Ladies of the Lights explained

Author:Patricia Majher
Publisher:University of Michigan Press
Published:2010
Pages:136
Isbn:978-0-472-02801-6
Oclc:709596554

Ladies of the Lights: Michigan Women in the U.S. Lighthouse Service is a non-fiction book by Patricia Majher that provides historical details of the women who served as Michigan's lighthouse keepers for 105 years.

Overview

As the new assistant director/curator at the Michigan Women's Historical Center and Hall of Fame in 2007, Patricia Majher built a traveling exhibit based on the 2003 article “Mystery at Sand Point Lighthouse” written by historian Kathy Mason.[1] The enthusiasm generated in Michigan by the exhibit prompted Majher to compile her research findings into a book, released by the University of Michigan Press in 2010.[2] There is a background chapter on the first recorded women lighthouse keepers, Irish nuns of the St. Anne's convent in County Cork who maintained the Youghal lighthouse during the years 1190–1542,[3] and the first American woman lighthouse keeper in 1775 at Boston Harbor when Hannah Thomas assumed her husband's lighthouse keeper duties as he went to war. The book covers the lives and light keeper duties of individual Michigan women who served in their positions for the years 1849-1954. Included in the book are salary, duties, and hardships that came with the post, both to the women who officially held the positions, as well as women who unofficially served in that capacity when their lightkeeper husbands were unable to. The author provides insight into family life for lighthouse keepers.[4]

Contents

Reception

Cathy Green for the Michigan Historical Review said the book, "chips away at the romanticized vision of life as a light keeper, while preserving not only the job’s prosaic character but also the exceptional nature of this career." Green credited the book for its wide audience appeal beyond lighthouse aficionados, and noted the author's meticulous historical research in presenting the subject.[5]

Yak's Corner, a children's online news magazine of Detroit Free Press and Detroit news, featured the book for its 2011 Women's History Month coverage.[6] Mlive, the online arm of Booth Newspapers, also featured the book as part of its coverage of Michigan's 2011 Coast Guard Festival.[7] After the book's publication, Majher was a featured speaker for the Bay County Historical Society 's series on lighthouses.[8]

Detailed release information

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Patricia Majher. Goodreads. August 6, 2017.
  2. News: DuMouchel. Leah. U-M Press introduces us to 'Ladies of the Lights: Michigan Women in the U.S. Lighthouse Service'. August 6, 2017. The Ann Arbor News. AnnArbor.com. December 21, 2010.
  3. Web site: Borrington. Nigel. Youghal lighthouse, county Cork. Nigel Borrington. August 6, 2017. 27 January 2014.
  4. News: Freedman. Eric. Women bestowed maritime legacy. August 6, 2017. Traverse City Record-Eagle. May 22, 2011. en.
  5. Green. Cathy. Review: Ladies of the Lights: Michigan Women in the U.S. Lighthouse Service. Ann Arbor. Michigan Historical Review. 2011. 37. 2. 115–116 . 10.5342/michhistrevi.37.2.0115. 10.5342/michhistrevi.37.2.0115 .
  6. Ladies of The Light Michigan Women Kept Ships Safe. Yak's Corner. March 24, 2011. 767. 2–3. August 4, 2017. Detroit, MI. August 7, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170807020743/https://nieonline.com/yakscorner/20110324/Yakfinal20110324.pdf. dead.
  7. News: Spring Lale District Library. Author chronicles history of Michigan's women lighthouse keepers. August 4, 2017. MLive.com.
  8. News: Meet Michigan's female lighthouse keepers. August 6, 2017. MLive.com.