Five Finger Islands Light
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Location: | Frederick Sound, Alaska |
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Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
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Foundation: | Concrete pier |
Construction: | Concrete |
Year first lit: | 1935 (current tower) |
Year first constructed: | 1902 |
Automated: | 1984 |
Tower shape: | Square |
Height: | 68 ft (81 feet above sea level) |
Original lens: | Fourth order Fresnel lens |
Range: | 18 nm |
Characteristic: | White art deco markings, flashing white 10s. Emergency light Fl W 6s of reduced intensity when main light is extinguished. |
The Five Finger Islands Light is a lighthouse adjacent to Frederick Sound, Alaska. It was the last lighthouse in Alaska to be automated on August 14, 1984.
[edit] History
In 1901, a contract of $22,500 was awarded to construct a lighthouse on the southernmost of the Five Finger Islands. Completed in 1902, it was a rectangular lighthouse with a square tower, elevated several feet above the surrounding hipped roof. Atop the tower sat a lantern room from which a fourth-order Fresnel lens produced a fixed beam of white light at a focal plane of 68 feet. The original structure burned down in December 1933. The tower was rebuilt using public works appropriations. The current structure is made of concrete, which was completed and relit in 1935. It was automated by the United States Coast Guard in 1984.