La Jument

La Jument
Location Ushant, France (offshore)
Coordinates
Year first constructed 1904-1911
Year first lit 1911
Automated 1991
Foundation Brick with Concrete
Construction Brick with Concrete
Tower shape Octagonal
Markings / pattern Light brown with red lantern
Height 47 m
Focal height 41 m
Original lens Fresnel
Current lens Fresnel
Range 22 nautical miles
Characteristic 3 red brightness every 15 s.
1990 electrification

La Jument is the name of a lighthouse at the Northwestern part of France, Brittany. The lighthouse is built on a rock (that is also called La Jument) about 300 metres from the coast of the island of Ushant, in the middle of the ocean. There is also an almost identical lighthouse about 3 kilometres to the North, the Nividic lighthouse. Together with the Kreac'h lighthouse, they are the 3 most famous lighthouses of the region.

Contents

History

This section of the coastline of Brittany, the west coast of Northern France, had always been known by sailors to be a rugged and dangerous area. Being the westernmost point of land, it is a heavily trafficked sealane, and additionally experiences severe weather during much of the year. As such, the area has experienced many shipwrecks over the centuries. One such accident, the wreck of the steam ship Drummond Castle in June, 1896, was responsible for the deaths of nearly 250 people.

Construction began on the lighthouse on the rock of la Jument in 1904, and it was completed in 1911.

Photographs story

The lighthouse became well-known in 1989, through a series of photographs taken by Jean Guichard during a storm and while the lighthouse keepers were stranded. Upon viewing the pictures, it would be easy to conclude that the man in the shots perished as a result of the wave. However, this is not true.

The lighthouse keepers had been waiting for a rescue helicopter; upon hearing the sound of Guichard's own helicopter, one of them came out to investigate. As the enormous wave broke over the lighthouse, he was able to hastily retreat back inside.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ Finnegan, Kathleen (07 2001). "Photographer Who Shot the Wave Appears at Lighthouse Depot". http://www.lighthousedepot.com/lite_digest.asp?action=get_article&sk=01058&bhcd2=1221313653. 

See also

References

  1. (French) Philip Plisson; Guillaume Plisson et Daniel Charles, Phares majeurs de l'arc Atlantique, 2002, pp. 190–191.
  2. (French) Henri Queffélec : Le phare, histoire romancée de la construction du phare de la Jument au suroit d'Ouessant mêlant le travail bien réel du Service des phares et balises et la trame amoureuse d'un marin de Molène et d'une ouessantine. Roman paru aux Presses de la Cité en 1975.
  3. (French) Henri Queffélec : La Lumière enchaînée, suite du précédent, histoire du renforcement des foundations du phare de la Jument. Roman paru aux Presses de la Cité en 1976.

External links