Coast guard heritage museum newsletter

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Coast guard heritage museum newsletter George Washburn - Editor Emeritus, Publisher CGHM summer 2010 Jack McGrath Editor volume number 7 COAST GUARD HERITAGE MUSEUM 3353 MAIN ST. (ROUTE 6A) P.O. BOX 161 BARNSTABLE, MA 02630 508-362-8521 EMAIL: CGHERITAGE@COMCAST.NET OUR WEB SITE: WWW.CGHERITAGE.ORG

PRESIDENT S CORNER President s Report Summer 2010 Been a busy Summer with a lot of visits from active duty Coast Guard. We now have a CGHM rotating display in the Coast Guard 1 st District Building on Atlantic Ave. Boston, thanks to Connie Terrell PA3 and Chief Jeff Hall PAC, Public Affairs Specialists. The displays will change every couple of months to keep it fresh and not the same. The CGC Webber is still being built and a request to have the ship do its time trials here in Cape Cod waters has been denied by the Coast Guard Commandant. This was very upsetting to me where the fight to save our own history is once again taking a step back and no time to honor our own. The only service in America that does not have their own National Museum. We have kept our displays changing as we get new artifacts in here at the museum. This has been great but now another added job for me, along with Harris Weston, to keep everything in hard copy and in the computer inventory. Looking forward now to closing so all the jobs that can not be done while open will be attempted to be done this Winter. We need more volunteers to help us do this. On that note, things continue to pile up because we do not have enough volunteers to do the much needed work. What this has done is put more on the few that do volunteer. This being near the end of my third year as President has also taken its toll and I hope that someone else will step up and take over. Anyone interested please contact the Nominating Committee for admittance on the ballot if qualified. Thanks to all the people who have supported our efforts and come on down and volunteer a couple of hours a week to keep this Coast Guard Heritage Museum squared away and heading in the right direction. Thank you. Bill Collette

A sample of the items from CDR. Young EDITOR S NOTES Another busy summer at the CGHM. We have added additional items in our Aviation section, especially models by Mike Maynard, including a great Privateer. Also some new items in the Lightship Sailors room. Air Station Cape Cod has been active in their support, with Commander Beth Young providing a lot of excellent material on women and minorities in the USCG. Also. AST Chief Randy Rice has been contributing items to our Aviation section. As a former AT, the Aviation stuff is my favorite. The PA section at CG District One has been very helpful to the museum. Recently, some display cases that had been declared surplus were transferred to the museum. They are great cases and will be filled over the winter. Jack McGrath EXHIBIT NEWS

EXHIBIT NEWS Mike Maynard is one of our most prolific modelers. Here are a few of the items on display in our aviation section. privateer marlin

EXHIBIT NEWS Skytrain Hawkeye

MUSEUM NEWS Now that we have begun to have members, we will be changing our newsletter a bit. We will continue to send a newsletter to all who have given us their e-mail, but will be providing an expanded newsletter to our members in the future. Initially it will also be via email, but we hope to be able to publish a hard copy version as well for those members who would prefer that. Please print and mail the application. MEMBERSHIP CATEGORIES & DUES Individual $25 Single membership in the CGHM with all member privileges, including attending annual meeting with no voting privilege, individual admission to the museum, and a 10% gift shop discount. Family - $40 Same as individual, but with additional admissions to the museum for immediate family. One person may attend annual meeting with no voting privilege. Supporting Member- $ 100 Unlimited Museum admission & 10% discount. This is for those who want to support museum but not actively participate. Sustaining Member - $250 For those who want to show a greater level of support for the museum. Unlimited admission and 10% discount apply. Guardian: 3 donor levels Guardians receive all benefits of membership. The Guardian category includes individual recognition at the museum. The 3 categories are: Captain s circle: $500+ Admiral s circle: $1,000+ Commandant s circle $2,500 +

COAST GUARD HERITAGE MUSEUM APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP Name: Address: City: State: ZIP Phone: EMAIL: USCG Connection (if any) Membership Level: Annual Dues Individual $25 Family $40 Supporting $100 Sustaining $250 Guardian Captain s Circle $500+ Admiral s Circle $1,000+ Commandant s Circle $2,500+ Please make checks payable to: Coast Guard Heritage Museum Mail to: Coast Guard Heritage Museum P O Box 161, Barnstable, MA 02630 Credit Card: Visa Mastercard Discover Card Number: Expiration Date: Month Year Signature: Date: 7

GIFT SHOP We now have T- Shirts and Polo Shirts in our Gift Shop. T s are $15, various sizes in red, blue, grey. Polo s are $30, $33 w/ pocket. Colors include blue, red, grey. Call for specific availability & shipping. We accept MC, Visa, Discover. 82 footer polo GOAT polo T shirt

