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 western landing-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, foreman builder, 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 writer not
unfrequently felt considerable anxiety, 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 bolt-sprits, and ’made all
snug’ for a gale. At four p.m. the Smeaton
was obliged to slip her moorings, and passed the tender,
drifting before the wind, with only the foresail set.
In passing, Mr. Pool hailed that he must run for the
Firth of Forth to prevent the vessel from ‘riding
under.’
On board of the tender the writer’s
chief concern was about the eleven men left upon the
beacon. Directions were accordingly given that
everything about the vessel should be put in the best
possible state, to present as little resistance to
the wind as possible, that she might have the better
chance of riding out the gale. Among these preparations
the best bower cable was bent, so as to have a second
anchor in readiness in case the mooring-hawser should
give way, that every means might be used for keeping
the vessel within sight of the prisoners on the beacon,
and thereby keep them in as good spirits as possible.
From the same motive the boats were kept afloat that
they might be less in fear of the vessel leaving her
station. The landing-master had, however, repeatedly
expressed his anxiety for the safety of the boats,
and wished much to have them hoisted on board.
At seven p.m. one of the boats, as he feared, was
unluckily filled with sea from a wave breaking into
her, and it was with great difficulty that she could
be baled out and got on board, with the loss of her
oars, rudder, and loose thwarts. Such was the
motion of the ship that in taking this boat on board
her gunwale was stove in, and she otherwise received
considerable damage. Night approached, but it
was still found quite impossible to go near the rock.
Consulting, therefore, the safety of the second boat,
she also was hoisted on board of the tender.
At this time the cabins of the beacon
were only partially covered, and had neither been
provided with bedding nor a proper fireplace, while
the stock of provisions was but slender. In
these uncomfortable circumstances the people on the
beacon were left for the night, nor was the situation
of those on board of the tender much better.
The rolling and pitching motion of the ship was excessive;
and, excepting to those who had been accustomed to
a residence in the floating light, it seemed quite
intolerable. Nothing was heard but the hissing
of the winds and the creaking of the bulkheads or
partitions of the ship; the night was, therefore,
spent in the most unpleasant reflections upon the condition
of the people on the beacon, especially in the prospect
of the tender being driven from her moorings.
But, even in such a case, it afforded some consolation
that the stability of the fabric was never doubted,
and that the boats of the floating light were at no
great distance, and ready to render the people on
the rock the earliest assistance which the weather
would permit. The writer’s cabin being
in the sternmost part of the ship, which had what
sailors term a good entry, or was sharp built, the
sea, as before noticed, struck her counter with so
much violence that the water, with a rushing noise,
continually forced its way up the rudder-case, lifted
the valve of the water-closet, and overran the cabin
floor. In these circumstances daylight was eagerly
looked for, and hailed with delight, as well by those
afloat as by the artificers upon the rock.
[Friday,
2nd June]
In the course of the night the writer
held repeated conversations with the officer on watch,
who reported that the weather continued much in the
same state, and that the barometer still indicated
29.20 inches. At six a.m. the landing-master
considered the weather to have somewhat moderated;
and, from certain appearances of the sky, he was of
opinion that a change for the better would soon take
place. He accordingly proposed to attempt a
landing at low-water, and either get the people off
the rock, or at least ascertain what state they were
in. At nine a.m. he left the vessel with a boat
well manned, carrying with him a supply of cooked
provisions and a tea-kettle full of mulled port wine
for the people on the beacon, who had not had any
regular diet for about thirty hours, while they were
exposed during that period, in a great measure, both
to the winds and the sprays of the sea. The boat
having succeeded in landing, she returned at eleven
a.m. with the artificers, who had got off with considerable
difficulty, and who were heartily welcomed by all
on board.
Upon inquiry it appeared that three
of the stones last laid upon the building had been
partially lifted from their beds by the force of the
sea, and were now held only by the trenails, and that
the cast-iron sheer-crane had again been thrown down
and completely broken. With regard to the beacon,
the sea at high-water had lifted part of the mortar
gallery or lowest floor, and washed away all the lime-casks
and other movable articles from it; but the principal
parts of this fabric had sustained no damage.
On pressing Messrs. Logan and Watt on the situation
of things in the course of the night, Mr. Logan emphatically
said: ’That the beacon had an ill-faured
twist when the sea broke upon it at
high-water, but that they were not very apprehensive
of danger.’ On inquiring as to how they
spent the night, it appeared that they had made shift
to keep a small fire burning, and by means of some
old sails defended themselves pretty well from the
sea sprays.
It was particularly mentioned that
by the exertions of James Glen, one of the joiners,
a number of articles were saved from being washed off
the mortar gallery. Glen was also very useful
in keeping up the spirits of the forlorn party.
