Tag Archive: New Hampshire history

Temporary Lighthouse Keeper in New Hampshire Became National Hero

Allan Wood | March 1, 2023 | COMMENTS:Comments Closed
Isles of Shoals (White Island) Lighthouse

Isles of Shoals (White Island) Lighthouse

Temporary Lighthouse Keeper at Isles of Shoals Light, John Bragg Downs, Involved in a Daring Winter Rescue, Became a National Hero


White Island Lighthouse Built on the Isles of Shoals

The Isles of Shoals consist of nine islands split between the Maine and New Hampshire borders about 10 miles away from the mainland. The shoals are rocky islands that spawned a small local fishing community, which soon developed into an important local fishing center for centuries. The shoals also became a safe haven for those that led less productive lives, like Blackbeard the pirate. It was also a haven for tourists, poets, and writers, as it still is today.

Vintage image of Isles of Shoals light. Courtesy of US Coast Guard

Vintage image of Isles of Shoals light. Courtesy of US Coast Guard

The Isles of Shoals’ dangerous location along the coastal shipping route amid New England’s frequently inclement weather caused many shipwrecks. In 1821, a lighthouse was built on one of these rocky islands, White Island, and became known as the Isles of Shoals Light, or White Island Lighthouse. It helped to protect the many local mariners, shipping traffic that would pass by the islands, vacationers, and those heading into Portsmouth’s busy shipping port.

 

John Bragg Downs Involved in Famous Rescue

Isles of Shoals (White Island) Lighthouse

Isles of Shoals (White Island) Lighthouse

One of the most famous rescues in the region occurred in March of 1855, not by the present lighthouse keeper at that time, but by a local islander named John Bragg Downs, who agreed to act as temporary keeper while the new keeper was preparing to bring his family from the mainland to the lighthouse. The Downs family had been living near the desolate White Island for generations and was part of a group of families known as the original “shoalers”. John grew up on nearby Appledore Island, away from the mainland, and enjoyed the view of White Island Lighthouse. He frequently visited the keepers and learned many duties of tending the lighthouse and surrounding buildings. He was a salty man of medium build who was also renowned as one who could always be counted on as a great resource of information or assistance. He was also known to drink a cup of rum three times a day to maintain good health.

During the Winter of 1855, the new keeper to Isles of Shoals Light, Captain Richard Haley, needed to head to the mainland of Massachusetts to prepare to bring his family to the Isles of Shoals Lighthouse. He asked local “shoaler” John Bragg Downs to stay at the lighthouse and act as its temporary keeper until he returned. Downs gladly accepted the task and brought a friend to keep him company and work as his assistant while Haley was away. He was comfortable with his new position and responsibility and enjoyed tending to the lighthouse duties with his friend. Five days into his temporary position, he saw a major storm brewing.

Cold waves crashing on rocks

Fierce waves crashing on rocks

On the sixth day, the area was hit with a monstrous snowstorm, causing huge waves from the winds and high tide. These waves were sweeping across the islands as the evening progressed. Downs and his friend stayed at the keeper’s house to ride out the storm.

Meanwhile, a Russian brig headed for Salem, Massachusetts, with a cargo of tallow and hides got caught in the storm. The captain could not see the lighthouse beacon in the blinding snow that night and believed he was many miles away from the mainland. To his horror, and too late to change course, the vessel was carried by the thrashing waves near the rocks by White Island. One colossal wave lifted up the vessel and lodged it between some jagged rocks a short distance from the lighthouse. The captain prepared the crew to be ready in case the vessel started to break apart during the night. There was nothing the crew could do but wait until daybreak and try to ride out the storm.

Just after midnight, the blizzard was calm, and the captain saw the beacon’s light through the snow a short distance from their position. This was a fortunate but perilous situation. He knew the vessel might break apart from the pounding waves, and all might perish in the freezing seas if they could not get help from the shore.

One of the vessel’s sailors, a large burley man, volunteered to be lowered over the wreck and get help. The captain knew time was precious and told the sailor to make haste. The sailor was lowered over the bow in the night, lit only by the lighthouse beam illuminating through the snowfall. He had to time his endeavors so that as the enormous waves would recede, he would try to lunge onto barnacle-filled rocks and hold fast as waves washed over him, dragging his skin over the jagged edges. As he slowly made his way to the shore, he became increasingly cut and bruised with each rock he tried to hold to avoid the undertow and as each frigid wave passed over him. He finally reached a ledge above the waves and started to scramble over the rocks up an incline towards the lighthouse, knowing time was precious for the safety of his comrades. Bruised, bloody, and freezing, he made haste for the keeper’s house, where he could see a light inside.

