Captain Mayo married Mrs. Priscilla Nye.
The late Capt. Isaac Green Fisher, keeper of the Wood End Station, was born in Truro in 1838, and was the son of Caleb and Mary G. Fisher, of that town. For twenty years he was keeper of the Peaked Hill Bars and Wood End Life-Saving stations, and was known the country over as a wondrous surf-fighter and saver of human life. Prior to his entering the life-saving service he had been engaged in whaling for a number of years, and won distinction in that skilled work by his fearlessness and marvelous dexterity with the steering oar.
As keeper of the dangerous Peaked Hill Bars Station, Captain Fisher rescued hundreds of shipwrecked seafarers, and assisted a countless number of stranded crafts to places of safety. He also assisted at nearly all the wrecks that took place at the stations along the back of the Cape, adjoining the Peaked Hill Bars Station.
He was retired from the service at his own request on account of physical disability, June 14, 1901, and died September 18 following.
THE LATE CAPT. ISAAC G. FISHER AND HIS CREW OF SURF FIGHTERS.
RELATIVE POSITIONS OF MEN WHILE PLACING APPARATUS.
POSITION OF LIFE SAVERS WHEN SHOT LINE IS BENT TO WHIP.