top of the building, three cheers were given in
testimony of
this important circumstance. A glass of rum was then served
out to all hands on the rock and on board of the respective
ships.
[Sunday, 16th July]
Besides laying, boring, trenailing, wedging, and grouting
thirty-two stones, several other operations were proceeded
with on the rock at low-water, when some of the artificers
were employed at the railways, and at high-water at the
beacon-house. The seamen having prepared a quantity of
tarpaulin, or cloth laid over with
successive coats of hot
tar, the joiners had just completed the covering of the roof
with it. This sort of covering was lighter and more easily
managed than sheet-lead in such a situation. As a further
defence against the weather the whole
exterior of this
temporary
residence was painted with three coats of white-lead
paint. Between the
timber framing of the habitable part of
the
beacon the interstices were to be stuffed with moss, as a
light substance that would
resist dampness and check sifting
winds; the whole
interior was then to be lined with green
baize cloth, so that both without and within the cabins were
to have a very comfortable appearance.
Although the building artificers generally remained on
the rock throughout the day, and the millwrights, joiners, and
smiths, while their number was
considerable, remained also
during the night, yet the tender had
hitherto been considered
as their night quarters. But the wind having in the course of
the day shifted to the N.W., and as the passage to the tender,
in the boats, was likely to be attended with difficulty, the
whole of the artificers, with Mr. Logan, the
foreman,
preferred remaining all night on the
beacon, which had of late
become the
solitary abode of George-Forsyth, a jobbing
upholsterer, who had been employed in
lining the
beacon-house
with cloth and in
fitting up the
bedding. Forsyth was a tall,
thin, and rather loose-made man, who had an utter aversion at
climbing upon the trap-ladders of the
beacon, but especially
at the process of boating, and the
motion of the ship, which
he said `was death itself.' He
therefore pertinaciously
insisted with the
landing-master in being left upon the
beacon, with a small black dog as his only
companion. The
writer, however, felt some
delicacy in leaving a single
individual upon the rock, who must have been so very helpless
in case of accident. This
fabric had, from the beginning,
been rather intended by the
writer to guard against accident
from the loss or damage of a boat, and as a place for making
mortar, a smith's shop, and a store for tools during the
working months, than as
permanent quarters; nor was it at all
meant to be possessed until tile joiner-work was completely
finished, and his own cabin, and that for the
foreman, in
readiness, when it was still to be left to the choice of the
artificers to occupy the tender or the
beacon. He, however,
considered Forsyth's
partiality and confidence in the latter
as rather a
fortunate occurrence.
[Wednesday, 19th July]
The whole of the artificers, twenty-three in number, now
removed of their own
accord from the tender, to lodge in the
beacon, together with Peter Fortune, a person singularly
adapted for a
residence of this kind, both from the urbanity
of his manners and the versatility of his talents. Fortune,
in his person, was of small
stature, and rather corpulent.
Besides being a good Scots cook, he had acted both as groom
and house-servant; he had been a soldier, a sutler, a
writer's
clerk, and an apothecary, from which he possessed the art of
writing and suggesting recipes, and had hence, also, perhaps,
acquired a turn for making collections in natural history.
But in his practice in
surgery on the Bell Rock, for which he
received an
annual fee of three guineas, he is
supposed to
have been rather
partial to the use of the lancet. In short,
Peter was the FACTOTUM of the
beacon-house, where he
ostensibly acted in the several capacities of cook, steward,
surgeon, and
barber, and kept a statement of the rations or
expenditure of the provisions with the strictest integrity.
In the present important state of the building, when it
had just attained the
height of sixteen feet, and the upper
courses, and especially the
imperfect one, were in the wash of
the heaviest seas, an express boat arrived at the rock with a
letter from Mr. Kennedy, of the workyard, stating that in
consequence of the intended
expedition to Walcheren, an
embargo had been laid on
shipping at all the ports of Great
Britain: that both the SMEATON and PATRIOT were detained at
Arbroath, and that but for the proper view which Mr. Ramsey,
the port officer, had taken of his orders, neither the express
boat nor one which had been sent with provisions and
necessaries for the floating light would have been permitted
to leave the harbour. The
writer set off without delay for
Arbroath, and on
landing used every possible means with the
official people, but their orders were deemed so peremptory
that even boats were not permitted to sail from any port upon
the coast. In the
meantime, the
collector of the Customs at
Montrose
applied to the Board at Edinburgh, but could, of
himself, grant no
relief to the Bell Rock
shipping.
At this
critical period Mr. Adam Duff, then Sheriff of
Forfarshire, now of the county of Edinburgh, and EX OFFICIO
one of the Commissioners of the Northern Lighthouses, happened
to be at Arbroath. Mr. Duff took an immediate interest in
representing the circumstances of the case to the Board of
Customs at Edinburgh. But such were the doubts entertained on
the subject that, on having
previously received the appeal
from the
collector at Montrose, the case had been submitted to
the
consideration of the Lords of the Treasury, whose decision
was now waited for.
In this state of things the
writer felt particularly
desirous to get the thirteenth course finished, that the
building might be in a more secure state in the event of bad
weather. An opportunity was
thereforeembraced on the 25th,
in sailing with provisions for the floating light, to carry
the necessary stones to the rock for this purpose, which were
landed and built on the 26th and 27th. But so closely was the
watch kept up that a Custom-house officer was always placed on
board of the SMEATON and PATRIOT while they were
afloat, till
the embargo was especially removed from the lighthouse
vessels. The artificers at the Bell Rock had been reduced to
fifteen, who were
regularly supplied with provisions, along
with the crew of the floating light,
mainly through the port
officer's
liberalinterpretation of his orders.
[Tuesday, 1st Aug.]
There being a
considerable swell and
breach of sea upon
the rock
yesterday, the stones could not be got landed till
the day following, when the wind shifted to the
southward and
the weather improved. But to-day no less than seventy-eight
blocks of stone were landed, of which forty were built, which
completed the fourteenth and part of the fifteenth courses.
The number of
workmen now
resident in the
beacon-house was
augmented to twenty-four, including the
landing-master's crew
from the tender and the boat's crew from the floating light,
who assisted at
landing the stones. Those daily at work upon
the rock at this period amounted to forty-six. A cabin had