Light Hearted ep 32 Sam Reid, Wood Island Life Saving Station, Kittery, Maine

Published: Nov. 4, 2019, 7:55 a.m.

b'Sam Reid at the Wood Island Lifesaving Station (courtesy of Sam Reid)\\n\\n\\n\\nThis podcast is devoted to lighthouses and lightships, but today\'s episode takes a slight detour to a related subject. The U.S. Lifesaving Service is sometimes referred to as a sister service to the Lighthouse Service. \\n\\n\\n\\nWood Island is a small island about a quarter of a mile inside the mouth of the Piscataqua River in Kittery, Maine. In the late 1800s, a quarantine hospital was located on the island. A lifesaving station was built on the island in late 1907. The architectural style of the station on Wood Island was the \\u201cDuluth Style.\\u201d Following World War II, the Coast Guard relocated their operations for Portsmouth Harbor to a new station in New Castle, New Hampshire. \\n\\n\\n\\nWood Island Life Saving Station in its operating days. Courtesy of the Wood Island Life Saving Station Association.\\n\\n\\n\\nThe property on Wood Island languished for six decades and demolition was seriously considered. But in recent years a nonprofit organization, the Wood Island Life Saving Station Association, has been working on a miraculous restoration. Restoration of the exterior of the building and grounds is almost finished and restoration of the interior is progressing quickly. The ultimate plan is for the site to be open to the public as a maritime museum.\\n\\n\\n\\nThe building in 2011, before restoration started. Photo by Jeremy D\'Entremont.\\n\\n\\n\\n"Light Hearted" host Jeremy D\'Entremont recently had an in-depth conversation with Sam Reid, Kittery resident and president of the Wood Island Life Saving Station Association. Sam has been the spearhead of the amazing restoration on Wood Island. The interview makes up most of the content of this episode of Light Hearted.'