GIFT SHOP Bill Meininger was a BM1 who became a pilot. This very funny book is full of stories about his career that any Coastie can relate to. $21 Members $18.90 $3 shipping For all you lightship sailors, here is a look at the ships that protected Cape Cod. $23 Members $20.70 $3 shipping George Rongner was skipper of the Buzzards lightship in the 1950 s. Read about a part of the USCG that is no more. $15 Members $13.50 $3 shipping The original book about the Pendleton rescue. By the man who was there, Bernie Webber himself. $30 Members $27 $3 shipping We have additional titles. Please inquire. A history of shipwrecks in Massachusetts by Robert Farson $25 Members $22.50 $3 shipping A great photo book by Bill Quinn, longtime Cape Cod author & photographer. $30 Members $27 $3 shipping

DISPATCHES FROM THE FLEET THE LIGHTHOUSES OF ZIMRI ROBINSON PART 2 In my last story about Uncle Tobey and Bird Island Lighthouse I incorrectly stated that his pay, when he transferred from Bird island to Ned Point, went from $560.00 to $500,00 per month. After a note from Jim Walker stating that it was $600 per year before his transfer, I stand corrected. Also since then I have been in contact with several distant cousins in regard to Zimri s pay and the photo of Zimri. After going through Zimri s pay and compensation records, I came across a copy of a service record card showing a payment to his widow Angeline A. Robinson of $53.00 in April 1914 after his death. His pay as of 10/23/12 was $516.00. Apparently the photo that was published on the web and in the book Maritime Marion may have been incorrectly identified. The photo had not been confirmed by the family. It is possible that in the group picture published in Maritime Marion the man on the far left is Zimri. As of this date research by the family is ongoing. The group picture is supposed to be in possession of the Sippican Historical Society. Three early views of Ned Point

DISPATCHES FROM THE FLEET NED POINT LIGHTHOUSE Location: Entrance to Mattapoisett Bay, Buzzards Bay, near Mattapoisett, Massachusetts Station Established: 1838 Year tower was first lit: 1838 Automated: 1923 Deactivated: 1951-1963 Foundation materials: natural / emplaced Construction materials: Stone Tower shape: Conical 39 feet Marking /Pattern: White with a black lantern Relation to other structure: Separate Original Lens: Fifth Order Fresnel The light is still operational Present Optic; 250mm Present Characteristic: White light; 3 seconds white alternating with 3 seconds darkness HISTORY In 1837, $5,000 was appropriated to build a light at Ned s Point. (The Name is from the original owner of the land Edwin Ned Dexter of Mattapoisett.) The cost of the station was $4,000. Ned s Point Light was first lit in March of 1838. It was built from stone gathered near the site. The thirty-two cantilevered granite steps are embedded in the wall without the use of mortar. The original lantern was bird cage style. Before 1888 the original lantern was replaced by an octagonal style one. A fifth order Fresnel lens was installed in 1857. It is possible that the lantern was changed at that time. The present lantern room was installed in 1896 and a brick oil house was built in 1907. After a hurricane in 1888 which destroyed the original stone house, a wood-frame keeper s house was built on the original stone foundation. In 1923 the light was automated and the keeper s house was loaded onto the scow Eva and floated across Buzzards Bay to the Wing s Neck Lighthouse in Bourne where it remains today as a private dwelling. The light was deactivated in 1952. The land was sold to the town of Mattapoisett which developed it into a park. The Light was reactivated in 1963. It remains an active aid to navigation. THE KEEPERS George Brayley (1843-1849); Hanna Brayley (c1846-1849); Lamet Hall Jr. (1849-1853); John Bumpus (1853-1874; Lamet Hall Jr. (1859-1874); George H. Kelly (1874-1895); William P. Howard (1895-1912); Zimri Tobey Robinson (1912-1914); Russell Eastman (1914-1923). NOTES OF INTEREST The land was purchased by the Government from H.H. Edwards through his guardian Barnabus Hiller. The contract to build the tower and the keeper s dwelling went to Lenard Uncle Lenard Hammond. The original construction of the light and dwelling were of poor workmanship. In 1838 the light s terrible condition was recorded by the Lighthouse Inspector Carpenter. Just a few months after the activation of the light that the keeper informed him that in the late storm both buildings leaked in all directions. The lantern dome leaked so bad that the keeper had to remain in the lantern room during rain to keep the light from going out. The inspector found that the mortar or cement between the stone was little more than sand. The glazing of the lantern was to be of Boston double-crown glass, but was of the thinnest kind and nothing more