Ice Covered Rocks

Ice Covered Rocks

Acting Keeper Downs had been watching for any vessel most of the day and that night but could not see anything in the blinding snowstorm. At about the same time, during a lull in the storm around midnight, he told his friend to catch a quick nap while he prepared something to eat. His assistant could not relax and watched Downs prepare a small meal while he gazed at the door. The noise of the surf crashing over the rocks could easily be heard from their comfortable dwelling. His friend shouted over the noise, “Well, John, what would you think if somebody was to knock at the door just now?” Downs responded, “Think! I should think it must be the devil himself, for no human could land on White Island this night and live.” A loud rap on the door from the outside came almost as if in response, startling the two men. They couldn’t believe that, during a raging storm, someone or something was trying to get in from the outside so late in the evening. The raps continued, and Downs quickly lit his lantern and opened the door. The burly Russian sailor stood in the darkness, covered in blood from cuts and bruises, like some ghastly figure in the night. His shadow filled the doorway, lit only by Down’s lantern. The man was exhausted, drenched, and freezing from exposure. He cried in broken English, “Brig ashore, sir! Right near the lighthouse tower!” Downs and his assistant tried to remove the sailor’s bloody tattered rags and then quickly gave him warm garments. As they tended to his many cuts to prepare him to join them outside, the sailor told the two rescuers of the stranded wreck.

With the sailor in dry clothes and covered in bandages, the three men grabbed a line and other equipment and headed over the icy rocks to the shoreline, where they found the wreck constantly being pounded by the waves but still intact. Downs could see that the crew members needed to be rescued quickly as the ship could easily break apart from its position on the rocks. He ventured out on an icy rock ledge and tried to throw a line to the rest of the crew on the vessel. After several attempts, the line was caught by one of the crew and secured on the wreck.

Isles of Shoals Lighthouse on White Island in New Hampshire. Image Courtesy US Coast Guard.

Isles of Shoals Lighthouse on White Island in New Hampshire. Image Courtesy US Coast Guard.

Downs looked around to find where he could secure the line on his end and could not find anything from the rocks where they were located. He decided that the only way to anchor the line on shore was to use his own body by tying the line around his waist and then climbing into a crevice to maintain a hold on his position. He searched in the darkness lit only by the lighthouse and found a deep enough crevice nearby to climb into to gain a foothold while maintaining a firm grasp on the line. He told the Russian sailor and his friend to hold him fast as he braced himself in the freezing winds and icy spray. He then instructed his friend to shout to the crew on the vessel to come down the line one by one toward him.

Sunset over rocky coast.

Sunset over rocky coast after a snowfall.

Most of the fourteen men on the wreck were in fair health as each braved the bitter chill from the winds, the sting of the snow, and the icy spray of the surf. One by one, they slowly climbed over the jagged rocks using the line to safety. The last two crew members were failing from exposure to the storm, and as they needed assistance from their crew mates, each nearly became washed off the rocks as their strength was failing. Finally, all crew members had made it safely to shore, and the exhausted men started to make their way up the rocky hill through the storm towards the lighthouse. Downs and his friend cared for them by giving them warm blankets, any clothing they could find, food, and spirits when they reached the warmth of the little keeper’s house. The house was overcrowded with so many individuals as most slept on the floor, exhausted from their ordeal.

Days passed as the storm continued, leaving all stranded at the lighthouse and keeper’s dwelling without assistance from the mainland or the locals on the other islands who were also stranded in their homes, many unaware of the rescue. There were no other residents on White Island except for the occupants of the lighthouse. The food supply was desperately low, and Downs feared that they might starve with so many mouths to feed. Finally, the storm subsided, and Keeper Haley, who was stranded on the mainland from the storm and worried for the safety of his island friend, sailed back out to White Island and was able to bring provisions to the many hungry unsuspected guests at the lighthouse. When he arrived, he provided all with a hearty meal, and the 14 grateful crew members were transported that afternoon to the mainland.

White Island (Isles of Shoals lighthouse in New Hampshire Seacoast.

White Island (Isles of Shoals lighthouse in New Hampshire Seacoast.

