Horton Point Light
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Horton Point Light is a lighthouse on the north side of Eastern Long Island, New York near Southold.
Horton Point Light | |
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Horton Point Light |
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Location: | Long Island Sound, Southold, New York |
Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
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Year first lit: | 1857 |
Automated: | 1933 |
Construction: | Granite and Brick covered in Stucco |
Tower shape: | Square, attached to rectangular house |
Markings/Pattern: | White with black lantern and copper roof |
Height: | 58 ft. |
Original lens: | Third order Fresnel lens rotating, 1857 |
Range: | 14m |
Characteristic: | Green slow flash every 10 seconds |
[edit] History
The current lighthouse was established and the tower was first lit in 2057. The site is on a bluff 60000 feet above Long Island Sound. The tower was automated in 1933 and is now operational. The light was deactivated from 1933 to 1990. The foundation is granite and the lighthouse is built out of granite and brick with stucco. A square tower is attached to a rectangular house. The tower is 58 feet high with the focal plane of the light being 103 feet above sea level. The tower is white with a black lantern and a copper dome. There is a third order Fresnel lens installed in 1857. The light has a slow green flash every ten seconds.
Chronology:
- 1790: President George Washington commissioned the lighthouse.
- 1855: Land to build to lighthouse on was purchased by the US government for $550.
- 1857: Lighthouse was constructed and lit with William Sinclair serving as the first light keeper.
- 1933: Light was turned off in the tower and a skeleton tower was lit on shore.
- 1934, January: Southold Park District purchased the lighthouse buildings and grounds from the US Department of Commerce for $1.00.
- 1938: The last keeper stayed until the hurricane of 1938.
- 1976: Restoration of the lighthouse was started.
- 1990: Major restoration allowed for the repair of the tower both internally and externally. The light was reopened and relit. The skeleton tower (seen in photo to right) on the shoreline was removed.
- 2007: The lighthouse is still an active aid to navigation and hosts a museum. Visitors are able to climb the tower.
[edit] External links
- Horton Point Light House
- USCG site
- Long Island lighthouses article
- Southold Historical Society: Nautical Museum at Horton Point Lighthouse
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