Recently, I received a text message and picture
from one of my daughters and her family on vacation in North Carolina. Her
picture below, tower only, is of a lighthouse they visited. She
stated my 11-year old granddaughter wanted to climb to the top of the lighthouse, but all remaining
tours for the day were booked, so she was very disappointed.
In 1847, the first lighthouse constructed on the island was built
at a height of 54-feet. A series of lanterns and reflectors provided light for
that first lighthouse. After 11 years, its foundation failed. Therefore, the second
lighthouse was built in 1859. Its tower rose 80-feet high and the lantern room
was equipped with a third-order Fresnel lens. During the Civil War, the second
lighthouse was damaged to the extent it was inoperable and not cost effective
to restore.
Likewise, I was disappointed in 2000 when I visited the Bodie
Island Lighthouse because it was not open that day. The lighthouse is
located just north of the Oregon Inlet Bridge, (Pea Island), NC and is the
third lighthouse built on Bodie Island. (Photo below of lighthouse with dwelling, my
picture.)
Construction of this third lighthouse was completed in 1872. Height of the tower and lantern room is 164-feet. The lantern room houses a first-order Fresnel lens and is lighted from dusk to dawn daily. In 1940 the light was automated.
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