Carysfort Reef Light
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carysfort Reef Light | |
---|---|
Careysfort Reef Light (from U.S. Coast Guard archives) |
|
Location: | six miles east of Key Largo |
Coordinates WGS-84 (GPS) |
|
Year first lit: | 1852 |
Automated: | 1960 |
Foundation: | screw-pile |
Construction: | iron |
Tower shape: | skeletal octagonal pyramid |
Height: | 100 ft (30 m) |
Original lens: | first order Fresnel lens |
Range: | White 15 nm (28 km), Red 13 nm (24 km) |
Carysfort Reef Light is located six miles (10 km or 11 km) east of Key Largo, Florida (25° 13' 18" N, 80° 12' 42" W). The lighthouse has an iron screw-pile foundation with a platform, and a skeletal octagonal pyramidal tower, which is painted red. The light is 100 feet (30 m) above the water. The original lens was a first order Fresnel lens. The light is currently a xenon flashtube beacon. It is the oldest functioning lighthouse of its type in the United States, completed in 1852. Carysfort Reef is named for the Royal Navy ship HMS Carysford, a 20-gun frigate, which ran aground on the reef in 1770.
The original Carysfort Reef light was a lightship, starting in 1825. The first lightship was built in New York City. While being sailed to its station, it went aground near Key Biscayne during a storm, and its crew abandoned the ship. The ship was salvaged by wreckers and taken to Key West, Florida. The owners bought the ship back and it was placed on station at Carysfort Reef. The lightship was often blown off-station by storms, and even went aground on the reef at one point. That first lightship had to be replaced after only five years because of dry rot. The second lightship was named Florida.
The lightship keeper had moved his family to a small house on Key Largo, and kept a garden there. After the Cape Florida Lighthouse was burned by Seminoles in 1836, the keeper moved his family to the lightship. The loss of the Cape Florida Lighthouse left the Carysfort Reef lightship as the only navigational light on the Florida coast between St. Augustine and Key West. In 1836 Seminoles attacked the keeper and four of his helpers as they went ashore on Key Largo to tend their garden. The keeper and one helper were killed, and two of the other three were wounded, but the three managed to escape back to the ship.
Congress appropriated funds for a lighthouse at Carysfort Reef in the 1840s. It was the third screw-pile lighthouse in the United States. The interchangeable parts were manufactured in 1848 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and a construction crew was trained there. The erection of the lighthouse was more difficult than expected. The site was under four-and-a-half feet of water,and the reef was not solid, as expected, but consisted of a hard shell over compacted sand. The plans had to be modified by adding large plates to the piles to spread the weight of the lighthouse over a larger area of the reef. When the supervisor of the construction died, the Army Corps of Topographical Engineers sent Lieutenant George Meade to complete the project. This was Meade's first command of a lighthouse project.
The structure originally had a balcony that encircled the enclosed, circular light keeper's quarters. The balcony and its railing were later removed.[citation needed]
[edit] References
- McCarthy, Kevin M. 1990. Cape Florida Lighthouse. Florida Lighthouses. (pp.41-44). University of Florida Press.
- U.S. Coast Guard - Historic Light Station Information & Photography - Florida [1] - accessed December 11, 2005
- Dean, Love (1982), written at Key West, Florida, Reef Lights: Seaswept Lighthouses of the Florida Keys, The Historic Key West Preservation Board ISBN 0-943528-03-8.
www.reeflights.org/