunate. Paul was taken away from me, but I forget where he went. I think it might have been the Royal Sovereign. He was replaced by Peter Bix. Bix was not with us that long. There was a period when I escaped the station. I am not exactly sure when it was, but it was a pleasant excursion. What had happened was that, since I was last there, they had turned Alderney into a man-and-wife station. This came about with electrification of the station and the development of a new type of electric drive for the lens. This resulted in withdrawal of the keepers from this cushy station. Howard Allen and his wife who had previously been at Anvil Point took over. They had a staff of local keepers recruited from the island to assist them. There were three, two older men, one a local man, the other an escapee from Surrey where he had held a good job as head of his department in local government. Due to a marital indiscretion he had left home and settled locally where he became well respected. The third member of the crew was one of the lads who had been a delivery boy to the lighthouse. The PK was due for leave and someone had hit on the brilliant idea to send me over. I could have extended my leave by a couple of days as the relief was later, but I decided upon having the best of both worlds and went to Sark first to collect some working clothes and having a night out. Also to collect my knitting gear and some cheaper booze than I would get on Alderney. I then went back through Guernsey and then on to the island, a day before I took over. It so happened that the army was in residence and that night they were holding a party at Fort Clonque. The junior keeper saw that I got an invite. The three weeks went very well and I had little to do myself, due to the new set up. Other than my turn of watch the three keepers did all the maintenance work. I was able to complete some knitting orders whilst on watch. I was also lucky to collect some new ones. I also surprised some of the local priests by turning up for mass. The island seemed to have changed quite a lot since I was last there, and I did not feel at all at home. One strange piece of fortune occurred however, and I do not know how it came about. One day I had a call from the BBC who wanted to do an article on the keeper of a lighthouse and his musical choice. I acquiesced to this arrangement, but told them that I was only there temporarily. They later contacted me when I was back on my proper station and the item was published in the Daily Mail on 13th August 1977. I returned Page 24 World Lighthouse Society to Sark to complete my month and deposit my knitting material and do a few days work before going on leave. In the meantime the Superintendent had been promoted to Chief Superintendent but had made a case for remaining at East Cowes instead of moving to Harwich. The skipper of the local depot ship, Captain Tarrant, became Superintendent. When I came back from my next leave I discovered that Geoff had resigned. Jackson had taken over the local bakery and provisions shop to enlarge his empire and offered Geoff a full time job. In Geoff's Sark lighthouse in 1958 showing the words he was made an offer he could not refuse, reed fog signal trumpets outside the PK's bedroom window although the end did not reach the implied dream. Richard Jones started that same relief. He was compliant until the second member of the new crew arrived. Mike Berridge was a very uncooperative person. Having sent Richard up to the Mermaid to show the fellow the way down, I prepared lunch as per normal and awaited their arrival. The first words of greeting I got from Mike, were “You won’t get that from me”, whereupon Richard stated that he would not go in for communal messing in future. This was obviously something they had hatched up between them on the way down. Mike was disruptive and uncooperative in many ways, but not out of the line for proper duty. In the circumstances I contacted Mike Tarrant to discuss the situation. From him I received no support at all. Things became very difficult, and during this period the new water installation for the hut was taking place. When it was completed and the Superintendent made a visit I requested permission to use the cabin again. My argument being that now that we were all cooking independently I could never get to the stove when I was day off, and only with difficulty when I was on duty. This was because the other two were getting up at different times, having cooked breakfasts, followed by cooked lunches and cooked teas, with the result that the cooker was almost in perpetual use. He saw my point and approved my request. This made things a lot easier for me as the hut was a selfcontained unit with electric heaters, had a hot water installation and its own cooking stove. I had my own wireless and tape machine. Despite the original ganging up of Mike and Richard against me, they soon found out that they were not all that compatible with each other. When I was in the building I would hear one complaining against the other which, I thought, was bloody good-oh! Serves you right! Mike’s pet complaint was the smell of Richard's cooking wafting into his room. In a way, it was his own fault. Circumstances had occurred at the time of their occupancy when they had been in different rooms. Mike discovered that traditionally the senior hand had occupied opposite rooms. He insisted that they change over. So he brought his discomfort upon himself, which I thought was poetic justice. Another complaint was that Richard cooked a meal on the middle watch, and this also woke him by smell and noise. It was soon after this that I got my marching orders, and I was not really sorry. I had had five good years on Sark, and stuck with this cussed crew it was a relief. My tales are not over however. In fact the underlying reason for my removal was in a way my own fault, but at the same time [I was] looking after my fellow man. Before the departure of Paul the telephone authorities decided to modernise by putting in an automatic exchange. This disclosed the same difficulties that Alderney had experienced. With a lot of preliminary enquiries before I got to Sark the Pleas had approached Trinity as to whether they would assist with the 999 service in view that there would no longer be a manned