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The Matinicus Rock Light house in Maine as it appeared in the years that Abbie Burgess was in residence. (Coast Guard Drawing)
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Abby Burgess
Lighthouse Keeper’s Daughter Kept Light On in Midst of Storm
By Bethanne Kelly Patrick
Military.com Contributing Writer
Abby Burgess had just rescued her chickens from their coop when a wave swept
over the edge of Matinicus Rock and destroyed the structure. Clutching her
hens, she made it into her family's house with saltwater at her heels. Yet
she had to venture out again, into the storm, in order to light the beacons
that would guide ships safely to Maine's rocky shore.
As a girl of seventeen, Abby Burgess makes an unlikely Coast Guard heroine.
Her father Samuel moved his family of five to the tiny 32-acre island outpost
of Matinicus Rock in 1853. He officially held the title of Lighthouse
Keeper, but Abby soon assumed most of the keeper's duties so that her father
could supplement the family income by lobstering. In January 1856, Samuel
took advantage of calm seas to sail 25 miles to Rockland, the nearest port on
the mainland , for supplies. The lighthouse desperately needed oil and wicks,
and the family desperately needed food and medicine for Mrs. Burgess. With
only her younger sisters at home, Abby had to care for the children's needs,
nurse her mother, and keep the lights burning at all times.
Soon after Samuel Burgess reached land, a storm blew up. Because of the
island's position in the Penobscot Bay, the original lighthouse had been
constructed with twin towers. However, by Jan. 19, the island was virtually
underwater, and Abby had to move her mother and sisters to the north
lighthouse tower. She wrote in the keeper's log: "If they [the towers] stood
we were saved, otherwise our fate was only too certain. But for some reason,
I know not why, I had no misgivings. . . For four weeks, owing to rough
weather, no landing could be effected on the Rock. Though at times greatly
exhausted with my labors, not once did the lights fail. Under God I was able
to perform all my accustomed duties as well as my father's."
Samuel Burgess made it back in his dinghy Puffin with all needed supplies,
and Abby continued to assist him until the position was assumed by one
Captain John Grant. Abby married his son Isaac, and continued to work at
lighthouses, both Matinicus Rock and Whitehead Light, until her death in
1892. Abby, whom poet Wilbert Snow called "the friend and guide of sailors
through dark nights," once said "It has almost seemed to me that the light
was part of myself."
Matinicus Rock Light House Information
Additional History of Matinicus Rock Light House
Information on ‘Women Who Kept the Lights’
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