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Cabot Island

The Alex Gill Story · by Gary Collins · 2007 · Flanker Press

Cover of Cabot Island by Gary Collins (2007)

In the nineteenth century, the Newfoundland government, under constant pressure from fish merchants, began installing lighthouses in some of the more treacherous places around the island. In the 1950s, Cabot Island boasted a large lighthouse, with a steady, brilliant light and a bellowing foghorn to warn seafarers away from its inviting shoreline. This sentinel of the sea was manned by brothers Alex and Bertram Gill, who hailed from Newtown, a nearby community in Bonavista Bay. In November of 1954, a terrible storm darkened the skies above Cabot Island and battered its solitary lighthouse with a single-minded fury. The keepers of the Cabot Island light were no strangers to sea weather, but when tragedy struck the brothers Gill, the younger of the two was left to fend for himself amid one of the worst storms in Newfoundland's history. This is a true story of the love between two brothers, a love that perseveres in the face of death, loss, and greatest personal challenge. source

Scene

Cabot Island Lighthouse

At dusk, Bert climbed the seventy-four-foot-high cast-iron tower and placed the lamp inside its glass prism again. The silence of the dark tower was as pressing as the night that closed around the isolated island… The booming sound from Easter Head and the Pound Rocks, and the steady crash of rollers coming from Souther Point, confirmed that he would be stuck here alone for at least a few days. Ships at sea depended on the chartered light on the Cabot to be there as it had been since 1880.

Verbatim narrative anchored to Cabot Island lighthouse and named offshore features in Bonavista Bay, with Newtown context confirmed on the same publisher page.

Gary Collins, Cabot Island: The Alex Gill Story (Flanker Press, 2007), publisher excerptsource

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  1. 1.Blurb source — flankerpress.com/product/cabot-island