exchange. Trinity had accepted the situation probably without any consultation with the keepers, and established remuneration equal to that received at Alderney, which at the time was £500. Two years or more elapsed before the system was set up. I was on station at the time of the inception and I was called to the Seignuery for a meeting with the emergency committee for the adoption of the scheme. When it came to asking me to accept the scheme at the rate of £500, I pointed out that the rate was not appropriate at the time. During the time that had since elapsed, payment on Alderney had increased to £800. The conditions in the original agreement were that the remuneration was to be the same as that island. This caused shock and consternation. However the changeover was put into effect, but in the meantime the Seignuery decided to take this up with Trinity, who overrode that there should be any increase in the agreed rate. Soon after I went to Sark, I read of a successful claim by a British worker in Spain, where he was able claim all his tax repaid for income earned abroad. I thought that I filled this same category, and made application. Dave Spurgeon reckoned that he was capable of claiming back £8,000, but I could not see how. However after protracted correspondence the Inland Revenue Office [IRO] decided to refund all overseas Trinity personnel. I arrived back from one leave to be told by Bert that he had received a cheque for £560. This was more than I had anticipated. After Bert had left and I went up the island I met the wife of Norman Wakeley, a Sarkie, who had a condition of employment only to work in the Channel Islands. I asked if she had heard anything on the subject, and quite unenthusiastically she said that she had just received a cheque. I remarked about the amount Bert had received, and she quite disappointedly said no, not that much, only 4th Quarter 2013 £370. I stated I could not understand that, and she withdrew the cheque from the envelope, turned pale and exclaimed, “Oh, my God!” From that I decided that she had misread the amount and it was probably £3,700. When I later received mine, which was back-pay, followed by another of a similar amount later, it paid for my wife and I to travel to South Africa to see our son who was then working there and had recently got married. The amount I received was much larger than I anticipated, because the IRO paid in full, including leave periods, whereas I had expected the leave to be disregarded. I passed the majority of my time whilst on the station with knitting. I had gained a few orders locally and people were always coming to me in the anticipation that they would get a cheaper item from me than from the local shop. In fact it cost me almost as much for my wool as the shop was paying for a finished garment. I therefore concentrated on doing the one-off items, knitting Coats-of-Arms into a Guernsey. One ‘special’ I did was to knit a map of the island into one, showing all the rocks and roads. I got a second request for this which I got permission to do. I used to borrow a knitting machine from John Carre's wife, with which I did all the plain pieces. I had offered to purchase it, as she could not use it. It meant I had to collect and return it each relief. That was a bit of a chore. The church women were sewing new kneelers for the church and one day they approached me, telling me that they had obtained £50 from Trinity for a three-seater pew kneeler and would I sew it? This I did and it remains in the church in a front pew. I worked my initials into the side panels. From my meetings at the Seignuery, I got to know Michael Beaumont and his wife Diana quite well. I was already Knitting coats-of-arms into jerseys. regularly visiting her parents' house for a cup of tea. When I left the island I think they were quite sorry to see me go as I got on well with all around, and he probably felt that he was in a way responsible for me going. They invited me up for a going away meal. I am quite sure that this was the first time a keeper was so treated by the Seignuer. Whether there were others afterwards I do not know. Page 25 I was fortunate in several ways on the island, especially at Christmas time. Two of the pubs held grand draws. I returned after Christmas leave one year to find I had won the first prize of gallon of whisky. Of course everyone thought I should share it with them; many had the equivalent in beer. The following year I was on the island, but did not go up for the draw, but was telephoned to say I had won the gallon again. I have forgotten what the event was, but shortly afterwards there was a big do (perhaps it was 25 years of the Queen's accession) and I attended. There was an auction being held for local charities. At this I sponsored two bottles of whisky which raised over twenty pounds. I am afraid I did not get credit for it. Pat Taylor gave the bottles to the auctioneer from the cellar, and although it was stated they were given by Mr. Taylor, everyone got the wrong idea. I had quoted that Richard and Mike did not see eye-to-eye in the end. Other reasons were, when they went up for a drink together, Richard would spend a long time over his drink. As Mike said “How can you go out drinking with a fellow who takes all afternoon to drink half a pint?” Another amusing incident was when they were going ashore. They both lived in the same area and needed to travel in the same direction, but could not agree upon the means or times they would achieve it. In the winter, planning this trip home could be quite complicated, for the boat only travelled officially on three days with one return trip, and a very good chance that it may be cancelled due to the weather. However there would be charters and it was a constant enquiry as to whether there was one due. If it was, it was a rapid scramble to get to the harbour, or the most likely landing place depending on the weather. I recall once it was touch and go till the last and it was Christmas Eve or the day before. The sea was very rough and the service boat had been cancelled. It was not till the last minute that we knew a launch would be arriving at the far end of the island prepared to take aboard any that were prepared to make the hazardous journey. We got a tractor to the nearest landing point then trudged