Sabin Point Light Explained

Sabin Point Light
Location:southwest of Sabin Point in the Providence River
Coordinates:41.7619°N -71.3742°W (approx.)
Yearlit:1872
Automated:1956
Yeardeactivated:1968
Foundation:granite pier
Construction:granite mansonry
Shape:square house with integral tower
Height: (incl. foundation)
Lens:sixth-order Fresnel lens
Range:7.5miles
Characteristic:fixed red

The Sabin Point Light was a lighthouse located in the Providence River. It was removed as part of a channel-widening project in 1968.

History

This lighthouse was constructed in 1872 to mark a bend in the shipping channel southwest of Sabin Point. The Second Empire style house was constructed according to a plan by Albert R. Dow, which won a design contest sponsored by the Lighthouse Service. Nearly identical lights were also constructed at Colchester Reef, Pomham Rocks, Esopus Meadows Light and Rose Island. Initially, the keeper also had responsibility for the beacon, which was later replaced in 1876 by the Bullock's Point Light.

The lighthouse weathered the hurricane of 1938 fairly well, although it sustained serious flood damage to the first floor. The keeper's wife, Annie Whitford, was washed away three times, but managed to survive and keep the lighthouse operational throughout the storm. On a less perilous note, two of her daughters were married at the lighthouse, with the second marrying the son of the keeper of the Warwick Light.

In 1956, the lighthouse was converted to electricity and automated. In 1968, the widening of the shipping channel led the harbor authority to order the removal of the light. It was burned down, and the foundation razed. An automated beacon was placed on a dolphin nearby; the lighthouse was discontinued in 1989 and replaced with a day beacon.

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