Boston Light Beacon’s Last Lighthouse Keeper Retires

Boston Light Beacon’s Last Lighthouse Keeper Retires

Sally Snowman, the last remaining official lighthouse keeper in the US, retires this ⁤weekend from her post looking after the first lighthouse built in ‌North ⁢America,⁤ on‌ a tiny island in Boston harbour, in what would later become the​ United States.

‘We⁣ failed the city ⁣of Boston’: how ​a racist​ manhunt led to chaos‍ in⁣ 1989Read more

Snowman, 72, has been looking after Boston Light Beacon on ⁣Little Brewster Island for‍ two decades and it’s now being sold to‌ a private owner. The arrangement – the ⁤new owner will be required to⁤ preserve it –‌ comes almost 60 years ⁤after‌ it was⁢ designated​ a⁢ national landmark and ⁤government funding ​secured to keep it staffed, making it the last staffed lighthouse in the country.

The lighthouse keeper, known to wear history-appropriate 18th-century clothing to​ greet visitors to her‌ island outpost,‍ told US public radio this week that she ​had been taken to see ‍the lighthouse at age 10 and began to fantasise about being a lighthouse keeper herself.

“It’s sort of a metaphysical type of thing that – I felt something so deeply in my ⁢heart and⁢ in my cells and the space between the ⁢cells that⁢ it came into fruition. It’s a fairy tale come true,”⁤ she told NPR.

The lighthouse‌ was built in 1716, almost⁣ a century after colonial ⁤settlers arrived from Europe. ​It had ‌to be rebuilt after British forces blew it ⁣up in 1776, three years after a demonstration against British rule – the ‍Boston Tea⁣ Party – kicked off ‌a revolution.

When Snowman ‌was hired⁢ in 2003 to be Boston‍ Light’s 70th caretaker, she⁤ was also the first women to hold the post and ⁣now the last⁤ person to do so. The beacon is still in service​ as ⁣a navigational aid, along with a foghorn, though both ⁤have ⁢been fully ‍automated ‌since the 90s.

Snowman had worked at the‍ lighthouse ⁣for a decade before being‍ taken‌ on as its keeper and has written three books about it. Her favourite ‍place to contemplate, she told the ​radio outlet, was on a ​deck that rings the⁣ top of the tower.

“Seeing the far expanse of the universe, the sunrises, the sunsets‍ –⁢ they are⁢ phenomenal,” she said. “To me, they were‌ never the same twice. The‌ sea⁣ was​ never ‍the same twice. The cloud cover was never the same. It was like ‌dying and ‍go[ing] ⁣to heaven.

Even during heavy storms and blizzards, the experience was exhilarating, “with snow and the sea just pounding on ‍the back ​of ⁢the house and⁢ every window”, she said, adding‌ philosophically:⁢ “If the house got washed‌ off the island during the storm when I was asleep, what a way to go.”

skip past newsletter promotion

In a separate conversation with Boston’s ​WBUR,⁣ Snowman said ⁣there had been other female ⁢lighthouse keepers over the years but they had rarely been recorded or recognised. Mostly, women had worked uncelebrated on supporting duties pertaining to the​ maintenence of lighthouses ⁣but not the main event‌ of beacons and foghorns.

She predicted that the new ⁣owners and their staff ⁣would do a good job of maintaining…

2023-12-30 14:13:11
Post ⁣from‍ www.theguardian.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version