across fields and clambered down cliffs till we arrived at this old landing place where we had to drop into the boat. I think it was probably the roughest trip I have ever made in a small boat, but the skipper Rueben Robbileau was a skilful fellow who had coxed the lifeboat. I do not remember the manner on that occasion that I travelled back to England, I expect it was by air, but during my stay on the island I had resorted to the boat in general. There were several reasons for this. I have mentioned before that there was a system where one could book up in advance provisionally for the air trip, but only from the island side. One had to pay for your return trip a month before to confirm it. Despite my good relationship with the Guernsey flight office, I was let down once and had difficulty getting a flight. I had to resort to the ship, which by now had started to sail from Portsmouth. This arrived at St Peter Port about an hour before the first boat to Sark and left me enough time to get a breakfast, and have a full day on Sark without worries. Page 26 World Lighthouse Society I subsequently found I could also do this provisional booking with the boats, and I opted to book up a whole year in advance, but it seemed again that I could only do it at the Guernsey end. This had a bonus in disguise, for when I made my first trip I approached the steward about a cabin and found myself taken to one on the bridge. It was a spare pilot’s cabin. There was a cup of tea and an early call. Quite surprisingly the steward would not even take a tip. This happened on all but one occasion when there was a change of chief steward or purser. However a ship’s officer saw me slumbering on the saloon coach and pointed it out to the new purser and it never happened again. I had fallen on my feet at last. Harold Taylor (England) This shows the mercury bath and part of the clock mechanism, now driven by small electric motors (white). The stairs and weight tube Control panels for the Nautophone fog signal The stairs and weight tube Maseline harbour Page 27 4th Quarter 2013 INTERNATIONAL LIGHTHOUSE HERITAGE WEEKEND In 1993 International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend was founded by the Ayr Amateur Radio Group with the aim of radio operators transmitting from lighthouses around the globe. This is coordinated and promoted via www.illw.net and overseen by its owner Kevin Mulcahy. In 2002 the Association of Lighthouse Keepers decided to run an event to coincide with the amateur radio group; the aims of which were to open as many lighthouses to the public as possible, raise the profile of lighthouses, lightvessels and other navigational aids, promoting our maritime heritage and of course that of the ALK. Initially the ALK coordinated events were held only on a Sunday, but gradually some visitor centres opened on Saturdays, and some over the weekend, so International Lighthouse Day became International Lighthouse Weekend. There has, not surprisingly, been some confusion over these two separate events, so at the ALK AGM in September 2013, it was agreed that the name International Lighthouse Heritage Weekend be adopted for the ALK and be used for future events. With increased and ongoing collaboration from the radio amateurs it is hoped that in future more overseas lighthouses will join in the event, and both organisations will benefit from the increased and shared publicity. Both events will continue to run over the 3rd weekend in August, so for 2014 this will be held on 16-17 August. More details will follow in due course – watch the ALK website for details – www.alk.org.uk. If you wish your lighthouse/lightship visitor centre to be included in the list of visitor centres open for the weekend, please notify Joy Tubby - web@alk.org.uk. Joy Tubby (England) BOOK REVIEW A Light in the Wilderness by David M Hird David M Hird’s fascinating book is for lovers of lighthouses, geology and wild places. For those lucky enough to have visited Cape Wrath, the most northerly and westerly lighthouse on the United Kingdom mainland, this book will bring back memories. For those of us yet to step upon Cape Wrath it will only increase the desire to visit the area. Perhaps one of the best ways to review this book is to quote the jacket cover: “Meticulously researched and the first all encompassing and accurate account of the history and natural history of Cape Wrath, this book covers the geology, fauna and flora, climate, delicate ecology, the history of human habitation and accounts of military activity in the area. But above all it is a history of the building and maintaining of the lighthouse, the road to the light and how it became a tourist attraction. It tells of the work of ordinary men and women in ensuring that access to this wilderness continues.” The story it tells is as exciting and gripping as any fiction and it will interest all who love wild and remote areas.” There is so much of interest in this book. A list of the keepers of the light shows two keepers: Peter Ewing, 1847 and Donald A Sinclair, 1876, both remaining at Cape Wrath for over 10 years. The average time for a keeper is approximately 4 years. Cape Wrath must have held a real fascination for those two men. Chapter one begins with a short poem as follows: There’s little on the peninsula of Cape Wrath A lighthouse, buses, bullets and a wall It’s a wilderness, a place of isolation A thousand miles due east of bugger all. Get the book and read on. This has been one of the most amazing books I have read in years and I am so looking forward to setting foot on Cape Wrath in June 2014, when I can see this wonderful place and lighthouse for myself. David writes as if he is talking to you and you feel you know Cape Wrath with all the history laid out on the pages before you. Lin Sunderland (England) Page 28 World Lighthouse Society BOOK REVIEW Belle Tout-The Little Lighthouse That Moved by Elizabeth Wright My Voice Publishing, Eastbourne, England; 2013. Hardcover; 151 pp, illustrated; ISBN 978-1 909359 19 2. The historic Belle Tout Lighthouse, located high atop Beachy Head’s white chalk cliffs in East Sussex, England, first came into operation in October of 1834. The lighthouse was deemed ineffective and replaced by the tower at Beachy Head in 1902. However there is much more to be