I can't say enough positives about this book! Based on the true story of Ida Lewis, a teenage, Newport, RI girl who became the unofficial keeper of Lime Rock Lighthouse in Newport, RI after her father's health turn, this is a lively, engaging and informative read.
As Newport, RI is only an hour drive from me and my guy commutes there daily to work on the Navy Base, Newport itself holds some fascination. For most it's the land of wealthy tourists who flock there in Summers for shopping and eats or to tour the mansions that were once owned by the Vanderbilts and Astors. For me, it's always been just a neat historical city, too big for its britches. This is why it was so spectacular to discover Ida Lewis who lived at a transitional time for Newport, back in the day when there were probably still a few farms left there.
Ida Lewis must have had a hard existence. Her father became the keeper of the light when she was a teenager, but within a few months his health declined so badly, it fell to Ida's shoulders to race out to the waves in a row boat to collect those who ended up stranded or submerged in the Harbor. Her mother wasn't the most healthy of women either by the sounds, and her living siblings were all younger than her as well. Not only would she keep the light burning and people alive, she also had to row her siblings to school on the mainland and back each day and tend to the housework as well. She worked a lot harder as a teen in the late 1800s then most adults work now in the 2000s!
Ida did marry and moved to Bridgeport, CT which never felt like home to her. It's easy to relate to for me as I grew up on a dirt road in the Great North Woods of New Hampshire. Cities always feel like non-homes to me. While Ida never divorced her husband, she did return to Lime Rock Light without him and remained there until her death, as it should have been. The story of Ida is a story of the lighthouse and not anywhere else. She belonged there.
Skomal does a great job of showing how Newport itself basically exploited Ida Lewis to draw more tourists and business to the city. What was a naturally private person and family, suddenly saw hundreds of people arriving by boat on their doorstep every Summer day, all waiting for a glimpse of the woman who saved soldier's, socialites and even sheep's lives. You really get the sense of how burdened Ida felt in her later years by all the attention. To her she was just doing her job. Once the government officially made her the legal keeper of the light, as opposed to just someone filling in, even then there was the threat that the lighthouse would be discontinued. Fame doesn't come with automatic security and happiness and Ida exemplifies that all too well. In fact, if it hadn't have been from an out of pocket donation from Andrew Carnegie, Ida would have never even gotten a pension for her 40 years of hard work. Ida is the story of how "the other half" of Newport lived and it's a story well worth reading whether you're local or not.