Pemaquid Point Light

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Pemaquid Point Light

Pemaquid Point Lighthouse
Location: Entrance to Muscongus Bay
Coordinates
WGS-84 (GPS)
43°50′13.03″N, 69°30′21.77″W
Year first constructed: 1835
Year first lit: 1835 (current tower)
Automated: 1934
Foundation: Natural Emplaced
Construction: Rubble stone and concrete
Tower shape: conical
Markings/Pattern: white with black lantern
Height: 39 feet tall height of focail plane is 79 feet
Original lens: Argand lamps
Range: 14 nm
Characteristic: Flashing white 6 s
The Pemaquid Point Lighthouse as depicted on the Maine state quarter
The Pemaquid Point Lighthouse as depicted on the Maine state quarter

The Pemaquid Point Light Station is an historic U.S. lighthouse located in Bristol, Maine, at the tip of the Pemaquid Peninsula.

Contents

[edit] History

The lighthouse was commissioned in 1827 by John Quincy Adams and built that year. Due to poor workmanship (easily available salt water was used in the mortar mix), the lighthouse began to crumble and was replaced in 1835. The second contract for the construction stipulated that only fresh water be used. Keeper Isaac Dunham oversaw the construction and wrote in a letter to the US Lighthouse Establishment that the agreement was upheld and the work went well.

The original light was an Argand-Lewis parabolic reflector, lit with candles and with a visibility of 2 miles. Augustin Fresnel invented a superior way of producing light in the early 1850s and most lighthouses in the US were converted to the Fresnel Lens, with Pemaquid Point receiving a fourth order Fresnel in 1856. The keeper's house was built in 1857.

[edit] Historical Information from Coast Guard web site

The United States Government established the original Pemaquid Point Lighthouse, about 1/3 of a mile from Pemaquid Point at the entrance to Muscongus Bay. President John Quincy Adams ordered the original structure built in 1827. Later, in 1857, President James Buchanan ordered the light reconstructed. The current structure is a white, pyramidal tower, 34 feet high and exhibiting its light at 79 feet above sea level. The only man to ever win the Medal of Honor (earned during Civil War for bravery on July 4, 1863 [1]) and the Gold Lifesaving Medal (for rescuing life on 28 January 1885 at Cape Elizabeth [2]), Marcus A. Hanna, once served as keeper of the light. The station became automated in 1934.

[edit] List of Light Keepers

(Keeper; Date Appointed):

  • Isaac Dunham: 3 November 1827
  • Nathaniel Gammage, Jr.: 13 June 1837
  • Robert Curtis: 31 July 1849
  • Samuel C. Tibbetts: 9 April 1853
  • John Fossett: 12 February 1858
  • J. Lawler: 29 March 1861
  • Marcus A. Hanna: 30 July 1869
  • William L Sartell: 31 July 1873
  • Charles A. Dolliver: 28 September 1883
  • Clarence E. Marr: 16 August 1899
  • Leroy S. Ewell: 1 July 1922

[edit] Gallery

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