DISPATCHES FROM THE FLEET than ordinary. The lantern was only five feet eight inches high, which is too low for the keeper with his hat on. Three of the eleven lamps were found to be reflecting their light inland. In the winter months the keeper would have to haul buckets of whale oil from the oil house to lighthouse s ground level and heat it on the stove to warm it before using it in the lamps. Then the keeper would have to lug the oil up the thirty-two stone steps to the lantern room. The wicks had to be trimmed and the reflector cleaned and the glass cleaned. Often the wife of the keeper had to tend the light when the keeper was ill or absent from his duties. It was not uncommon for the wife to be the assistant keeper at lighthouses and to assume the full duties until a suitable replacement could be found. Not to mention that they had to keep the dwelling clean and tidy, cook the food and tend the gardens and farm animals that were at many of the stations. It is noted earlier in this article that Hanna Brayley assumed her husband s duties when he died. When the light was fully automated and the house moved to Wing s Neck, the story goes that Russell Eastman, the last keeper, remained in the house and cooked his breakfast during the move. When the Coast Guard decommissioned the light in 1952, they put the 35-foot tower up for sale to the lowest bidder. James Stowell of Mattapoisett quickly put in a bid of one cent making sure he would not be under bid. The Government on realizing their mistake sent Stowell eight pages of explanation that the sale was cancelled. Zimri Robinson was transferred to Ned Point in 1912. His son Jerry assisted in keeping the light and assumed Zimri s duties when he died in 1914 until Eastman took over. Zimri died of a stroke in 1914 after many years in service as a lighthouse keeper. It is fitting that he finally got his transfer to a shore station and lived a relatively much easier life than at sea before and after the Civil War and hard duties as a lighthouse keeper. As a young boy I can remember going to family gatherings in Marion and looking out to Bird Island where my Grandfather kept the light. Except for the time Zimri took care of the light at Ned Point the family always lived in Marion. Not until I went into the Coast Guard and had my turn at helping to maintain the light was I aware that Great Grandfather kept the light at Ned Point. I have retold the story many times that the first time I climbed those stone steps in the tower I felt that I was being watched and felt a presence. When I went home on leave my mother said she had remembered that Zimri and her uncle Jerry kept the light. That explained my feelings. I still visit Ned Point and it brings back a lot of memories and unexplained happenings. I am very comfortable knowing that in some small way that I continued as Zimri did helping to keep the light. The Town of Mattapoisett now owns the land and it is a veterans memorial park. The light was reactivated in 1961 with a new modern lens. In 1993 the local Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla adopted the light and renovated the tower in 1995-1996 and more work was completed in 2001. On my last visit in August this year I found the south side of the tower in need of repair. Several sections of mortar are missing and there is some work to be done at the base near the electrical supply entrance. The park is open daily to the public and Bert Theriault is the volunteer keeper there Thursdays 10:00 am until noon. I have on several occasions tried to get into the old tower but for some reason or another the tower was closed or the keeper did not allow visitors to enter. For those visiting the tower on scheduled days of opening be prepared that it just may not be open to the public. For directions and further information call the town of Mattapoisett at 508-758-4121.

DISPATCHES FROM THE FLEET I wish to thank the following sources for references for these articles: Betty Roberts of the Mattapoisett Historical Museum and Society Clayton Hagy, former volunteer keeper at Ned Point, for his Ned Point collection and his efforts for the preservation of Ned Point Lighthouse The Coast Guard Historian s Office for photos of Ned Point and some of the history Albert Theriault, present volunteer keeper at Ned Point, and Albert and Elizabeth Theriault Ned Point Lighthouse Chronicles and their efforts to preserve Ned Point lighthouse Jeremy D Entremont, Historian, American Lighthouse Foundation Paula Cobb for family recollections and history Judy (Hagemann) Mazurkiewicz, daughter of Elizabeth (Robinson) Hagemann, Robinson Family research. The National Archives for the photo of Ned Point during the 1938 hurricane Mystic Seaport for maritime information The New Bedford Library for maritime information The various committees and societies for the preservation and restoration of Ned Point and Bird Island lighthouses George Washburn for his photo collection Two views of the Oil House

DISPATCHES FROM THE FLEET Ned Point in modern times During the famous 1938 hurricane For those interested in Zimri Robinson and would like more information, I would suggest they visit the Mattapoisett Historical Society, The Mattapoisett Library, the Marion Library and the Sippican Historical Society in Marion. Respectfully, George Washburn

Coast Guard Heritage Museum 3353 Main Street (Route 6A) P. O. Box 161 Barnstable, MA 02630 508-362-8521 cgheritage@comcast.net The Coast Guard Heritage Museum continues its dedication to preserving the heritage of the USCG in the 1856 Custom House Building located in the village of Barnstable, MA. Our everchanging exhibits make each visit a fresh experience. Most recently, the Lightship Sailors Association has added their exhibit to the museum. We cover the full range of Coast Guard roles, ranging from protecting our shores, lives and property to lighthouses and lightships, from life-saving stations to rescue boats, from buoy tenders to icebreakers and weather ships and from modern aircraft to patrol boats and cutters. The heroic story of the Coast Guard must be told and never forgotten! We often work closely with the USCG, but we DO NOT receive funding from the Coast Guard or any other government agency. Our attendance has increased each year. However, it is not enough to defray the rapidly rising costs of maintaining and conserving our collections as well as promoting our existence. We are entirely operated by volunteers. We need your help! Please support us by printing the form below and mailing it, along with your check made payable to the Coast Guard Heritage Museum. Be sure to include your mailing address and your e-mail address so that we can send you our newsletter. Some may wish to provide for us in their will. Consult your financial advisors to choose what best suits your personal situation. All gifts are tax-deductible. By remembering the Coast Guard Heritage Museum in your will you can continue your support for years to come. Help support our mission so we can continue to promote the history of the USCG. WN