told about the lovely little tower perched high on the cliffs. Belle Tout survived abandonment, being reduced to ruin, and nearly toppling from the crumbling cliffs to the beach below. Elizabeth Wright has written the most comprehensive history of Belle Tout Lighthouse to date. It is obvious a lot of time and effort was put into the research and writing of this book. Inside its pages can be found many never before published drawings, photos and related legal documents that help tell the story of the “little lighthouse that moved.” Throughout the book readers will find personal accounts of life at Belle Tout along with details about its many lives as an aid to navigation, private home, TV series location and bed and breakfast accommodation. Readers will learn about the many struggles of past and current owners to preserve this famous landmark for future generations. Easy to read and a fascinating account of the famous Belle Tout, this book would be a wonderful addition to anyone’s collection. Donna Suchomelly (U.S.A.) Oxcars, Scotland Fort Nikolai Range Frong, Russia Photo by Ian Cowe Photo by L. Myhre 4th Quarter 2013 Page 29 BOOK REVIEW Everyday Heroes: The True Story of a Lighthouse Family by Seamond Ponsart Roberts with Jeremy D’Entremont; Coastlore Media, Portsmouth New Hampshire; 2013. Paperback; 244 pp, illustrated; ISBN 978-148 2006506. package dropped from the Flying Santa lands on a rock, destroying the long-awaited treasure within. Join in on young Seamond’s adventures and laugh at her antics. Let her introduce you to a colorful cast of characters who helped enrich her life. Meet her “lightship uncles.” Shed tears with Seamond and her family as they leave their island home when her father is reassigned to another station. Travel with her through the years of her life and watch her passage from a young, precocious child to that of a young woman determined to make her dream of joining the United States Coast Guard come true. Tag along with Seamond when she returns to her beloved Cuttyhunk with her own grown daughter, a bittersweet journey filled with laughter and tears. Everyday Heroes is a wonderful book rich with history and the everyday trial and tribulations of life as lightkeepers. It left this reader feeling nostalgic for a way of life I’ve never experienced – a life both rich and somehow uncomplicated by the hardships faced by those who lived it. The author’s words will enthrall you and by the time you reach the end of the book, you will have a new appreciation for a lost way of life. But just as importantly, you will feel you have a new friend in Seamond Ponsart Roberts. Donna Suchomelly (U.S.A.) If you enjoy reading as much as I do, you will understand what it means to have a book “grab you” right from its opening pages. This book captured me before I’d even finished the acknowledgements with the author’s simple way of writing and her invitation to share her adventures as if “we are old friends sitting on the porch telling each other stories.” A pleasant conversation with a treasured friend is exactly what reading this book is like. However, before starting to read, I would invite you to jump to the middle of the book where you will find several photos, many from Seamond’s personal collection. Then let her soothing voice transport you back in time as she first shares with you her family history, and then her entrance into the world and the life of a lighthouse keepers’ family in 1940s New England. Next I would invite you to watch little Seamond play on the rocks of her beloved island of Cuttyhunk and peer over her shoulder as she leads you through the many adventures of a young child growing up in the shadow of a lighthouse. Hide in the cellar with Seamond and her family while Navy bombs rain down on their island home disrupting a beachside family celebration and narrowly missing the lighthouse tower. Feel her disappointment when the Editor’s Note: I also purchased a related children’s book entitled “Love from the Sky: Seamond and the Flying Santa” by Angeli Perrow and Heidi Farrow. It is a beautifully illustrated true story about Seamond Ponsart Roberts and makes a wonderful addition to my library of children’s lighthouse books. I purchased one copy to share with my grandchildren and donated the second copy to a local library. Page 30 World Lighthouse Society MYSTERY OF LIGHTHOUSE PHOTO SOLVED Editor’s Note: On page 7 of the 3rd Quarter 2013 issue of the Newsletter we published a request for assistance in identifying the lighthouse in a photo sent to us by Mauricio Arruga, who located the World Lighthouse Society via the Internet. Several of our members (including your editor) thought the lighthouse looked familiar, but weren’t quite able to solve the mystery. That is, until WLS member Michel Forand of Canada joined us in the search. What follows is a series of messages sent by various members in their quest to solve the mystery, along with the photo originally sent to us by Mauricio. Dear Professor Rowlett, We have had an enquiry to try to identify the lighthouse in the attached link and hope that you may be able to assist. http://ryane.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/ lighthouse.jpg Kind regards Peter Williams Administration Officer World Lighthouse Society Dear Mauricio, identical, to the Cape Elizabeth East tower. I considered the possibility of its being a replica, but could not locate one that looked like this tower. I have now dug a little deeper, using the address (URL) of the lighthouse image as a clue (http://ryane.com/wpcontent/uploads/2007/05/lighthouse.jpg), and I believe I have found the source of the mystery. In a way, the photo does show a replica, but not a physical one. ryane.com is the address of a now-inactive blog maintained by someone named Ryan Ellis. From his blog, I gather that Ellis is a photographer and computer graphics artist, possibly a computer games designer as well, probably in his 20s. The year 2007 in the URL led me to this page, showing the photo in question: http://www.ryane.com/?p=124. Note his statement about “this lighthouse I did a few years ago”, which I take to mean “this lighthouse image I created a few years ago.” In other words, I now believe the very realistic image of the lighthouse was created by Ellis, probably combining the Cape