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LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. ANNISQUAM LIGHTHOUSE Station established: 1801. Current lighthouse tower built: 1897; Automated: 1974. Construction material: Brick. Other buildings still standing: 1801 keeper's house, oil house. Tower height: 41 feet. Height of focal plane: 45 feet. Optic: Fifth-order Fresnel lens (1856) Current optic: VRB-25. Characteristic: Flashing white every 7.5seconds with
RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY A lighthouse at Race Point, Cape Cod’s third light station, went into service on November 5, 1816. The rubblestone tower, laid with “common lime mortar,” was 25 feet tall and its light was 27 feet above mean high water. The tower was joined to a small, stone, one-story keeper’s dwelling via a covered passageway connected tothe kitchen.
THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolving MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. ANNISQUAM LIGHTHOUSE Station established: 1801. Current lighthouse tower built: 1897; Automated: 1974. Construction material: Brick. Other buildings still standing: 1801 keeper's house, oil house. Tower height: 41 feet. Height of focal plane: 45 feet. Optic: Fifth-order Fresnel lens (1856) Current optic: VRB-25. Characteristic: Flashing white every 7.5seconds with
RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY A lighthouse at Race Point, Cape Cod’s third light station, went into service on November 5, 1816. The rubblestone tower, laid with “common lime mortar,” was 25 feet tall and its light was 27 feet above mean high water. The tower was joined to a small, stone, one-story keeper’s dwelling via a covered passageway connected tothe kitchen.
THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolving MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
LYNDE POINT LIGHT HISTORY To mark the entrance to the Connecticut River and the harbor of Old Saybrook, officials decided to erect a lighthouse in 1802. Land was purchased from William Lynde for $225, and the 35-foot wooden tower was built by New London carpenter Abisha Woodward in 1803. The first lighthouse was criticized by mariners for being too dim and too short. BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. CLARKS POINT LIGHT HISTORY Clarks Point is the southernmost extension of the city of New Bedford, in Buzzards Bay on the west side of the entrance to the Acushnet River and New Bedford Harbor.The area's fledgling whaling industry flourished in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, making NewBedford one of
MATINICUS ROCK LIGHT HISTORY Matinicus Rock is a windswept 32-acre granite island, 18 miles off the mainland and 25 miles from Rockland, the nearest port."The Rock" is five miles south of the much larger Matinicus Island. It was recorded by Capt. John Smith in 1614, who made notes in his log about "the rockof Mattinack."
OWLS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY The village called Owl's Head became a town in 1921; it had previously been part of South Thomaston. The growing lime trade in nearby Rockland and Thomaston led to the establishment of a light station at Owl's Head, at the entrance to Rockland Harbor. President John Quincy Adams authorized the building of Owl's Head Light in 1825. MONHEGAN ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY Monhegan Island, 10 miles offshore from midcoast Maine, is a picturesque summer haven for artists and vacationers. By the time the island was visited by Samuel de Champlain, Capt. John Smith, Bartholomew Gosnold, and other explorers in the 1600s, it had already been an outpost for many European fishermen. ISLE LA MOTTE LIGHT HISTORY A light was established at Isle La Motte about 1829. This light was actually a lantern placed in an upper window of a stone house belonging to Ezra Pike, Jr. The house (right) still stands and is a private residence. In 1856, the federal government paid $50 for a lot of land previously belonging to John D. Reynolds and John R. McGregor. NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
CUCKOLDS LIGHT HISTORY Circa 1975. U.S. Coast Guard. The Cuckolds was a family light with two families assigned, and the personnel stationed there got two days a month shore leave. Occasionally the women and even the men could leave the island, but the men always had to be there at night. There were often weeks at a time when the water around the island was so rough NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
CUCKOLDS LIGHT HISTORY Circa 1975. U.S. Coast Guard. The Cuckolds was a family light with two families assigned, and the personnel stationed there got two days a month shore leave. Occasionally the women and even the men could leave the island, but the men always had to be there at night. There were often weeks at a time when the water around the island was so rough FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to GREAT POINT LIGHT HISTORY Before the completion of the Cape Cod Canal in 1914, the stretch between Great Point and Monomoy was one of the busiest sections of the Atlantic Coast.Nantucket was already an important port in the eighteenth century, with 150 ships involved in whaling by 1775. The residents of Nantucket first clamored for a lighthouse at Great Point, then called Sandy Point, in 1770. RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY A lighthouse at Race Point, Cape Cod’s third light station, went into service on November 5, 1816. The rubblestone tower, laid with “common lime mortar,” was 25 feet tall and its light was 27 feet above mean high water. The tower was joined to a small, stone, one-story keeper’s dwelling via a covered passageway connected tothe kitchen.
BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. PLUM ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY Celia Thaxter would go on to become one of New England's most celebrated poets, and one of her best known poems was The Wreck of the Pocahontas. Also in 1839, the brig Richmond Packet, carrying a cargo of flour and corn into Newburyport, was driven by a gale into the rocks.The captain of the ship managed to leap to the rocks and secure a line holding the ship. BASS HARBOR HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Congress soon appropriated a sum of $5,000, and title to the needed land was secured in 1857. A 32-foot-tall lighthouse was built at rocky Bass Harbor Head in 1858. The cylindrical brick lighthouse tower is attached to the one-and-one-half-story, wood-frame keeper’s house by a covered walkway. A fixed red light went into service on September PORTLAND HEAD LIGHT HISTORY The U.S.S. Constitution passes Portland Head Light on July 23, 1931. Edward Rowe Snow, the popular historian and raconteur of the New England coast, wrote in his book Famous New England Lighthouses, “Portland Head and its light seem to symbolize the state of Maine—rocky coast, breaking waves, sparkling water and clear, puresalt air.”.
PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and from the Black Rock section of HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolving NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE All about the lighthouses of New England (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut), with histories, original photos, and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses. LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY The lighthouse established in 1749 at Beavertail Point, at the southern tip of Conanicut Island, was the granddaddy of all Rhode Island lighthouses and only the third one—after Boston Harbor and Nantucket’s Brant Point—in the American colonies. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY An ice-breaking structure was added and was subsequently swept away by the sea; it was rebuilt in 1867. It consisted, according to the annual report of the Lighthouse Board, of "oak piles secured with girders ballasted with stone, planked all over, shod with iron, and paintedwith red lead."
FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY _As it turned out, he was the light’s last keeper, staying until 1877 except for a two-year gap from 1867 to 1869. Thompson’s wife, Elizabeth (Bradley), was on the payroll as an assistant keeper for two years, and their sons Sidney and George also served as assistants. THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY In 1864, the steamer Rip Van Winkle ran into the rocks with a large number of passengers and a major tragedy was narrowly averted. In the winter of 1866-67 alone, four more vessels ran into the shoal. Local merchants and mariners clamored for a lighthouse to guide vessels safely around the treacherous area. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. CUCKOLDS LIGHT HISTORY P erhaps the loveliest time to observe The Cuckolds is at sunset from a boat close by to the eastward. The white light against a glowing red and golden sky the dark outline of the trees on Cape Newagen, and tired seagulls winging their way eastward . . . produce a scene and a sense never to be forgotten. NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE All about the lighthouses of New England (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut), with histories, original photos, and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses. LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY The lighthouse established in 1749 at Beavertail Point, at the southern tip of Conanicut Island, was the granddaddy of all Rhode Island lighthouses and only the third one—after Boston Harbor and Nantucket’s Brant Point—in the American colonies. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY An ice-breaking structure was added and was subsequently swept away by the sea; it was rebuilt in 1867. It consisted, according to the annual report of the Lighthouse Board, of "oak piles secured with girders ballasted with stone, planked all over, shod with iron, and paintedwith red lead."
FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY _As it turned out, he was the light’s last keeper, staying until 1877 except for a two-year gap from 1867 to 1869. Thompson’s wife, Elizabeth (Bradley), was on the payroll as an assistant keeper for two years, and their sons Sidney and George also served as assistants. THACHER ISLAND TWIN LIGHTS HISTORY European visitors to Thacher Island date back at least to Samuel de Champlain in 1605 and Capt. John Smith in 1614. The island was later named for Anthony Thacher, an Englishman whose vessel, the Watch and Wait, was wrecked in a ferocious storm near the island in 1635 on its way to Marblehead from Ipswich. Thacher and his wife, Elizabeth, were the only survivors of the wreck in which 21 people BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY In 1864, the steamer Rip Van Winkle ran into the rocks with a large number of passengers and a major tragedy was narrowly averted. In the winter of 1866-67 alone, four more vessels ran into the shoal. Local merchants and mariners clamored for a lighthouse to guide vessels safely around the treacherous area. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. CUCKOLDS LIGHT HISTORY P erhaps the loveliest time to observe The Cuckolds is at sunset from a boat close by to the eastward. The white light against a glowing red and golden sky the dark outline of the trees on Cape Newagen, and tired seagulls winging their way eastward . . . produce a scene and a sense never to be forgotten. GREAT POINT LIGHT HISTORY Before the completion of the Cape Cod Canal in 1914, the stretch between Great Point and Monomoy was one of the busiest sections of the Atlantic Coast.Nantucket was already an important port in the eighteenth century, with 150 ships involved in whaling by 1775. The residents of Nantucket first clamored for a lighthouse at Great Point, then called Sandy Point, in 1770. FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Joshua Dyer, a native of Truro on Cape Cod, was the first keeper at Race Point. He died at the age of 37 in November 1822 and was succeeded by his brother, Elijah Dyer, who remained until 1847. BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. PLUM ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY Celia Thaxter would go on to become one of New England's most celebrated poets, and one of her best known poems was The Wreck of the Pocahontas. Also in 1839, the brig Richmond Packet, carrying a cargo of flour and corn into Newburyport, was driven by a gale into the rocks.The captain of the ship managed to leap to the rocks and secure a line holding the ship. PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY In 1864, the steamer Rip Van Winkle ran into the rocks with a large number of passengers and a major tragedy was narrowly averted. In the winter of 1866-67 alone, four more vessels ran into the shoal. Local merchants and mariners clamored for a lighthouse to guide vessels safely around the treacherous area. SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. PORTLAND HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Edward Rowe Snow, the popular historian and raconteur of the New England coast, wrote in his book Famous New England Lighthouses, “Portland Head and its light seem to symbolize the state of Maine—rocky coast, breaking waves, sparkling water and clear, pure salt air.” The hundreds of thousands of people who visit Portland Head each year would agree; this is one of the most strikingly HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolving MATINICUS ROCK LIGHT HISTORY Matinicus Rock is a windswept 32-acre granite island, 18 miles off the mainland and 25 miles from Rockland, the nearest port."The Rock" is five miles south of the much larger Matinicus Island. It was recorded by Capt. John Smith in 1614, who made notes in his log about "the rockof Mattinack."
NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to POINT GAMMON LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon, or Great Point, at the southern end of Great Island, had an interesting history before a lighthouse was established there.In 1796, Dr. James Hedge opened a hospital on the point and conducted early experiments in smallpox inoculation, with some success. ST. CROIX RIVER LIGHT HISTORY St. Croix River Light, established in 1857, was listed as the first lighthouse of the First Lighthouse District. The lighthouse was an octagonal wooden tower on top of the keeper's house. The lantern held a fifth-order Fresnel lens. A fog bell tower with striking machinerywas also built.
