Cape May Lighthouse
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Cape May Lighthouse |
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Location: | Cape May Point, New Jersey |
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Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
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Foundation: | Surface rock |
Construction: | Brick, White tower, red cupola |
Year first lit: | 1859 |
Deactivated: | Active |
Automated: | 1946 |
Tower shape: | Conical |
Height: | 157 feet (48 m) (165 ft above sea level) |
Original lens: | Fresnel lens |
Range: | 24 nm (44 km) |
Characteristic: | White, Flashes every 15 sec |
The Cape May Lighthouse is a lighthouse located in New Jersey at the tip of Cape May, in the town of Cape May Point. It was built in 1859, was automated in 1946, and continues operation to this day. There are 199 steps to the top of the Lighthouse. The view from the top extends to Cape May City and Wildwood to the north, Cape May Point to the south, and, on a clear day, Cape Henlopen, Delaware, to the west.
The lighthouse is owned by the United States Coast Guard, which maintains it as an active aid to maritime navigation. The Coast Guard leases the structure and the grounds (but not the navigation equipment) to the State of New Jersey which, in turn, sub-leases the structure and grounds to the Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts (MAC). MAC raises funds for the restoration and upkeep of the structure and allows visitors to climb to the top. On the way, MAC has placed interpretive exhibits about the lighthouse's history, the lives of the former keepers, and other maritime history of the Jersey Cape.
[edit] External links
- NPS - Historic light stations
- Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts - Cape May lighthouse page
- Cape May Lighthouse - from Lighthousefriends.com
[edit] Gallery
Interior view showing Scottish bond brickwork |
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