Elizabeth East Tower for the top portion of the tower and another, unknown lighthouse for the bottom portion, and using the Maya graphics software to create the seamless image of the tower. The combination of the two portions is very cleverly done, but the rest of the image is not quite so realistic. If you magnify the photo, you can see that the rocks look like cutouts: Ellis probably used the computer program to draw or superimpose them (and the sand) on the photo of the composite lighthouse he created. I wonder how many other computer-created “mystery lighthouse” images are out there? Regards, Michel Further to your enquiry about the identity of the lighthouse. After extensive research I failed to identify the lighthouse image and asked for assistance from the publisher of the widely respected Lighthouse Directory who in turn asked one of his contributors. I am forwarding his reply for your interest. Dear Peter, Regards Peter Williams Administration Officer World Lighthouse Society I am very thankful for all efforts made by this Society in order to respond my inquiry. As I mentioned previously, I didn't expect all the attention given on the matter by all of you. I'm very glad for ending the search with your help. Hello Peter and Russ, Please, forward my gratitude to Mr. Michel Forand, Mr. Russ Rowlett and especially to Ms. Donna Suchomelly, and you, of course. My immediate reaction when I saw the photo was that the tower was very similar, but upon closer inspection not fully Best regards, Mauricio Arruga I also found the lighthouse posted very similar to Cape Elizabeth Tower but a few details have intrigued me. Page 31 4th Quarter 2013 PHOTO TOUR OF LV 50 LIGHTSHIP Our House Yacht is now the oldest floating timber light vessel remaining in Great Britain and only 1 of 3 still identifiable as a light vessel within the UK. In 1908 there were 54 light vessels on station mainly around the East Coast, the Thames Approaches and along the South coast. She was built in 1879 but the builder and location of her construction are unknown because all records held by Trinity House were destroyed in a fire following a bombing raid in 1940. The only physical identification mark on her is LV 50 engraved into one of the deck beams in what is now the Club bar area. LV 50 Lightship Today, National Historic Ships UK register her as being of National Importance. Her dimensions are 100 ft long (30.48 metres) her width is 21ft (6.4 metres) with a draft of 9 ft (2.74 metres). She weighs a little over 230 tons deadweight and was never fitted with an engine, always being towed to station. Her hull construction is very similar to that of an 18th century fighting ship, being double planked with 3” teak timbers on 4”oak frames set 2’ apart. This is sheathed with a metal alloy called Muntz to just above the waterline to prevent attack by shipworms. Her design was developed to ensure maximum strength whilst moored in some of the most dangerous waters around the United Kingdom. LV 50 at Shambles with the original mast and lantern lifting gear. LV 50 retains her original mast and lifting pulleys for the lantern. Above this lifting gear would have been placed a further timber top-mast to which was hoisted a black ball as a top-mark to denote she was at anchor. She was stationed originally for up to five years on the Seven Stones reef off the Isles of Scilly, considered to be the most dangerous reef in Britain. She was then moved along the South Coast to be stationed at a sandbank known as Shambles, off Weymouth, then Warner off the Isle of Wight, Calshot Spit in Southampton water, then finally Outer Gabbard in the Thames Approaches North East of Felixstowe. Her crew consisted of 11 men including the ship’s master. Generally the crew served 4 weeks afloat then 2 weeks on shore unless the weather was too rough for them to be removed. Totally self-sufficient they had to remain on station in the wildest of weather & roughest of seas to ensure the safety of vessels passing by the hazard. Her signal lantern was hoisted and lowered to the deck using the lifting pulleys from a winch behind the mast on the main deck. Every morning the lantern was lowered, cleaned and refilled with shale oil. She was never fitted with Lantern lowered to the deck electric light for signaling. Here the lantern has been lowered into the deckhouse for cleaning & refilling. The lamp flash sequence varied according to the station she was on. For example on Calshot Spit it was simply a revolving plain flash. On Seven Stones it was a triple group flash. LV 50 was also fitted with a reed fog-horn powered by a manual pump. In later years she was also fitted with a submarine bell to be lowered into the water which gave a greater signal range. All this equipment was removed by the breakers with the exception of the lantern, subsequently removed by us as it was in a poor state of repair and to reduce the sway on the vessel when moored to a jetty. These vessels were normally on station for up to 3 years before being towed to a depot for service & repair. At this point they were often re-chained and anchors changed to account for a new station sea bed. Normally in sand or silt an inverted mushroom anchor was used and in the case of reefs a Martin anchor was utilized. LV 50 in drydock. 50 was subsequently decommissioned in the mid 1900’s and moved to a breaker’s yard in Ipswich where she World Lighthouse Society Page 32 was rescued by us and towed to Blyth. Today she is our much loved House Yacht and she has been transformed inside to provide, a bar, a saloon and associated galley able to serve an a la-carte menu to members who enjoy many functions on board her during the year. The upper deck is entered through the door on the Port side into a small reception area with access down to the lower deck area. At its rear is the galley fitted with an electric cooking range and right at the stern is a small storage cupboard with access to the rudder- stock. A corridor on the starboard side leads to the forecastle past a race office as well as toilets & showers. These were installed Cast iron “knees” supporting the timber ribs and top deck. Also note the heavy plates in the ceiling Forward of this modified deck-house area were located the towing bits and anchor windlass with chain exiting through hawse