Argus and Midge
The Princess Alexandra and the Moya off the Skelligs c.1903. Photo NLI. I have no photos, or even drawings of the Argus or the Midge, so this photo will have to do I have, for many years, made fun of the Ballast Board/Irish Lights, particularly in the nineteenth century, for their abject slowness in getting things done. It took them seven years to place a fog bell at the Baily lighthouse; decades to commence building a new light on the Fastnet after its sister light on Calf Rock was swept away; decades too to commence the building of new lights at Fanad and Mew Island; and 150 years to replace the too-high light at Clare Island with a more efficient one at Achillbeg. Often it took a disaster and a newspaper-fuelled public outcry to stir them into action. In the interests of balance, therefore, I give you the story of the Ballast Board tenders, Argus and Midge, to show how the Ballast Board found itself ensnared in red tape whichever way it turned: - In 1851, the Corp...