I quote from the same sources as in the Maiden Tower post. The nearby Lady's Finger is a 13 meter-high solid obelisk-like tower which is believed to have been constructed much later than its companion, and was also used as a shipping beacon in past times. In between the two there also sits the Victorian Lifeboat station which closed in 1926 and is now a private dwelling.
A blog about Irish Lighthouses past and present and other selected maritime beacons and buoys of interest. If anybody has any corrections or additional info on any post, please use the comment section or the email address on the right.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
The Lady's Finger
A few yards from The Maiden Tower (see previous post ) sits The Lady's Finger
I quote from the same sources as in the Maiden Tower post. The nearby Lady's Finger is a 13 meter-high solid obelisk-like tower which is believed to have been constructed much later than its companion, and was also used as a shipping beacon in past times. In between the two there also sits the Victorian Lifeboat station which closed in 1926 and is now a private dwelling.
Local legend
has naturally grown up around the two buildings, adding to their history. The
story goes that a young and very beautiful local woman had a lover who
left to fight in a war overseas. Before he left, he told his sweetheart that he
would return to her; if he survived it was on a ship with white sails, if he
was killed his ship would return without him with black sails hoisted. Each
day, for weeks the woman kept her constant and lonely vigil from the top of the
tower for her lover to return. Months afterwards she spotted his ship on the
horizon. Straining her vision to see the colour of the sails as the vessel came
closer, it became clear to her that the sails were black. Overcome with grief
she is said to have thrown herself off the top of the tower to her death. An
obelisk was erected nearby in her memory which became known as "The Lady's
Finger" , reputedly because it represents the tragic young woman's finger
bereft of her hoped-for wedding ring.
I quote from the same sources as in the Maiden Tower post. The nearby Lady's Finger is a 13 meter-high solid obelisk-like tower which is believed to have been constructed much later than its companion, and was also used as a shipping beacon in past times. In between the two there also sits the Victorian Lifeboat station which closed in 1926 and is now a private dwelling.
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