pipes to the anchors resting against the stem cheeks. In this area, you will also see an exposed part of the timber bulwark showing the internal rib together with both a metal rivet and a wooden locating peg. The timber is in surprisingly good condition. As you go downstairs, the saloon in the forward part of the vessel has been split into two areas with an emergency exit The anchor windlass by the Club for the use of the members. Previously located in this area was a deck-house, skylight to the lower deck and the exhaust pipe for the crew’s cooking stove. The saloon is currently being used as the club room. located at the forward bulkhead. The upper area of this saloon was where the crew slept in hammocks. The lower area contained their mess table and cooking range. Stairs leading down to the saloon You will notice the cast iron brackets or knees supporting the timber ribs and top deck. Also notice within the deck ceiling there are some metal plates. Although a timber vessel, metal plates provided additional strength for the anchor windlass, towing bits and some additional deck gear. The anchor chains dropped through here from the main deck and were stored in the bilge below the crew sleeping area. The exposed chain was shackled to deck 4th Quarter 2013 Page 33 used to drive the rotation of the lantern when hoisted allowing the other [passing] vessel to observe a flashing sequence of lights. The rear part of the vessel is now used as a bar for members but originally contained the oil storage room and the Master’s cabin. Today we are embarking on a project to preserve the vessel for future generations. This will mean some extensive repair work to rotten timbers, deck & hull seam caulking and replacement of the stem (bow) section. As part of this we will undertake significant research both as to the vessel’s history but also its design and construction. The rear part of the saloon is now used as a bar. support stanchions of which there were 4 in this sleeping area. Metal plate was used for protection when filling the lamp with shale oil, preventing any risk of oil impregnation of timbers, a major fire hazard. Remember, this vessel used oil lamps to provide signaling. The main-mast is also seen at the rear of the saloon and this is taken right through onto the keel to provide strength. In front of the mast was originally the clockwork mechanism We are therefore keen to attract volunteers to become Friends of LV 50 and help us in this task. There will be significant opportunities to learn about the vessel’s history and its use in the 19th & early 20th century. In particular, as part of the planned preservation project (subject to funding) you can be trained to help us measure, record, photograph, document, archive and present the material to other interested parties. If you are interested in participating in this exciting venture then please contact us by email: mikewade60@ btinternet.com Mike Wade (England) The Friends of LV 50 Lightship St. Paul Island South Point, Canada Photo by Dennis Jarvis Le Four Lighthouse, France Photo by Graham Rabbitts World Lighthouse Society Page 34 NEWS FROM THE LAKE PONCHARTRAIN BASIN FOUNDATION Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation's New Canal Lighthouse Museum on Lake Pontchartrain in New Orleans is ready for visitors Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation’s New A Christmas light celebration at the New Canal Lighthouse Canal Lighthouse in New Orleans is now open to the public, operating as a museum, education center and gift shop. The lighthouse was destroyed by the hurricanes of 2005 and was an icon to the city. Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation, a local non-profit environmental organization, raised money for seven years and with the donations of many, broke ground in 2012 to rebuild a replica of the 1890 structure. The goal was to create a venue where visitors could come hear the history of the lighthouse (four have stood on the site since 1839), the successes of Lake Pontchartrain’s clean-up, and the challenges faced by Louisiana’s coastal land loss. The only variation in construction was to make it “hurricane proof” as it is located outside of the city’s levee system. The building was raised 19 feet to protect against storm surge. The museum is housed on the first level and much of the materials from the 1890 structure were used in the rebuild. Runners prepare to start at the second annual walk/run at the New Canal Lighthouse Today, over 2,500 visitors have come through the New Canal Lighthouse, toured the museum and participated in one of the many activities. We have hosted a Walk/Run, Fishing Camp, Parties, Christmas event, and daily museum tours. Please come to New Orleans to visit the lighthouse, hear the stories of the region and enjoy the recreation Lake Pontchartrain and New Orleans has to offer. To visit LPBF’s New Canal Lighthouse see www.saveourlake.org or come out to the New Orleans lakefront, (8001 Lakeshore Dive, New Orleans LA, 70122.) Joann Burke (U.S.A.) Lake Ponchartrain Basin Foundation John C. Burrus School of Fish teaches children how to enjoy Lake Pontchartrain Page 35 4th Quarter 2013 OBITUARIES Robert Scott; 21 May 1942 – 17 October 2013 Aged 71 Thibault Turenne; Deceased 12 November 2013 Aged 74 We recently received word of the death of WLS member The WLS also received word of the sudden death of Robert Scott, from Luncarty, Scotland. Bob spent a large part of his working life in the RAC where he rose in rank from patrolman to superintendent with responsibility for the North of Scotland, the Highlands and Islands. In the 1990s he entered politics and was successfully elected to Perth and Kinross District Council and served in that role until his retirement in 2007. Bob distinguished himself in many ways including meeting all the senior members of the Royal Family and, acting as civic head, hosting the G8 Conference at Gleneagles Hotel in 2005 where he welcomed world leaders such as then U.S. President George Bush. Bob’s interests were many. He served as vice chairman of the local branch of the National Trust for Scotland, was a Friend of the Far North Rail Line and an officer of St. John Scotland. His interests in maps led him to become a volunteer with the Royal Scottish Geographical Society. He was