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LONELY LIGHTHOUSE

No News for Seven Months

An amazing letter, written, by a man who, with his family, has been entirely cut off from the world for seven months, was recently received in England. He is Mr. Ernest Abbott, lighthouse-keeper on Peckford Island, a tiny place, little bigger than a rock, off the coast. of Newfoundland, one of the loneliest lighthouse stations in the world. Except for a mail on December . 20, not a word did this family hear of the outside world from October 4 to May 2, and during those seven months .not. a human being landed on their tiny island in the Atlantic. A strange visitor, did arrive one stormy night .in March.

The strange visitor was a large sheep dog, swept to the rocks on an ice-floe —from where no one knows. He was very thin and weak, and had probably been on the ice some time.

Once they bad jrecovered from their amazement, the Abbott family were overjoyed to have a new face among them, though it was only a dog’s face; and as for the children, they no longer wondered what fresh game to play at. It is difficult to imagine what it must be like to be left alone in this way for seven months, hearing no news, and being able to convey none; but it is easy to understand the .lighthouse- < keeper’s desire for a radio set. It would make all the difference in the world to this lonely family, but they cannot afford It yet. That is why Mr. Strain, of the Lighthouse Literature Mission, has passed on Mr. Abbott’s letter to the “Childdren’s Newspaper.” Many a magazine and paper has been sent to this lighthouse by the mission, but it cannot afford a 'radio set. An appeal for the cost of a set has been made.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19330902.2.147.15

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 26, Issue 290, 2 September 1933, Page 18

Word Count
306

LONELY LIGHTHOUSE Dominion, Volume 26, Issue 290, 2 September 1933, Page 18

LONELY LIGHTHOUSE Dominion, Volume 26, Issue 290, 2 September 1933, Page 18