- George Worthylake
George Worthylake (died November 3, 1718) was the first
lighthouse keeper in what was to become theUnited States . He was also the first to die in the line of duty.Worthylake was hired as keeper of the
Boston Light onLittle Brewster Island by the General Court of Massachusetts, at a salary of £50 a year; he was admonished that anydereliction of duty would cost him £100. Besides keeping the light burning from sundown to sunup, he was also expected to serve as a harbor pilot. Worthylake would live on the island with his wife, Ann, and two daughters, Ann and Ruth. He is also known to have kept a flock ofsheep onGreat Brewster Island ; these drowned in a storm in 1717.On November 3, 1718, Worthylake, his wife, his daughter Ruth, and a friend were returning to the lighthouse after going into Boston to collect pay; upon arrival near the island, the family slave rowed out in a canoe to take them to the station. On the return trip, the canoe capsized. Worthylake, his wife, his daughter, the friend, and the slave drowned while Ann and a friend watched from shore.
Benjamin Franklin memorialized the event in his poem "Lighthouse Tragedy"; he hawked copies of the poem, printed by his brother, in the streets. A single copy, whose authenticity is unknown, survives.Worthylake, his wife, and his daughter are buried under an unusual triple headstone in Copps Hill Burying Ground.
ee also
* [http://www.lighthouse.cc/boston/history.html History of Boston Harbor Light]
*F. Ross Holland, Jr. "".
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