In the early part of life he had undergone many curious
adventures at sea, which he now recounted somewhat
after the manner of the tales of the Arabian Nights.
When one observed that the beacon was a most comfortless
lodging, Glen would presently introduce some of his
exploits and hardships, in comparison with which the
state of things at the beacon bore an aspect of comfort
and happiness. Looking to their slender stock
of provisions, and their perilous and uncertain chance
of speedy relief, he would launch out into an account
of one of his expeditions in the North Sea, when the
vessel, being much disabled in a storm, was driven
before the wind with the loss of almost all their
provisions; and the ship being much infested with rats,
the crew hunted these vermin with great eagerness
to help their scanty allowance. By such means
Glen had the address to make his companions, in some
measure, satisfied, or at least passive, with regard
to their miserable prospects upon this half-tide rock
in the middle of the ocean. This incident is
noticed, more particularly, to show the effects of
such a happy turn of mind, even under the most distressing
and ill-fated circumstances.
[Saturday,
17th June]
At eight a.m. the artificers and sailors,
forty-five in number, landed on the rock, and after
four hours’ work seven stones were laid.
The remainder of this tide, from the threatening
appearance of the weather, was occupied in trenailing
and making all things as secure as possible.
At twelve noon the rock and building were again overflowed,
when the masons and seamen went on board of the tender,
but Mr. Watt, with his squad of ten men, remained
on the beacon throughout the day. As it blew
fresh from the N.W. in the evening, it was found impracticable
either to land the building artificers or to take
the artificers off the beacon, and they were accordingly
left there all night, but in circumstances very different
from those of the 1st of this month. The house,
being now in a more complete state, was provided with
bedding, and they spent the night pretty well, though
they complained of having been much disturbed at the
time of high-water by the shaking and tremulous motion
of their house and by the plashing noise of the sea
upon mortar gallery. Here James Glen’s
versatile powers were again at work in cheering up
those who seemed to be alarmed, and in securing everything
as far as possible. On this occasion he had
only to recall to the recollections of some of them
the former night which they had spent on the beacon,
the wind and sea being then much higher, and their
habitation in a far less comfortable state.
The wind still continuing to blow
fresh from the N.W., at five p.m. the writer caused
a signal to be made from the tender for the Smeaton
and Patriot to slip their moorings, when they
ran for Lunan Bay, an anchorage on the east side of
the Redhead. Those on board of the tender spent
but a very rough night, and perhaps slept less soundly
than their companions on the beacon, especially as
the wind was at N.W., which caused the vessel to ride
with her stern towards the Bell Rock; so that, in
the event of anything giving way, she could hardly
have escaped being stranded upon it.
[Sunday,
18th June]
The weather having moderated to-day,
the wind shifted to the westward. At a quarter-past
nine a.m. the artificers landed from the tender and
had the pleasure to find their friends who had been
left on the rock quite hearty, alleging that the beacon
was the preferable quarters of the two.
[Saturday,
24th June]
Mr. Peter Logan, the foreman builder,
and his squad, twenty-one in number, landed this morning
at three o’clock, and continued at work four
hours and a quarter, and after laying seventeen stones
returned to the tender. At six a.m. Mr.
Francis Watt and his squad of twelve men landed, and
proceeded with their respective operations at the beacon
and railways, and were left on the rock during the
whole day without the necessity of having any communication
with the tender, the kitchen of the beacon-house being
now fitted up. It was to-day, also, that Peter
Fortune a most obliging and well-known character
in the Lighthouse service was removed from
the tender to the beacon as cook and steward, with
a stock of provisions as ample as his limited store-room
would admit.
When as many stones were built as
comprised this day’s work, the demand for mortar
was proportionally increased, and the task of the
mortar-makers on these occasions was both laborious
and severe. This operation was chiefly performed
by John Watt a strong, active quarrier
by profession, who was a perfect character
in his way, and extremely zealous in his department.
While the operations of the mortar-makers continued,
the forge upon the gallery was not generally in use;
but, as the working hours of the builders extended
with the height of the building, the forge could not
be so long wanted, and then a sad confusion often
ensued upon the circumscribed floor of the mortar gallery,
as the operations of Watt and his assistants trenched
greatly upon those of the smiths. Under these
circumstances the boundary of the smiths was much
circumscribed, and they were personally annoyed, especially
in blowy weather, with the dust of the lime in its
powdered state. The mortar-makers, on the other
hand, were often not a little distressed with the
heat of the fire and the sparks elicited on the anvil,
and not unaptly complained that they were placed between
the ’devil and the deep sea.’
[Sunday,
25th June]
The work being now about ten feet
in height, admitted of a rope-ladder being distended
between the beacon and the building. By
this ‘Jacob’s Ladder,’ as the seamen
termed it, a communication was kept up with the beacon
while the rock was considerably under water.
