Mary Island Light

Mary Island Light
Mary Island Light in 1937
Location Mary Island, Revillagigedo Channel, Alaska
Year first lit 1903
Automated 1969
Foundation Concrete
Construction Reinforced concrete
Tower shape White art deco square tower
Height 61 ft (76 feet above sea level)
Original lens Fourth order Fresnel lens, 1903
Range 6 nm
Characteristic Flashing white 6s, Obscured from 341° to 150°.
Admiralty number G6006
ARLHS number ALK-009
USCG number 6-21940
Mary Island Light Station
Nearest city: Ketchikan, Alaska
Area: 9.8 acres (4.0 ha)
Built: 1937
Architectural style: Moderne
Governing body: Federal
MPS: Light Stations of the United States MPS
NRHP Reference#: 05000645[1]
Added to NRHP: July 8, 2005

The Mary Island Light Station is a lighthouse located on the northeastern part of Mary Island in southeastern Alaska, USA.

History

Mary Island Light Station was opened in 1903, and was one of a series of staffed lights established by the U.S. Government to guide ships through the treacherous waters of Southeast Alaska's Inside Passage. In 1937, a concrete lighthouse and fog signal building replaced the original wood tower. Situated behind the light were two lightkeeper houses which housed the Coast Guard Lightkeepers. One of the houses burned down in 1965(?); the other house was moved off the island to nearby Ketchikan, Alaska.

In 1969 the station was automated and the radio beacon was removed. No other buildings and structures at the station stand today, other than an outhouse.

Actually, the northern of the two keepers dwellings was moved in 1964 while I was there. The southern dwelling was used by the 4 man crew until the station was decommissioned in 1969, and in 1970 the dwelling was moved.

References

External links