St Ann's Head Lighthouse Explained

St. Ann's Head Lighthouse
St. Ann's Low Light
Coordinates:51.6812°N -5.1737°W
Yearbuilt:1714 (first)
Yearlit:1844 (current)
Automated:1998
Construction:masonry tower
Shape:octagonal tower with balcony and lantern
Marking:white tower and lantern
Height:13m (43feet)
Focalheight:48m (157feet)
Lens:First-order catadioptric
Intensity:48,700 candela
Managingagent:Trinity House[1] [2]

St. Ann's Head Lighthouse is a lighthouse that overlooks the entrance to the Milford Haven Waterway, one of Britain's deep water harbours, from St. Ann's Head near Dale in Pembrokeshire.

The lighthouse is intended to guide ships around a number of rocky shoals that cause a hazard to shipping entering the Haven as well as Crow's rock. The current lighthouse was completed in 1844, at which time it was known as St. Ann's Low Light, and was commissioned by John Knott, senior lighthouse keeper with Trinity House. The first lighthouse on the site was built in 1714. The present operational tower is 13m (43feet) in height and is painted white. Visible is Skokholm Lighthouse on the small island of Skokholm 8km (05miles) to the west.

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Notes and References

  1. 2016-06-02.
  2. https://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/lighthouses-and-lightvessels/st-anns-head-lighthouse St. Ann's Head Lighthouse