Location: | Darien, Georgia | ||||||||||||||||||
Coordinates: | 31.3913°N -81.2857°W | ||||||||||||||||||
Yearbuilt: | 1820 | ||||||||||||||||||
Yearlit: | 1820 | ||||||||||||||||||
Yeardeactivated: | 1905 to 1998 | ||||||||||||||||||
Construction: | Brick | ||||||||||||||||||
Shape: | Conical | ||||||||||||||||||
Marking: | 6 alternate red and white horizontal | ||||||||||||||||||
Height: | 80feet | ||||||||||||||||||
Lens: | Lewis lamp (1820) Fourth-order Fresnel lens (1854) | ||||||||||||||||||
Characteristic: | Fixed white varied by a white flash every 45 s | ||||||||||||||||||
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Sapelo Island Lighthouse is a lighthouse in Georgia, United States, near the southern tip of Sapelo Island. It is the nation's second-oldest brick lighthouse and the oldest survivor among lighthouses designed by Winslow Lewis.[1] The lighthouse, oil building, the cistern, the footing of the 1905 light, the ruins of the fortification, and the associated range light were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.
The lighthouse is a 65feet brick structure, about 30feet in diameter at the base and 12feet at the top. Its brick walls are several feet thick at the bottom, tapering to about two feet thick at the top.[2]
Sapelo Island Lighthouse was built in 1820. It was designed and built by Winslow Lewis. It had fifteen Lewis lamps with 16inches reflectors. In the 1850s, the tower was raised by 10feet and a fourth-order Fresnel lens was installed in 1854. The lens was removed during the Civil War. It was extensively repaired after an 1867 storm and relit in 1868. The tower was damaged by a strong hurricane in 1898.
A pyramidal 100feet skeletal tower lighthouse with a third-order Fresnel lens was built in 1905. This tower was dismantled and relocated in 1934 to South Fox Island, Michigan.
The 1820 lighthouse was inactive from 1905 to 1998, when it was restored to its 1890 appearance and was relit (with a modern light and lens).[3] [4] Is now maintained by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and is unofficial.