One end of it being furnished with tackle-blocks,
was fixed to the beams of the beacon, at the level
of the mortar gallery, while the further end was connected
with the upper course of the building by means of two
Lewis bats which were lifted from course to course
as the work advanced. In the same manner a rope
furnished with a travelling pulley was distended for
the purpose of transporting the mortar-buckets, and
other light articles between the beacon and the building,
which also proved a great conveniency to the work.
At this period the rope-ladder and tackle for the
mortar had a descent from the beacon to the building;
by and by they were on a level, and towards the end
of the season, when the solid part had attained its
full height, the ascent was from the mortar gallery
to the building.
[Friday,
30th June]
The artificers landed on the rock
this morning at a quarter-past six, and remained at
work five hours. The cooking apparatus being
now in full operation, all hands had breakfast on
the beacon at the usual hour, and remained there throughout
the day. The crane upon the building had to be
raised to-day from the eighth to the ninth course,
an operation which now required all the strength that
could be mustered for working the guy-tackles; for
as the top of the crane was at this time about thirty-five
feet above the rock, it became much more unmanageable.
While the beam was in the act of swinging round from
one guy to another, a great strain was suddenly brought
upon the opposite tackle, with the end of which the
artificers had very improperly neglected to take a
turn round some stationary object, which would have
given them the complete command of the tackle.
Owing to this simple omission, the crane got a preponderancy
to one side, and fell upon the building with a terrible
crash. The surrounding artificers immediately
flew in every direction to get out of its way; but
Michael Wishart, the principal builder, having unluckily
stumbled upon one of the uncut trenails, fell upon
his back. His body fortunately got between the
movable beam and the upright shaft of the crane, and
was thus saved; but his feet got entangled with the
wheels of the crane and were severely injured.
Wishart, being a robust young man, endured his misfortune
with wonderful firmness; he was laid upon one of the
narrow framed beds of the beacon and despatched in
a boat to the tender, where the writer was when this
accident happened, not a little alarmed on missing
the crane from the top of the building, and at the
same time seeing a boat rowing towards the vessel with
great speed. When the boat came alongside with
poor Wishart, stretched upon a bed covered with blankets,
a moment of great anxiety followed, which was, however,
much relieved when, on stepping into the boat, he was
accosted by Wishart, though in a feeble voice, and
with an aspect pale as death from excessive bleeding.
Directions having been immediately given to the coxswain
to apply to Mr. Kennedy at the workyard to procure
the best surgical aid, the boat was sent off without
delay to Arbroath. The writer then landed at
the rock, when the crane was in a very short time
got into its place and again put in a working state.
[Monday,
3rd July]
The writer having come to Arbroath
with the yacht, had an opportunity of visiting Michael
Wishart, the artificer who had met with so severe an
accident at the rock on the 30th ult., and had the
pleasure to find him in a state of recovery.
From Dr. Stevenson’s account, under whose charge
he had been placed, hopes were entertained that amputation
would not be necessary, as his patient still kept
free of fever or any appearance of mortification;
and Wishart expressed a hope that he might, at least,
be ultimately capable of keeping the light at the
Bell Rock, as it was not now likely that he would
assist further in building the house.
[Saturday,
8th July]
It was remarked to-day, with no small
demonstration of joy, that the tide, being neap, did
not, for the first time, overflow the building at
high-water. Flags were accordingly hoisted on
the beacon-house, and crane on the top of the building,
which were repeated from the floating light, Lighthouse
yacht, tender, Smeaton, Patriot, and
the two praams. A salute of three guns was also
fired from the yacht at high-water, when, all the
artificers being collected on the 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 therefore embraced 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 liberal interpretation
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 been laid
out for the writer on the beacon, but his apartment
had been the last which was finished, and he had not
yet taken possession of it; for though he generally
spent the greater part of the day, at this time, upon
the rock, yet he always slept on board of the tender.
[Friday,
11th Aug.]
The wind was at S. E. on the 11th,
and there was so very heavy a swell of sea upon the
rock that no boat could approach it.
[Saturday,
12th Aug.]
The gale still continuing from the
S.E., the sea broke with great violence both upon
the building and the beacon. The former being
twenty-three feet in height, the upper part of the
crane erected on it having been lifted from course
to course as the building advanced, was now about
thirty-six feet above the rock. From observations
made on the rise of the sea by this crane, the artificers
were enabled to estimate its height to be about fifty
feet above the rock, while the sprays fell with a
most alarming noise upon their cabins. At low-water,
in the evening, a signal was made from the beacon,
at the earnest desire of some of the artificers, for
the boats to come to the rock; and although this could
not be effected without considerable hazard, it was,
however, accomplished, when twelve of their number,
being much afraid, applied to the foreman to be relieved,
and went on board of the tender. But the remaining
fourteen continued on the rock, with Mr. Peter Logan,
the foreman builder. Although this rule of allowing
an option to every man either to remain on the rock
or return to the tender was strictly adhered to, yet,
as it would have been extremely inconvenient to have
the men parcelled out in this manner, it became necessary
to embrace the first opportunity of sending those
who had left the beacon to the workyard, with as little
appearance of intention as possible, lest it should
hurt their feelings, or prevent others from acting
according to their wishes, either in landing on the
rock or remaining on the beacon.
