Saturday, March 22, 2014

Maine Lighthouse Heroes and Legends: Two Lights

 Two Lights Cape Elizabeth Maine

Maine Lighthouse Heroes and Legends
By Doug Mills

  Marcus Auralius Hanna, a Civil War Medal of honor winner, was appointed
keeper of the two lights at Cape Elizabeth Maine, located on the approach to
Portland harbor.
  On the night of January 28, 1885 a huge winter storm moved up the Maine coast
growing rapidly into a howling blizzard. Hanna sick with the flue spent the whole
night sounding the steam fog whistle. At 6:00 A.M. he was relieved by the
assistant keeper. Suffering from his illness and exhaustion he had to crawl through
the deep snow drifts to the keepers house. Hanna’s wife put out the lights in both
towers after sunrise.
  It was around 8:40 A.M. when Mrs. Hanna saw it, a schooner aground on Dyer’s
ledge, just below the lighthouse. It was the Australia out of Booth Bay bound for
Boston. The captain had already been carried overboard in the violent seas. Two
crewmen remained alive. They had climbed into the rigging to keep from being
swept overboard, leaving them exposed to the freezing wind and ocean spray.
Hanna and the assistant keeper rushed to the shore near the stranded vessel. The ice on the rocks made it nearly impossible to get close and the wind and snow
would not allow them to keep the stranded sailors in sight. The waves attempted to pull them into the deadly waters while the cold wind slowly sucked the life out
of their bodies.
  Hanna tried to throw a line to the freezing sailors but to no avail. The assistant keeper returned to his duties at the fog signal, feeling the situation was hopeless. Hanna refused to give up. Nearly frozen himself by this time he waded waist deep into the freezing waves and threw the line again. Success, the first sailor managed to tie the rope around himself and was pulled to the shore. After several more tries he was able to get the rope to the second sailor. The sailor ties the line around himself. Hanna begins to pull him in. But, with the cold waters taking the life from his body and his cloths frozen from the wind and snow, his strength fails!
  At that moment the assistant keeper returns with two neighbors and the four men
were able to pull the second sailor to safety.



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