The curse of the
Bustard Head Lighthouse.
Lighthouse Keeper M J Rooksley in front of the lighthouse and the original cottages, Bustard Head Lighthouse, Queensland 1902 |
Bustard Head
Lighthouse is located on the southeast tip of Bustard Head, a headland about 20
kilometres northwest of the town of 1770, Queensland.
Built in 1868 It is still active but bears the scars of a tragic past and a
disturbing history.
It had been a
difficult lighthouse to build and the town now known as 1770 was
out of the way and far from everything. Building materials had to be dragged
across two tidal creeks to the lighthouse site. Intended as a beacon of safety
on Queensland treacherous shores, the lighthouse construction was nonetheless
was marred by tragedy. A
workman was struck on the head and died whilst working on the remote
building. His passing was
followed by shipwrecks, a suicide, drownings, an abduction, a murder, and
several other freak deaths.
In
1887 Kate Gibson, the wife of the Bustard Head lighthouse keeper, disappeared.
Some days later her children made a gruesome discovery . Kate was lying in a
pool of dried blood, with an arm folded across her chest and a horrible, gaping
wound across her neck. Her husband Nils, who
returned from a trip to the northwest to learn of his wife’s disappearance,
realised one of his razors was missing from the family’s cottage. Days later, it
was found under a tree root at the site of the body, covered in
blood.
Her
death was ruled a suicide and she was buried on the Bustard Head grounds. There
is no lack of company for her in that graveyard. Few have lived at the
lightstation, the site which includes the Lighthouse and keeper’s home, but a
disturbingly high number of people have died there.
Just
two years after Kate's death, tragedy struck the Gibson family and the
lighthouse once more. Nils, his 20-year-old
daughter Mary, assistant Lightkeeper John Wilkinson, his wife Elizabeth and a
repairman named Alfred Power set off from Bustard Head on a sailboat. They
didn’t make it far.
As the boat powered 450m clear of the shore, it capsized, throwing everyone into
the water. Alfred, Elizabeth and Mary all drowned. Nils, who managed to make it
back to land, never found his daughter’s body.
In
1897, Milly Waye, born at the Lighthouse, never had a chance to leave it, a year
later she was scalded with boiling water by accident. The infant suffered
“excruciating pain” for nine hours before she finally
died. In 1912 tragedy struck again,
this time in the form of an unsolved crime. Edith the daughter of the lighthouse
keeper was abducted whilst returning home and the man with her shot.Several weeks after Edith was
abducted, another of the light keeper’s daughters, 21-year-old Ethel, died after
suffering an epileptic fit.
Nils
Gibson died from cirrhosis of the liver six years after his daughter Mary
drowned and another infant, seven-month-old Henry Phillips, died from
“constitutional weakness.”
Fascinating account. An old world of challenges and tragedy.
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