About Me

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After retirement, for two summers I worked as a tour guide at the Umpqua River Lighthouse in Oregon. This opportunity enabled me to learn more about that lighthouse than any of the others I've seen. Although I have personally visited and photographed over 300 lighthouses in the United States and three Provinces in Canada, the Umpqua River Lighthouse has special meaning for me. That Lighthouse inspired me to write two fictional books with the characters working, living, and enduring the challenges of lighthouse keeping. All pictures posted in this blog were taken by myself, unless noted otherwise.

Book Info.

I hope you will find time to enjoy my books. Preview the book covers below at the right side of page.

Book #1: "The Wickie and the Umpqua Lighthouse." Detail: "The Wickie and the Umpqua Lighthouse" is an 1860's story about the lighthouse keepers and their families at the Umpqua River Lighthouse. It will stir your emotions and warm your heart. Discover the challenges they met but never expected, and their determination to maintain navigational aid to mariners on the Oregon coast. (Wickie is a nickname used by the early lighthouse keepers at the Umpqua River Lighthouse in OR.)

Book #2: "Spirit of The Lighthouse" is a sequel to The Wickie. Detail: Jesse Fayette, assistant keeper at the Umpqua River Lighthouse, finds himself alone to operate and maintain an Oregon lighthouse after the accidental death of his head keeper. After notifying the Lighthouse Board and requesting help, he is surprised but must deal with an acquaintance, Red Saunders, who believes the lighthouse is haunted.

Book #3: "Unexpected Moments" has a different theme than those of Book #1 and #2. Detail: Dan and Megan, as well as their old friends Jim and Anna, experience unexpected moments of hardships and tragedies in Arizona and California. Will they survive these unexpected moments and find any hope for their futures?

All of my books are available on Amazon.

26 June 2014

Fifth-order Fresnel lens

This fifth-order Fresnel lens sits in the lantern room atop the replica Vermilion Lighthouse located at the Inland Seas Museum, Vermilion, OH by Lake Erie.

The original Vermilion Lighthouse was built of wood in 1859 and equipped with a sixth-order lens. Due to deterioration, a new lighthouse, made of metal,  was built in 1877. The tower stood 34-feet high and the lantern room equipped with a fifth-order Fresnel lens. In 1929 the lighthouse was torn down due to its tower leaning excessively from shifting land. The lighthouse was replaced by a 10-foot high steel tower.

The 16-foot high replica of the 1877 lighthouse, pictured below, was built in 1991. The fifth-order lens was removed from  display in the Inland Seas Museum and installed in the lantern room atop the replica. At the time of my visit here in 2001, this light was active and recognized by the U.S. Coast Guard as a private aid to navigation .

 

19 June 2014

Third-order Fresnel Lens



This third-order Fresnel lens sits atop the Point Cabrillo Lighthouse located at Point Cabrillo, CA. The lighthouse, pictured below, was built in 1908 and its tower stands 47-feet high. Light for the lens was originally provided by an oil lamp until it was replaced in 1935 by an electric bulb. Restoration of this lighthouse started in 1995 and was still in progress during my visit here in 1999. To my knowledge, the light continues as an active light.




12 June 2014

Second-order through Sixth-order Fresnel Lens

In my previous post, I expressed intent to show pictures of the various sizes of Fresnel lens to help you better understand the different sizes. Since I only have personal pictures of the first-order Fresnel lens, my plan was to use the Internet to obtain pictures of the other sizes and post them here in my blog. However, due to copyright and the time and effort to obtain written permission from the owners, I have decided to provide the lens size information without the pictures. To help you visualize and comprehend the sizes, I have posted another picture of the first-order Fresnel lens from the Umpqua River Lighthouse. Remember what I wrote in the last post: The larger the number in the name of the lens, the smaller the lens. For example: The "first-order" lens is larger than the "third-order" lens.

                                           
          Lens Order / Name      Lens Height            Lens Inside Diameter
              Second Order             6'1"                              4' 7"
              Third Order                 4' 8"                             3' 3"
              Third and 1/2               3' 0"                             2' 5 1/2 "
              Fourth Order               2' 4"                             1' 8"
              Fifth Order                  1' 8"                             1' 3"
              Sixth Order                 1' 5"                             1' 0"
I hope this information will still be helpful to you without the pictures. You can view pictures of the different size Fresnel lens on the Internet. In your browser enter: Fresnel Lens

                   

05 June 2014

First Order Fresnel Lens

What does a first-order Fresnel lens look like? While posting information to my blog about the lighthouses, I usually mentioned a particular lighthouse was equipped with a specific size lens. Over the past few months, I've had inquiries from different people wanting to know what's the difference in the size of lens'. Starting with today's post, I will attempt to show the different size lens'. It may help you to understand sizes better if you keep in mind, the larger the number in the name of the lens, the smaller the lens. For example, a first-order is larger than a third-order.

 The following two lens' are examples of a first-order Fresnel lens. I have personally seen both of these lens'.

The first-order Fresnel lens, pictured below, is located in the lantern room of the Umpqua River Lighthouse, Winchester Bay, OR. This lens was manufactured in 1890 by Barbier and Cie of Paris, France. The lens has twenty-four bulls-eye panels. Every two minutes the lens completes a revolution. Its signature light is two white flashes followed by a red flash. The lens has 616 prisms and weighs two tons. It is nine-feet seven-inches tall and six-feet two-inches wide.The original lamps which provided the light were replaced by electricity in the 1930's. The light is currently powered by a 1,000 watt quartz bulb, visible in the photo below. The light can be seen for 19 miles out to sea on a clear night. This lens is only one of two first-order lens' that you can climb up inside to see the massive lens close up. As of the time of this posting, this lens operated twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. It is operated and maintained by Douglas County. This light was reclassified in 2011 by the U.S. Coast Guard from a Primary to a Secondary aid to navigation. The Umpqua River Lighthouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as well as the nearby former USCG Station Umpqua River. The former USCG Station now houses the Umpqua River Lighthouse Museum. Both the museum and the lighthouse are open for daily tours, seasonally. I took this picture during the time I volunteered as a tour guide in the summers of 2004 and 2005. You can also read about this lens in my book "The Wickie," a heart warming story about the lighthouse keepers and their challenges in the two Umpqua River Lighthouses.







This first-order lens is housed in the Westport Maritime Museum, Westport, WA. The lens was manufactured in France in 1888. This lens is from the Destruction Island Lighthouse and it was turned by a clockwork mechanism. The lens has twenty-four "bulls-eye" panels which cast a flashing light to a distance of over 26 miles. Originally, the lamp was lit by oil and had up to five hollow wicks. Whale oil was preferred until it became too expensive. Lard was used in the 1860's and then replaced by kerosene in the 1880's. In 1968 the Destruction Island Lighthouse was automated.. The Fresnel lens was dismantled in 1995, removed from the lighthouse and placed in temporary storage in Astoria, OR. In 1998 the display building was built at the Maritime Museum in Westport, WA. This location was selected because it was the closest place where the lens could be appropriately cared for and made accessible to the public. It took a team of 5-6 people who worked for a week to assemble, clean, and polish the Fresnel lens at Westport. At the time of my visit here in 1999, six lighthouses in Washington state still had operating Fresnel lens lit by an electric bulb. I purchased this picture via a post card from the Maritime Museum. Photo by Tammy Diamond.