Southwest Reef Light Explained

Coordinates:29.6943°N -91.2163°W
Yearbuilt:1848, Lightship; 1856
Yearlit:1858 Current tower
Yeardeactivated:1916
Foundation:Pile with two platforms
Construction:Iron plate
Shape:Square pyramid on skeleton
Marking:Red
Module:
Embed:yes
Southwest Reef Lighthouse
Built:1858
Added:September 12, 1991
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:91001152

Southwest Reef Light is a historic lighthouse built in 1856 at the end of Southwest Reef in Atchafalaya Bay, Louisiana to replace lightships which had been stationed there for ten years.[1] [2] [3] It served to guide vessels around the reef and into the main channel of the Atchafalaya River. It was discontinued in 1916 after a new, shorter and deeper, channel had been dredged across the reef, making it obsolete. Point Au Fer Reef Light took over its function.

Relocation

It sat, rusting, in shallow water[1] on the reef until 1987 when the town of Berwick, Louisiana paid to have it moved about upriver to a park in the town on the Atchafalaya River. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991 as Southwest Reef Lighthouse.

The location given in the title bar and the National Register box is the current location in Berwick. The location given in the upper box is its original location on the reef.

Notes and References

  1. 2004. NOAA Chart: Point Au Fer to Marsh Island, 1/80,000. 11351.
  2. 2010-01-11.
  3. Web site: Southwest Reef Light. Inventory of Historic Light Stations: Louisiana Lighthouses. National Park Service. 11 January 2010.