As he was not a government-appointed lighthouse keeper, John Bragg Downs never received a medal for risking his life that night but did win the admiration of his fellow islanders and the locals on the mainland. Downs would venture over to White Island to the rocky shore by the lighthouse for many years afterward. He admired the courage and tenacity of the sizeable Russian sailor who perilously attempted to climb over the barnacle-covered rocks, risking his life that night for his comrades when he could have easily been swept out to sea during the storm. Downs would often observe the crevice he used in making himself a human anchor, taking pride in risking his own life to save all 14 crewmen of the Russian brig.

 

 

 

Exploring the Isles of Shoals

Appledore Island one of the islands of the Isles of Shoals.

Star Island is one of the islands of the Isles of Shoals.

Star Island with solar panels among stone architecture.

Star Island with solar panels among stone architecture.

White Island (Isles of Shoals) lighthouse can be easily viewed from Star Island. Here visitors can eat at the Victorian Era Oceanic Hotel and explore the island and its timely stone cottages and church, and observe not only the largest monument in New Hampshire but a massive collection of solar panels on the other side of the island that makes the area dependent only on solar energy. Island Cruises offers tours to the Isles of Shoals Islands and the lighthouse during the summer and can set up a lunch ticket for you at the hotel. The vessel is also the mail boat to the island out of Rye Harbor. It offers daily stopovers to Star Island for a few hours or for the day. Also, during the summer season, Isles of Shoals Steamship Co. provides a narrated history of Isles of Shoals as part of their tour and has a weekly sunset tour for close-up views of the lighthouse. It’s a great place to spend the day and relax.

Here are a few photos of White Island Light, or Isles of Shoals Lighthouse

Enjoy!

Allan Wood

 

 

The Rise and Demise of the Largest Sailing Ships

The Rise and Demise of the Largest Sailing Ships


The Rise and Demise of the Largest Sailing Ships: Stories of the Six and Seven-Masted Coal Schooners of New England. In the early 1900s, New England shipbuilders constructed the world’s largest sailing ships amid social and political reforms. These giants were the ten original six-masted coal schooners and one colossal seven-masted vessel, built to carry massive quantities of coal and building supplies and measured longer than a football field! This book, balanced with plenty of color and vintage images, showcases the historical accounts that followed these mighty ships, from their launches to battling destructive storms and their final voyages.

Available also as an eBook and you can get it at Amazon Books.

get ebook on apple books

 

 

 

Book - Lighthouses and Attractions in Southern New England

Book – Lighthouses and Coastal Attractions in Southern New England: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts


My 300-page book, Lighthouses and Coastal Attractions of Southern New England: Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, provides memorable human interest stories from each of the 92 lighthouses, along with plenty of indoor and outdoor coastal attractions you can explore. These include whale-watching excursions, lighthouse tours, windjammer sailing tours and adventures, special parks and museums, and even lighthouses where you can stay overnight. Like the one above, you’ll also find many stories of shipwrecks and rescues. Lighthouses and their nearby attractions are divided into regions for weekly and weekend explorers. You’ll also find plenty of stories of hauntings around lighthouses.

 

 

Book - Lighthouses and Coastal Attractions in Northern New England: New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont

Book – Lighthouses and Coastal Attractions in Northern New England: New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont


My 300-page book, Lighthouses and Coastal Attractions of Northern New England: New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont, provides extraordinary human interest stories from each of the 76 lighthouses, along with plenty of indoor and outdoor coastal attractions you can explore and tours. Lighthouses and their nearby attractions are divided into regions for weekly and weekend explorers. Attractions and tours also include whale watching tours, lighthouse tours, windjammer sailing tours and adventures, unique parks and museums, and lighthouses where you can stay overnight. There are also stories of haunted lighthouses in these regions.

 

 

 

Book of shipwrecks, resuces, and hauntings around New England lighthouses

Book- New England Lighthouses: Famous Shipwrecks, Rescues & Other Tales

 

Included are more images and details of the story about John Bragg Downs and his rescue of the Russian ship, along with over 50 other stories in my book New England Lighthouses: Famous Shipwrecks, Rescues & Other Tales. This image-rich book also contains vintage images provided by the Coast Guard and various organizations and paintings by six famous artists of the Coast Guard.

You’ll find this book and the lighthouse tourism books from the publisher Schiffer Books or in many fine bookstores like Barnes and Noble.

 

 

 

Copyright © Allan Wood Photography; do not reproduce without permission. All rights reserved.

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American Lighthouse Foundation

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Category: Lighthouse keepers, Lighthouses, Rescues, shipwrecks TAG: , , ,