Prudence Island Light Explained

Location:Portsmouth, Rhode Island
Coordinates:41.6059°N -71.3035°W
Yearlit:1823 on Goat Island
moved here in 1851
Foundation:Natural / emplaced
Construction:Granite blocks
Shape:Octagonal tower
Marking:White
Lens:5th order Fresnel lens (1852), 250mm (current)
Characteristic:Flashing green, 6 seconds
Fogsignal:None
Module:
Embed:yes
Prudence Island Lighthouse
Architect:H. Vaugh, I.N. Stanley & Brother
Added:March 30, 1988
Mpsub:Lighthouses of Rhode Island TR
Refnum:88000270

The Prudence Island Lighthouse, more commonly known locally as the Sandy Point Lighthouse, is located on Prudence Island, Rhode Island and is the oldest lighthouse tower in the state.[1] Sandy Point is nicknamed Chibacoweda, meaning "little place separated by a passage", because the location is a little more than one mile offshore.

History

The lighthouse was constructed in 1823 and originally sat on a dike off Goat Island farther south in the Bay, where the Newport Harbor Light stands today. In 1851, it was transported to Prudence Island where it remains. It is one of the few lighthouses in the United States to retain its original bird-cage lantern. The light was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.

1938 New England hurricane

The lighthouse keeper's house was swept away in the 1938 New England hurricane, and five people were washed out to sea and drowned:

  1. the keeper's wife, Mrs. George T. Gustavus (Mable Gertrude Norwood; 1888–1938),
  2. the keeper's son, Edward J. Gustavus (1926–1938),
  3. the former keeper, Martin Thompson (1868–1938),
  4. James George Lynch (1863–1938) and v, his wife, Ellen Lynch (Ellen Wyatt; 1870–1938) – both of whom had sought refuge at the lighthouse residence.

The lighthouse keeper, George Theodore Gustavus (1884–1976), was also swept into the sea, but was swept back ashore and survived.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 2012-10-31.