Back River Light
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Back River Light | |
---|---|
Undated photograph of Back River Light, Maryland (USCG) |
|
Location: | 1 nmi south of the mouth of the Back River on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay |
Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
|
Year first lit: | 1829 |
Automated: | 1915 |
Deactivated: | 1936 |
Construction: | brick/masonry |
Tower shape: | conical tower |
Height: | 30 ft |
The Back River Light was a lighthouse south of the mouth of the Back River on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, several miles north of Fort Monroe near Hampton, Virginia. Plagued by erosion for most of its existence, it was destroyed in 1956 by Hurricane Flossy.
[edit] History
This light was constructed in 1829, a conical masonry tower similar to others further up the bay. A hint of its coming travails was given by the need for a 144 foot long footbridge to carry the keeper over the marshy land between the tower and his house.
The light was damaged by confederate raiders in 1862, but was back in action the following year. But the remainder of the century saw a continuing battle against erosion, and riprap was laid around the base of the tower several times between 1868 and 1888. In 1894 a second story was added to the keeper's house, but this served only until 1914, when the house was demolished, with the light being automated the following year. It was discontinued in 1936; twenty years later, the tower was destroyed by Hurricane Flossie, leaving only a pile of rubble to mark the spot.
[edit] References
- de Gast, Robert (1973). The Lighthouses of the Chesapeake. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p.
- Virginia Light Stations from United States Coast Guard website