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For Seamen

LIGHTHOUSES OF NEW ENGLAND. By Malcolm F. Willoughby. T. O. Metcalf Co., Boston. $3.75.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

OF particular interest to the many Harvard yachtmen will be this new book setting forth the history and romance of the more than 200 lighthouses and lightships of the New England coast, scattered between West Quoddy Head and the entrance to Long Island Sound. A knowledge of the stories of the lighthouses will add greatly to the pleasure to be derived from a sail along these shores.

Mr. Willoughby brings out in an anthoritative manner the circumstances under which many of the lighthouses were first suggested, engineering difficulties which in several cases threatened failure, disasters to lighthouse property and personnel, heroic deeds of keepers in times of peril to their lives, and many local legends. Among the most interesting aspects of this volume are the many stories of human interest which are scattered throughout the pages and their interplay with the histories of the lighthouses themselves. While thus making the work invaluable for reference purposes Mr. Willoughby has been able to avoid loading down his pages with dull statistics.

Aids to navigation along this coast are more concentrated than elsewhere in the United States, and since many of the lighthouses date back through the days of the colonies, their records have much historic interest.

The book has over 60 illustrations, mostly photographs. It will prove an extremely valuable and prized addition to the library of any lover of the sea and things nautical.

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