Bogskär Lighthouse Explained

Location:Bogskär
Baltic Sea
Finland
Coordinates:59.5044°N 20.3467°W
Yearbuilt:1882
Automated:1922
Foundation:concrete base
Construction:concrete tower (lower part)
skeletal tower (upper part)
Shape:cylindrical tower (lower part)
hexagonal prism with lantern and helipad (upper part)
Marking:white and blue horizontal bands (lower part)
white skeletal tower (upper part)
Height:22m (72feet)
Focalheight:28m (92feet)
Characteristic:Fl (3) W 20s.

Bogskär Lighthouse is located on the Bogskär skerries of Åland.[1]

History

The lighthouse was constructed in the 1870s and was completed in 1882, on Sweden's initiative. Of steel construction, it was erected on a three-metre granite plinth. The red-painted 25adj=midNaNadj=mid lighthouse had seven floors.

The lighthouse had a crew of nine, of which half were occupying the lighthouse at a time.

The lighthouse was damaged in a storm during the winter of 1889. In an 1894 repair, it was strengthened and to add weight, the space between its inner and outer shells was filled in with concrete up to the third floor.In 1905, a wireless telegraph was installed, replacing the previous communication via light signals to passing ships.[2]

In 1915 under the First World War, a German warship destroyed the original lighthouse.

A new automated lighthouse was constructed in 1922 on concrete pillars. The lighthouse was restored in 1981, when it was equipped with a helipad. The lighthouse is now painted blue-white and is solar-powered.

See also

References

59.5008°N 20.0369°W

Notes and References

  1. January 18, 2016.
  2. Web site: Aaland Lighthouses . Danstopicals.com . 2013-05-03.