height and three feet in
diameter at the middle, tapering to
both ends, being what seamen term a NUN-BUOY, vaulted or
sprung up with such force that it upset the boat, which
instantly filled with water. Mr. Macurich, with much
exertion, succeeded in getting hold of the boat's gunwale,
still above the surface of the water, and by this means was
saved; but the young man Scott was
unfortunately drowned. He
had in all
probability been struck about the head by the ring
of the buoy, for although surrounded with the oars and the
thwarts of the boat which floated near him, yet he seemed
entirely to want the power of availing himself of such
assistance, and appeared to be quite
insensible, while Pool,
the master of the SMEATON, called loudly to him; and before
assistance could be got from the tender, he was carried away
by the strength of the current and disappeared.
The young man Scott was a great favourite in the service,
having had something uncommonly mild and complaisant in his
manner; and his loss was
thereforeuniversally regretted. The
circumstances of his case were also
peculiarly distressing to
his mother, as her husband, who was a
seaman, had for three
years past been confined to a French prison, and the deceased
was the chief support of the family. In order in some
measureto make up the loss to the poor woman for the
monthly aliment
regularly allowed her by her late son, it was suggested that a
younger boy, a brother of the deceased, might be taken into
the service. This appeared to be rather a delicate
proposition, but it was left to the
landing-master to arrange
according to circumstances; such was the
resignation, and at
the same time the spirit, of the poor woman, that she readily
accepted the proposal, and in a few days the younger Scott was
actually
afloat in the place of his brother. On representing
this distressing case to the Board, the Commissioners were
pleased to grant an annuity of 5 pounds to Scott's mother.
The SMEATON, not having been made fast to the buoy, had,
with the ebb-tide, drifted to leeward a
considerable way
eastward of the rock, and could not, till the return of the
flood-tide, be worked up to her moorings, so that the present
tide was lost,
notwithstanding all exertions which had been
made both
ashore and
afloat with this cargo. The artificers
landed at six a.m.; but, as no materials could be got upon the
rock this morning, they were employed in boring trenail holes
and in various other operations, and after four hours' work
they returned on board the tender. When the SMEATON got up to
her moorings, the
landing-master's crew immediately began to
unload her. There being too much wind for towing the praams
in the usual way, they were warped to the rock in the most
laborious manner by their windlasses, with successive
grapplings and hawsers laid out for this purpose. At six p.m.
the artificers landed, and continued at work till half-past
ten, when the remaining seventeen stones were laid which
completed the third entire course, or fourth of the
lighthouse, with which the building operations were closed for
the season.
III - OPERATIONS OF 1809
[Wednesday, 24th May]
The last night was the first that the
writer, had passed
in his old quarters on board of the floating light for about
twelve months, when the weather was so fine and the sea so
smooth that even here he felt but little or no
motion,
excepting at the turn of the tide, when the
vessel gets into
what the seamen term the TROUGH OF THE SEA. At six a.m. Mr.
Watt, who conducted the operations of the railways and
beacon-
house, had landed with nine artificers. At half-past one p.m.
Mr. Peter Logan had also landed with fifteen masons, and
immediately proceeded to set up the crane. The sheer-crane or
apparatus for lifting the stones out of the praam-boats at the
eastern creek had been already erected, and the railways now
formed about two-thirds of an entire
circle round the
building: some progress had
likewise been made with the reach
towards the
westernlanding-place. The floors being laid, the
beacon now assumed the appearance of a
habitation. The
SMEATON was at her moorings, with the FERNIE praam-boat
astern, for which she was laying down moorings, and the tender
being also at her station, the Bell Rock had again put on its
former busy aspect.
[Wednesday, 31st May]
The
landing-master's bell, often no very favourite sound,
rung at six this morning; but on this occasion, it is
believed, it was
gladly received by all on board, as the
welcome signal of the return of better weather. The masons
laid thirteen stones to-day, which the seamen had landed,
together with other building materials. During these twenty-
four hours the wind was from the south, blowing fresh breezes,
accompanied with showers of snow. In the morning the snow
showers were so thick that it was with difficulty the
landing-
master, who always steered the leading boat, could make his
way to the rock through the drift. But at the Bell Rock
neither snow nor rain, nor fog nor wind, retarded the progress
of the work, if unaccompanied by a heavy swell or
breach of
the sea.
The weather during the months of April and May had been
uncommonly
boisterous, and so cold that the
thermometer seldom
exceeded 40 degrees, while the barometer was generally about
29.50. We had not only hail and sleet, but the snow on the
last day of May lay on the decks and rigging of the ship to
the depth of about three inches; and, although now entering
upon the month of June, the length of the day was the chief
indication of summer. Yet such is the effect of habit, and
such was the expertness of the
landing-master's crew, that,
even in this
description of weather, seldom a tide's work was
lost. Such was the
ardour and zeal of the heads of the
several departments at the rock, including Mr. Peter Logan,
foremanbuilder, Mr. Francis Watt,
foreman millwright, and
Captain Wilson,
landing-master, that it was on no occasion
necessary to address them, excepting in the way of precaution
or
restraint. Under these circumstances, however, the
writernot unfrequently felt
considerableanxiety, of which this
day's experience will afford an example.
[Thursday, 1st June]
This morning, at a quarter-past eight, the artificers
were landed as usual, and, after three hours and three-
quarters' work, five stones were laid, the greater part of
this tide having been taken up in completing the boring and
trenailing of the stones
formerly laid. At noon the
writer,
with the seamen and artificers, proceeded to the tender,
leaving on the
beacon the joiners, and several of those who
were troubled with sea-sickness - among whom was Mr. Logan,
who remained with Mr. Watt - counting
altogether eleven
persons. During the first and middle parts of these twenty-
four hours the wind was from the east, blowing what the seamen
term `fresh breezes'; but in the afternoon it shifted to
E.N.E., accompanied with so heavy a swell of sea that the
SMEATON and tender struck their topmasts, launched in their