[Tuesday,
15th Aug.]
The wind had fortunately shifted to
the S.W. this morning, and though a considerable breach
was still upon the rock, yet the landing-master’s
crew were enabled to get one praam-boat, lightly loaded
with five stones, brought in safety to the western
creek; these stones were immediately laid by the artificers,
who gladly embraced the return of good weather to
proceed with their operations. The writer had
this day taken possession of his cabin in the beacon-house.
It was small, but commodious, and was found particularly
convenient in coarse and blowing weather, instead of
being obliged to make a passage to the tender in an
open boat at all times, both during the day and the
night, which was often attended with much difficulty
and danger.
[Saturday,
19th Aug.]
For some days past the weather had
been occasionally so thick and foggy that no small
difficulty was experienced in going even between the
rock and the tender, though quite at hand. But
the floating light’s boat lost her way so far
in returning on board that the first land she made,
after rowing all night, was Fifeness, a distance of
about fourteen miles. The weather having cleared
in the morning, the crew stood off again for the floating
light, and got on board in a half-famished and much
exhausted state, having been constantly rowing for
about sixteen hours.
[Sunday,
20th Aug.]
The weather being very favourable
to-day, fifty-three stones were landed, and the builders
were not a little gratified in having built the twenty-second
course, consisting of fifty-one stones, being the first
course which had been completed in one day. This,
as a matter of course, produced three hearty cheers.
At twelve noon prayers were read for the first time
on the Bell Rock; those present, counting thirty, were
crowded into the upper apartment of the beacon, where
the writer took a central position, while two of the
artificers, joining hands, supported the Bible.
[Friday,
25th Aug.]
To-day the artificers laid forty-five
stones, which completed the twenty-fourth course,
reckoning above the first entire one, and the twenty-sixth
above the rock. This finished the solid part
of the building, and terminated the height of the
outward casing of granite, which is thirty-one feet
six inches above the rock or site of the foundation-stone,
and about seventeen feet above high-water of spring-tides.
Being a particular crisis in the progress of the
lighthouse, the landing and laying of the last stone
for the season was observed with the usual ceremonies.
From observations often made by the
writer, in so far as such can be ascertained, it appears
that no wave in the open seas, in an unbroken state,
rises more than from seven to nine feet above the general
surface of the ocean. The Bell Rock Lighthouse
may therefore now be considered at from eight to ten
feet above the height of the waves; and, although
the sprays and heavy seas have often been observed,
in the present state of the building, to rise to the
height of fifty feet, and fall with a tremendous noise
on the beacon-house, yet such seas were not likely
to make any impression on a mass of solid masonry,
containing about 1400 tons,
[Wednesday,
30th Aug.]
The whole of the artificers left the
rock at mid-day, when the tender made sail for Arbroath,
which she reached about six p.m. The vessel
being decorated with colours, and having fired a salute
of three guns on approaching the harbour, the workyard
artificers, with a multitude of people, assembled
at the harbour, when mutual cheering and congratulations
took place between those afloat and those on the quays.
The tender had now, with little exception, been six
months on the station at the Bell Rock, and during
the last four months few of the squad of builders
had been ashore. In particular, Mr. Peter Logan,
the foreman, and Mr. Robert Selkirk, principal builder,
had never once left the rock. The artificers,
having made good wages during their stay, like seamen
upon a return voyage, were extremely happy, and spent
the evening with much innocent mirth and jollity.
In reflecting upon the state of the
matters at the Bell Rock during the working months,
when the writer was much with the artificers, nothing
can equal the happy manner in which these excellent
workmen spent their time. They always went from
Arbroath to their arduous task cheering and they generally
returned in the same hearty state. While at the
rock, between the tides, they amused themselves in
reading, fishing, music, playing cards, draughts,
etc., or in sporting with one another. In
the workyard at Arbroath the young men were almost,
without exception, employed in the evening at school,
in writing and arithmetic, and not a few were learning
architectural drawing, for which they had every convenience
and facility, and were, in a very obliging manner,
assisted in their studies by Mr. David Logan, clerk
of the works. It therefore affords the most pleasing
reflections to look back upon the pursuits of about
sixty individuals who for years conducted themselves,
on all occasions, in a sober and rational manner.