also a life member of the Friends of Perth and Kinross Archive and a member of the RSPB (the Royal Society for Protection of Birds). Bob was also an elder of his local church where he undertook the duties of presbytery elder for more than ten years. Bob had a lifelong fascination with lighthouses. Following his retirement he took up pharology, the science of lighthouses and made many friends in the lighthouse community. Having visited every lighthouse in Britain and others further afield, he quickly gained an encyclopedic knowledge of lighthouses and was a popular lecturer on the subject. member Thibault Turenne, who lived in Perros-Guirec, France. Thibault was a great-grandson of M. Frederic Barbier and a grandson of M. Paul Turenne, who together with M. Fenestre founded the BBT (Barbier, Berbnard et Turenne) company, responsible for the installation of Fresnel lenses, lighthouses and light vessels all over the world. Thibault studied at the Institut Supérieur d'Electronique de Paris, a French institute located in Paris specializing in electronics, telecommunication and computer science. When Thibault retired from his work he started to collect information on his family’s company. He already had in his collection many photos, plans and contracts, but he was eager to find more information and hoped to one day publish a book. Thibault participated in an exposition on lighthouses and assisted WLS member Thomas Tag with the writing of an article on BBT lens making. In addition to being a member of the WLS, Thibault also was a member of the Société Nationale Pour le Patrimoine des Phares et Balises, the French National Society for the Heritage Lighthouse and Beacons. Thibault is survived by his wife, Marie France, along with his children and their families as well as all who had the pleasure of knowing him. Bob is survived by his younger sister, Anne Stewart, and the many other family members, friends and former colleagues who loved and respected him. Recently Restored Roanoke River Light , U.S.A. Photo by Charles Bash Gibalta Light, Lisbon, Portugal Photo by Karl Agre, M.D. Page 36 World Lighthouse Society STATEN ISLAND’S NATIONAL LIGHTHOUSE MUSEUM TARGETS 7 AUGUST 2014 GRAND OPENING The heavy snows and frigid temps of the recent polar located just to the north of the terminal. Almost 160 feet taller than the London Eye, the new wheel will tower 600 feet above the shoreline, giving its passengers spectacular vortex that slammed the Northeast did nothing to cool the views of New York harbor, the Manhattan skyline, the enthusiasm of the Board of Trustees of the National Verrazano Narrows Bridge, and beyond. Lighthouse Museum (NLM) in Staten Island, New York. Having recently reached their interim fundraising goal of On the south side of the ferry terminal, the National $350,000, the Trustees are in the process of negotiating a Lighthouse Museum will be the anchor of a cultural plaza lease, with the City of New York, for the museum’s new and commercial/residential development on the grounds of home adjacent to the Staten Island Ferry terminal on the St. the former Headquarters of the U.S. Lighthouse Service. As a George waterfront. The fundraising efforts continue part of its Lighthouse Point project, the developer, Triangle however, as the NLM needs to raise another $300,000 to Equities Development, LLC plans to build new commercial open its doors to the public. and residential spaces on the site and also to renovate and August 2014 Grand Opening Planned The Grand Opening of the NLM is planned to take place on August 7th, 2014, the anniversary of President George Washington’s historic proclamation that gave birth to what eventually became the U.S. Lighthouse Service. “We are working hard to see that our museum is launched on the anniversary of George Washington’s proclamation,” explained NLM Executive Director Linda Dianto. “This will be a great celebration for Staten Island and a real win for lighthouse lovers all around the country. We now have museum members in almost every state. This is truly a National museum and, with our location next to the ferry terminal, we expect to be visited by large numbers of foreign tourists, as well.” re-purpose several of its historic buildings to maintain the 19th century feel of the St. George waterfront. The NLM will offer more than just a one-stop cultural experience to its guests. “In the past, tourists never even got off the ferry. Now, we expect that our museum will serve as a cultural gateway to all of Staten Island for tens of thousands,” said Dianto. “We will be able to provide our guests with information about other local museums and cultural sites here on the island, and explain transportation options to get them there.” Museum’s Historic Site Served as a U.S. Lighthouse Service General Depot The initial home of the National Lighthouse Museum will be Building 11, the former U.S. Lighthouse Service (USLS) General Depot foundry that gave birth to many of the mechanical components of lighthouses around the country. It was on this site, from 1864 to 1939, that lighthouses and their components were designed, tested and manufactured and complex Fresnel lenses, imported from France, were assembled. “This site is so rich in the history of lighthouses,” said Dianto. “We are so very eager to give the public an understanding of the importance of lighthouses and their keepers to the commerce of the United States, and how this particular site played such an important role in that effort.” The National Lighthouse Museum plans to open its first building, located on the left (with the black roof) on 7 August 2014. Award winning museum designer Lee H. Skolnick Architecture + Design Partnership is in the process of taking its conceptual museum design to completion. The new museum will feature displays of lights from around the country, histories of lighthouses around the world and a small theater area. Plans also include exhibits describing the history of the USLS at the Staten Island site and displays that will provide visitors with an overview of the maritime history of New York harbor. The National Lighthouse Museum is the key cultural element in the tremendous ongoing renaissance of Staten Island’s North Shore. Developers recently inked deals to build a designer outlet mall, a hotel, and commercial space above the existing ferry terminal parking lots. Design work is underway for the world’s largest Ferris wheel, which will be An important feature of the museum’s initial exhibits is the “Wall of Lights” which will feature models of famous lighthouses from around the world. Each of these scale models will have been sponsored by a $1000 donation, with the donor’s name engraved beneath the display. “The Wall of Lights has been a very successful part of our fundraising effort,” explained Museum Executive Director Dianto. 