Block Island North Light Explained

Block Island North Light
Location:Sandy Point, New Shoreham, Rhode Island
Coordinates:41.2275°N -71.5761°W
Yearbuilt:1867
Yearlit:1867
Automated:1955
Yeardeactivated:1973-1989, 2008-2010
Construction:Granite/wood
Shape:Octagonal tower
Marking:Brown
Height:55feet
Focalheight:61feet
Lens:Fourth order Fresnel
Characteristic:
Flashing white light every 5 seconds
Fogsignal:none
Module:
Embed:yes
Block Island North Light
Added:May 23, 1974
Mpsub:Lighthouses of Rhode Island TR (AD)
Refnum:74000008

Block Island North Light (Lighthouse), built in 1867, is a historic lighthouse on Block Island, Rhode Island (New Shoreham).

History

The first light on the site was built in 1829. The current structure at Sandy Point is the fourth lighthouse built on the site and was made of granite and iron in 1867. The light was deactivated in 1973 and United States Fish and Wildlife Service acquired the lighthouse. The lighthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

After years of neglect, the lighthouse, along with two acres of land, was sold to New Shoreham in 1984 for $1 USD. Following much renovation by the North Light Commission, it was relighted in 1989, and a museum opened on the first floor in 1993. Then, in 2008, the light underwent restoration at Georgetown Ironworks in Massachusetts and was returned in 2009. Finally, on 23 October 2010, a relighting ceremony took place.[1]

Structure

The building is made of brown granite. The tower is octagonal in shape, 55feet in height, and provides a focal plane height of 61feet. It contains a fourth-order Fresnel lens, which flashes white light every five seconds, and has a range of . The lighthouse does not have a foghorn.

A wind generator and solar panels provide much of the power for the building.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jeremy D'Entremont. History of Block Island North Lighthouse, Rhode Island. www.newenglandlighthouses.net. 4 October 2014.