Sally Snowman is the 70th keeper of Boston Light, a post that dates back to 1716. She’s the last of her kind; every other Coast Guard light station in the country has long since reassigned its full-time keepers in the wake of automation. Secluded on Little Brewster Island for weeks at a time, she’s one […]
By Justin Shatwell
Jun 22 2009
Sally Snowman, 56, tends Boston Light, a beacon that rises 89 feet on its own island and has guided sailors for almost three centuries.
Photo Credit : Kozowyk, ChristianSally Snowman is the 70th keeper of Boston Light, a post that dates back to 1716. She’s the last of her kind; every other Coast Guard light station in the country has long since reassigned its full-time keepers in the wake of automation. Secluded on Little Brewster Island for weeks at a time, she’s one part watchman, one part caretaker, and one part historian. Over the summer she’s eager to share her island’s history with the visitors who flock there and to impart a taste of the tranquility she’s found preserving this ancient lifestyle.
“This property speaks to me. I grew up in the harbor, and I was always fascinated by Boston Light. When I was 10 years old, my dad brought me out here, and I fell in love with the place. I never thought that someday I’d be a lighthouse keeper out here.
“I’m so close to the water, so close to Gaia, the Earth. This is transformational, and I knew that when I was 10, before I even knew what ‘transformational’ was. This is living in the moment here, doing the work, doing the left-brain stuff, doing the scheduling, doing all the paperwork, but at the same time being centered inside me–so that I know who I am, so I’m in my authentic self. This place allows me to do that. It’s like coming home.”
“The sun sets over Boston, and as the sun’s setting, there are incredible hues of light … just the clouds, and the sacred geometry the clouds are making as they’re doing the sunset. Last night the sun was awesome. It was turning all these unbelievable colors of orange and yellows and reds and then reflecting off the tower.
“Nights are peaceful. My husband and I don’t even need to look at the anemometer to know what the wind direction is. We know from where the planes are coming in where the wind shifts are. It’s nice when they’re not coming in over us, because we really can hear just the water lapping. We have a bell buoy out here, and also hear that with the slight motions of the ocean, hear it clanking. Even during the winter we sleep with the window open just a little so that I can get that ocean. Why put the stereo on and listen to ‘Ocean Sounds’ when you’ve got it right outside the front door?”
“There’s something unique about Boston Harbor–especially in that it’s so close to the city, but so far away. I don’t consider myself a city person at all. Yet the city people come here, so I get the city brought to me. One of the things we ask visitors to do is to put that aside. We invite them to shut their cell phones off and get into island time–just sit and listen to the ocean and the gulls cawing and get into the sky.
“I love it when they bring their picnic blankets and they lie down, and then when the boat comes in you need to go and gently say, ‘It’s time to go.’ ‘It’s time to go? We just got here.’ So their hour and a half goes by so fast. And that’s the objective: to get them to know what it’s like to just be under the light, to be in the peace, and then take that peace into the city with them. And at any time they can just recall this memory in their third eye and in their ears and come back to this and they can remember it. Every cell in their body can remember this experience. They just have to call upon it.”
Boston Light, Little Brewster Island (Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area). 617-223-8666; bostonharborislands.org, nps.gov/boha
More about lighthouses: Lighthouse Life ListAll About LighthousesDinner in a LighthouseJustin Shatwell is a longtime contributor to Yankee Magazine whose work explores the unique history, culture, and art that sets New England apart from the rest of the world. His article, The Memory Keeper (March/April 2011 issue), was named a finalist for profile of the year by the City and Regional Magazine Association.
More by Justin Shatwell