Point Lookout Light, Australia Explained

Point Lookout Light
Location:Point Lookout
Queensland
Australia
Coordinates:-27.4316°N 153.5404°W
Yearbuilt:1932
Construction:concrete tower
Shape:square tower and lantern removed
Marking:white tower
Characteristic:Fl (3) W 15s.
Managingagent:Australian Maritime Safety Authority

Point Lookout Light is an active lighthouse on Point Lookout, a headland on North Stradbroke Island, Queensland, Australia.

History

A proposal for a lighthouse and a signal station on Point Lookout were made as early as 1825. A pilot station was built in 1825 elsewhere on the island, on Amity Point, lighting the South Passage into Moreton Bay.[1] In 1848 this pilot station was also moved.

A lighthouse on Point Lookout was finally constructed in 1932, the first settlement at the point. The light source was a carbide lamp operated by acetylene gas, and a hut for storage of the gas cylinders was built at the close by beach, which was to be named Cylinder Beach for this reason.

Structure and display

The lighthouse is 16feet high, made of concrete and painted white. The current display is three white flashes every 15 seconds (Fl.(3)W. 15s).

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Horton, Helen . Islands of Moreton Bay . 1983 . Boorarong Publications . Spring Hill, Queensland . 0-908175-67-1 . 29 .