102 4th Quarter 2013 Page 37 models have been sponsored to date, but we still have 198 models that are available. The list of lights that are still available is posted on www.lighthousemuseum.org. Donations can be made directly on the website. museum office or a multi-media display. And as previously mentioned, gifts of as little as $1,000 can support the named display of a model of a famous lighthouse on the museum’s “Wall of Lights”. The museum will also focus on the lives and duties of lightkeepers around the world. Part of the museum’s mission is to let our visitors understand the importance of the lightkeepers and the conditions that they worked under while maintaining these vital aids to navigation. One of the museum’s leading benefactors, New York businessman John Catsimatidis, the son of a Greek lightkeeper, was drawn to the cause of the museum as a way to honor his father and others who performed this difficult duty. For a limited time, the museum is offering Lifetime Founding Memberships as an important means to raise the cash needed to open the doors in August. For a donation of only $500 an individual will become a Lifetime NLM Member with a special distinction. If donated before the 7 August 2014 Grand Opening, that member will be forever enshrined in the museum as one of its Founding Members, with their names displayed on a wall in the museum and on the NLM website in perpetuity. Critical Fundraising Efforts Continue We encourage everyone to visit the NLM website and make a generous donation. Now is the time to come onboard. The National Lighthouse Museum still needs the assistance of For more information about naming opportunities, please lighthouse enthusiasts everywhere to reach its financial goal contact NLM Executive Director Linda Dianto directly at 347of $650,000 by 7 August 2014. Many naming opportunities 463-1119. still exist within the museum for donors of all levels. The exterior of the museum, including exhibits consisting of John Arntzen, 2nd actual aids to navigation, can be named for an individual, VP, Board of Trustees group or company for $125,000. $30,000 can name a Fresnel National Lighthouse Museum Light display. A gift of $20,000 can provide a named Artist’s rendering of the proposed National Lighthouse Museum Page 38 World Lighthouse Society MEMBERSHIP If you know anyone who might be interested in joining the WLS, a once only joining fee of £22 (28 Euro, US $40*) to cover administration costs has been initiated, to cover both individual and organization memberships. For members without Internet access, hard copies of the newsletter will be mailed for a yearly printing fee of £25 (30 Euro, US $40*). Payment can be made by GBP£ cheque made payable to “World Lighthouse Society”, UK banknotes, or Euros. PLEASE NOTE: We cannot process any cheques other than GBP Sterling cheques, and we cannot accept MasterCard or Visa. Membership applications and fees may be sent to: Administrative Officer The Anchorage Craignure Isle of Mull PA65 6AY Scotland Email: admin@worldlighthouses.org * U.S.A. membership applications and fees (U.S. check or money order made payable to “Donna Suchomelly”) should be sent to: Donna Suchomelly 1 Ironstone Drive Reading PA 19606 U.S.A. Email: newsletter@worldlighthouses.org Membership fees can also be paid via PayPal by contacting the Administrative Officer at the above address. Membership Statistics as of 31 December 2013 Organizations: 21 Individuals: 271 Countries represented: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Canary Islands, Chile, Croatia, England, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Scotland, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United States of America, Wales WLS Flickr Group and Facebook Statistics as of 31 December 2013 Flickr Group Members: 1,772 Photos in Flickr Group: 19,445 Facebook Members: 385 NEWSLETTERS Many thanks to everyone who contributed to this issue. Images have been kindly provided by members of the WLS unless specified otherwise and are protected by copyright. Comments made by individuals in the Newsletter are not necessarily the views of the WLS. Copy dates for the next 4 issues are: 1st Quarter 2014 – 31st March (for publication end of April) 2nd Quarter 2014 – 3oth June (for publication end of July) 3rd Quarter 2014 – 30th September (for publication end of October) 4th Quarter 2014 – 31st December (for publication end of January) © 2013 World Lighthouse Society Page 39 4th Quarter 2013 OFFICER & EXECUTIVE BOARD CONTACT INFORMATION If you wish to contact the World Lighthouse Society please contact: f Chairman: Jürgen Tronicke Boskamp 65 D-2414 Gettorf Germany Tel: 0049 4346 6000 341 Email: chariman@worldlighthouses.org or trollights@t-online.de Vice Chairman: Egbert Koch Stauffenbergstr. 13 22587 Hamburg Germany Tel: 0049 40860442 Email: EgbertW.Koch@t-online.de Administrative Officer: Peter Williams 32, Fairfax Road London W4 1EW United Kingdom Email: admin@worldlighthouses.org Webmaster: Ian Wright 18 Heol Conwy Abergele Conwy LL22 7UT North Wales Email: webmaster@worldlighthouses.org Newsletter Editor: All contributions to the newsletter should be sent to: Donna Suchomelly 1 Ironstone Drive Reading, PA 19606, U.S.A. Tel: 001 610 779 3260 Esbjörn Hillberg (Sweden) Donso Backe 16 S-43082 Donso. Sweden Email: esbjorn@hillberg.com Lord Hector MacKenzie (Scotland) 60 Oxhill Place Keil Park, Dumbarton G82 4QU Scotland Email: mackenzieh@parliament.uk Gerry Douglas-Sherwood (England) 32 Queens Road Bungay, Suffolk NR35 1RL England Email: gerryds@talktalk.net Rosalie Davis Gibb (England) J6 Simpson Close North Walsham Norfolk NR28 0HZ England Email: rosalie.gibb@btinternet.com Kathy Brown (Canada) 5 Whimsical Lake Crescent Halifax, NS B3P 2P9 Canada Email: Kathy@fromthesea.ca