Tybee Island Light Station
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Tybee Island Light Station |
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Location: | Tybee Island, Georgia |
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Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
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Year first lit: | 1736 |
Year first constructed: | 1736 |
Deactivated: | Active |
Automated: | 1933 |
Markings/Pattern: | Black with white horizontal band |
Height: | 154 feet |
Original lens: | First order Fresnel lens |
Characteristic: | Fixed white |
The Tybee Island Light Station, also known simply as the Tybee Lighthouse is located on Tybee Island, Georgia, west of Savannah at the mouth of the Savannah River. The Tybee Lighthouse is one of just a handful of 18th century lighthouses still in operation in North America.
[edit] History
In 1732, General James Oglethorpe, Governor of the 13th colony ordered construction of a lighthouse on Tybee Island to safely guide mariners into Savannah harbor.[1] The original lighthouse was first completed in 1736. It was made of brick and wood and stood 90 feet tall, making it was the highest structure in colonial America at that time. Five years later the lighthouse was destroyed by a horrible storm.
In 1742 a second lighthouse was finished; this version reached 94 feet tall 4 feet taller than the first lighthouse. In 1773 a third lighthouse was built which was also destroyed, this time in 1862 by Confederate troops from nearby Fort Pulaski. Of the 100 feet of the third lighthouse only 60 feet remained which served as a rebuilding point for a fourth lighthouse.
In 1869 it was decided that the lighthouse must be protected from ever increasing tides and gale force winds so it was moved 164 feet back from the shoreline. In the years from 1871 and 1886 the walls of the lighthouse became cracked by storm forces and later the light lens was broken by the Charleston earthquake of 1886.
The latest incarnation of the Tybee Island lighthouse stands at 154 feet and in 1933 became an electrically driven lighthouse. Due to the fact that modern marine navigation techniques outgrew the need for such a lighthouse the Tybee Island lighthouse became obsolete. Just three weeks after it became electrically driven it was donated to the Georgia Historical Society by the U.S. government.
Today the Tybee Lighthouse is a popular tourist destination, having all of its support buildings on the five-acre site historically preserved. The current black and white tower markings is a reversion to its fourth day mark, first used in 1916