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View Full Version : Last living Lighthouse keeper dies


Srol
12-12-2003, 05:07 PM
I know this doesn't have anything directly to do with Nickel Creek, but I thought this might be interesting considering how many fans there are of The Lighthouse's Tale.

Last Civilian Lighthouse Keeper Dies
1 hour, 48 minutes ago Add U.S. National - AP to My Yahoo!


By LARRY McSHANE, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - The last living vestige of a bygone era is gone: The keeper of a Brooklyn lighthouse, who stood watch over New York's gateway to the Atlantic Ocean for 43 years, has died.

Frank Schubert, 88, was the last of the Coast Guard's civilian lighthouse keepers in the United States, said Petty Officer Mike Hvozda. He died Thursday of natural causes at his cottage beneath the 113-year-old lighthouse on Brooklyn's Coney Island.


Schubert's work earned him many fans, including President George H.W. Bush, who invited him for a White House visit.


The Coast Guard mourns the loss of its most courageous sentry of the sea, said Capt. Craig T. Bone, commander of Coast Guard Activities New York. His devotion to duty and courage are unequaled.


Night after night, year after year, Schubert ensured that the ocean traffic at the nation's busiest port found safe passage around the pointy end of Brooklyn. He was responsible for maintaining the grounds, light and fog signal at the 80-foot-tall lighthouse.


Over the course of his career, Schubert was credited with saving the lives of 15 sailors. He survived howling hurricanes and towering waves, keeping the lighthouse beacon flashing through the rain and surf.


Even after the lighthouse became automated by the late 1980s, Schubert stayed on as an ambassador of good will and a reminder of maritime history.


Schubert was first assigned to a lighthouse off his native Staten Island at age 22, when the Coast Guard took over the U.S. Lighthouse Service in 1939.


Schubert was drafted and served in the Army during World War II. At the war's end, he came home and began working at another lighthouse in New York Harbor.


It was 1960 when Schubert took the job at the Coney Island lighthouse and never left.


Since its opening in 1890, only five other men have served at the Coney Island lighthouse — none longer than Schubert.

Guess the Lighthouse is just gonna have to make friends with computers. At least he knows they won't go jumpin' out the window on 'im ;)

obsessedwithNC
12-12-2003, 07:43 PM
Originally posted by Srol
INight after night, year after year
hee hee.. almost green and grey lyrics!
anyways, how sad. i loved lighthouses and old lighthouse history.. there's a lighthouse here on lake erie and we go sledding down the hill when the snow gets really thick. ... :)

man_n_black18
12-12-2003, 09:20 PM
its allways sad to see a tradition go away such as this

that of a lighthouse keeper was certainly a noble profession

Guesswho_Chick
12-12-2003, 10:13 PM
very sad...end of an era :( although I tend to get a bit romantic over these things - it's always sad to watch a human and semi-herioc profession get taken out by technology *even if it is necessary*

and interesting, a lot of sailors wish we still used lighthouses more often along with gps, because they don't necessarily find the gps reliable. I wonder if they run into the same probs with the comps that maintain the lighthouses??