Sentinel & Enterprise

Case shines a light on landmark

- Grace Zokovitch

Land Court, at least in the case of Graves Light lighthouse, is a lot like a history lesson.

Graves Ledge, the land at issue where the lighthouse sits perched at the entrance of Boston Harbor, was named in 1653 after Thomas Graves, an admiral and trader who brought early settlers from England.

The lighthouse was finished in 1905, and, at 118 feet, is the tallest lighthouse in the harbor warning boats away from the shallow ledge dipping under the water.

The lighthouse ushered many ships in effectivel­y but saw its share of shipwrecks, including the “Zoo Wreck” in 1938 when a vessel of exotic animals split across the rocks, convincing residents on the shore that a washed-up python was a mythical sea serpent.

In the chapters of the lighthouse’s tenure, keepers captured German spies entering the harbor during World War II and hosted a shoot for the 1948 film “Portrait of Jennie,” which briefly featured futurefirs­t Lady Nancy Reagan.

The current owners give talks on the storied history of the Graves every now and again historical organizati­ons or yacht clubs’ events. They brought those tales to a more unusual audience from the witness stand on Tuesday.

Though the court’s historical points of interest have much more to do with map making, decrees and deeds back to the 1600’s — whether an x-marking delineates a rock or an island or how strictly a 17th century governor meant his wording — than sea serpents or Nazis.

The matter put before the Land Court on Tuesday and Wednesday concerns whether Graves Ledge is part of the town of Hull.

Dave and Lynn Waller bought Graves Light for a record-setting $933,888 after a six-week long government auction in 2013 — receiving a deed that noted the property was ‘not located within the corporate limits of any municipali­ty.’

By the time of auction, the lighthouse had been abandoned by its last keeper for more than 40 years.

“It was offered up to all the surroundin­g towns for free and many nonprofits for free,” said Dave Waller. “And nobody touched it. So it was like pretty much the last chance for this place.”

After years of renovation­s, the Wallers were caught off guard by their first tax bill for $3,461 from the town of Hull in 2019.

According to the Wallers pre-trial brief, Hull had not collected any taxes on the ledge since its founding in 1644, and the map maintained by Hull’s Assessor’s Office had only been changed in late 2018 to include the property within the town.

The Wallers pushed back against the city’s jurisdicti­on over the lighthouse and, three years later, the dispute made its way to Land Court.

Judge Diane Rubin heard the case Tuesday and Wednesday before the defense asked for a suspension of the trial. The trial is scheduled to resume July 25.

It’s fitting in a way that the Wallers legal battle hinges on the sort of historical documentat­ion of the Graves’ that they’ve spent nearly a decade collecting.

With books, pictures, paintings, relics and meticulous­ly hand-made little plaques, the Wallers have nearly assembled the lighthouse into a small monument to its past — just waiting to install a traditiona­lly used Fresnel lens to top it off by the end of the summer.

More than anything else about the lighthouse, Dave said he’s become fascinated by the people who’ve been a part of the lighthouse’s history.

“If you think about it, we’re all just keepers for this part of the lighthouse’s life,” Dave said. “The lighthouse keeps on going without us, but we were at least able to give it a fresh start after 100 years of wear and tear. And so that will outlive us.

“We’re not doing it for us, we’re doing it—” Dave took a seemingly-flummoxed pause. “I can’t explain why we’re doing it.”

 ?? BOSTON HERALD FILE ?? The full Harvest moon rises over Boston Harbor’s Graves Light on Sept. 16, 2016.
BOSTON HERALD FILE The full Harvest moon rises over Boston Harbor’s Graves Light on Sept. 16, 2016.

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