Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 April 1896 — Fastnet Light. [ARTICLE]
Fastnet Light.
The first glance of Great Britain that the American tourist gets on his European tour is that of the Fastnet lighthouse, says The Sketch. It stands on a rugged, solitary rock, situated nine miles south of Crookhaven, at the extreme southwest corner <* Ireland, and is, perhaps, more stormbeaten than any other around our coast. The rock Is eighty feet in height, and the lighthouse towers another seventy above, yet in winter gales the Atlantic billows literally bombard the massive structure and have even smashed In a portion of the
lantern at the summit of the erection, the aeaa frequently sweeping over the rock with tremendous force. Some two or three yearn ago the stormy weather then prevailing prevented all communication between the rock for many weeks, so that the store of food was consumed with the exception of some flour. At last a schooner managed to approach 'sutHciently near to enable a small quantity of food to be dragged through the sea by the hungry men, and, fortunately, the next day the sea moderated, and the stores were once more fully replenished. Except in very calm weather the Fastnet is surrounded by a fringe of foam, and the only means of landing is by the aid of a “jib” fifty-eight feet in length, so placed on the rock that in moderate weather its end reaches outside the surf. When a visitor wishes to land (an unusual occurrence) he is rowed in a small boat as near as the waves permit, and the lightkeepers throw out a small buoy attached to a rope, which is secured by the man in the boat. The Jib is then swung out, and the visitor, placing one foot in the loop, and catching tight hold of the rope, is hoisted about forty feet vertically, and then the jib, being pivoted at its foot., swings him horizontally about 100 feet on a safe landing
