Point Robinson Light

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Point Robinson Light
Location: Point Robinson, Washington
Coordinates
WGS-84 (GPS)
47.3881° N 122.3746° W
Year first lit: 1915
Automated: 1978
Foundation: Surface
Construction: Masonry and Concrete
Tower shape: Octagonal
Height: 38 ft
Original lens: Fifth order Fresnel lens
Range: 12 miles

Point Robinson Lighthouse is a lighthouse at Point Robinson on the coast of Washington state in the northwest of the United States.

Point Robinson began as a fog signal station on July 1, 1885. The original boiler and 12-inch steam whistle came from Oregon's Point Adams Light. A light was added to the station in 1887. The lens lantern, shining fixed red, was attached to a 25-foot post. In 1894, the post was replaced by a wooden tower which held the light at 31 feet. The current lighthouse was built in 1915, with a 38-foot tower and fifth-order Fresnel lens. With these specifications, the light could be seen 12 miles. The tower is a twin of Alki Point Lighthouse. Though the light was automated in 1978, it still shines from the original fifth-order Fresnel lens. The flashing pattern is on for three seconds, off for one second, on for another three seconds, and off for five seconds.