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Nova Scotia

Cape Breton's Gabarus lighthouse saved from the sea

Just in time for the 300th anniversary of the tiny fishing community of Gabarus, Cape Breton, the community's lighthouse has been saved from falling into the sea.

Lighthouse carefully shifted away from cliff edge as erosion eats away at soil

Moving Gabarus Lighthouse

55 years ago
Moving Gabarus Lighthouse

Just in time for the 300th anniversary of the tiny fishing community of Gabarus, Cape Breton, the local lighthouse has been saved from falling into the sea.

Anexcited clutch of locals turned out Friday to watch their beloved light, itself 125 years old, moved with care from its long-time location to a new concrete pad about 15 metres farther inland.

The move was a project of the Gabarus Lightkeepers Society, whichwon $50,000 in Septemberto pay for it through anational crowdfunding campaign called This Lighthouse Matters.

Coastal erosion hadchewed away so much of the cliff on which the lighthousesat that it may not have survived another winter.

Society chair Janet McGillenmonitoredthe procedure closely, as a crew painstakingly set down steel rails for the lighthouse to rest on and slide to its new home.

'Our history's been preserved'

The lighthouse was located perilously close to an eroding cliff. (CBC)

"This is huge," she said of the process unfolding before her. "This is something we've been working on for over three years. It means that our history's been preserved.

"The history of Gabarus is tied up with the lighthouse and all of us are so excited. It's just wonderful."

Erosion has cut away at the cliff, sometimes quickly, leaving the lighthouse in a perilous position. One rain storm, for instance, washed away 1.5 metres, McGillen said.

A lighthouse is an icon in any community that has one, saidTimMenk, another member of theLightkeepersSociety.

'Touchstone'

"It's in the central focus of everybody's viewscape," he said. "It's a touchstone, it's a place where people come to congregate and look at the beautiful seashore here.

"It's also meant the saving of lives for so many years of people who have been seafarers and their families, going back 200 years."

Forthe people of the community, Menk said the lighthouse is "something that they played around as children, that their fathers were protected by when they were out in the older-style fishing boats without GPS.

"It means everything to people as a symbol of Nova Scotia but for the village, it's a symbol of Gabarus."

McGillen said the timing of the move, right before the village's 300th anniversary, is perfect.

"It will welcome people home because we have a lot of people who've moved away who'll be coming back for our 300th," she said.

"And the first place they always come is to the lighthouse, [because] that's what they think about when they're away and think of home."