WINGS NECK LIGHT HISTORY The land where the lighthouse is located was once swampy and mosquito-infested. The first Wings Neck Lighthouse (National Archives) Congress first appropriated $5,000 for a lighthouse at the tip of Wing's Neck in 1837, but the project was delayed after some debate about whether the light was really needed. There was plentiful ironore in the
SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to POINT GAMMON LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon, or Great Point, at the southern end of Great Island, had an interesting history before a lighthouse was established there.In 1796, Dr. James Hedge opened a hospital on the point and conducted early experiments in smallpox inoculation, with some success. ST. CROIX RIVER LIGHT HISTORY St. Croix River Light, established in 1857, was listed as the first lighthouse of the First Lighthouse District. The lighthouse was an octagonal wooden tower on top of the keeper's house. The lantern held a fifth-order Fresnel lens. A fog bell tower with striking machinerywas also built.
WINGS NECK LIGHT HISTORY The land where the lighthouse is located was once swampy and mosquito-infested. The first Wings Neck Lighthouse (National Archives) Congress first appropriated $5,000 for a lighthouse at the tip of Wing's Neck in 1837, but the project was delayed after some debate about whether the light was really needed. There was plentiful ironore in the
SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to NASH ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In 1837, Congress authorized the construction of a lighthouse at the mouth of the Pleasant River. The site chosen was Nash Island, the smaller of two islands known locally as Big Nash and Little Nashes Island. The government purchased about four acres of land for the station from the Nash family for $409. During the following year, thefirst
WINGS NECK LIGHT HISTORY The land where the lighthouse is located was once swampy and mosquito-infested. The first Wings Neck Lighthouse (National Archives) Congress first appropriated $5,000 for a lighthouse at the tip of Wing's Neck in 1837, but the project was delayed after some debate about whether the light was really needed. There was plentiful ironore in the
RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY A lighthouse at Race Point, Cape Cod’s third light station, went into service on November 5, 1816. The rubblestone tower, laid with “common lime mortar,” was 25 feet tall and its light was 27 feet above mean high water. The tower was joined to a small, stone, one-story keeper’s dwelling via a covered passageway connected tothe kitchen.
BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. BISHOP AND CLERKS LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon and the offshore ledges known as Bishop (largest of the ledges) and Clerks (smaller rocks) were, for many years, scourges to mariners traveling near Hyannis along the south coast of Cape Cod—one writer dubbed them the “Scylla and Charybdis” of Nantucket Sound.The lighthouse established at Point Gammon in 1816 was a help, but it wasn’t sufficient to prevent vessels from PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and from the Black Rock section of HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolving CLARKS POINT LIGHT HISTORY Clarks Point is the southernmost extension of the city of New Bedford, in Buzzards Bay on the west side of the entrance to the Acushnet River and New Bedford Harbor.The area's fledgling whaling industry flourished in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, making NewBedford one of
OWLS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY The village called Owl's Head became a town in 1921; it had previously been part of South Thomaston. The growing lime trade in nearby Rockland and Thomaston led to the establishment of a light station at Owl's Head, at the entrance to Rockland Harbor. President John Quincy Adams authorized the building of Owl's Head Light in 1825. NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
POINT GAMMON LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon, or Great Point, at the southern end of Great Island, had an interesting history before a lighthouse was established there.In 1796, Dr. James Hedge opened a hospital on the point and conducted early experiments in smallpox inoculation, with some success. SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. BASS HARBOR HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Congress soon appropriated a sum of $5,000, and title to the needed land was secured in 1857. A 32-foot-tall lighthouse was built at rocky Bass Harbor Head in 1858. The cylindrical brick lighthouse tower is attached to the one-and-one-half-story, wood-frame keeper’s house by a covered walkway. A fixed red light went into service on September NASH ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In 1837, Congress authorized the construction of a lighthouse at the mouth of the Pleasant River. The site chosen was Nash Island, the smaller of two islands known locally as Big Nash and Little Nashes Island. The government purchased about four acres of land for the station from the Nash family for $409. During the following year, thefirst
OWLS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY The village called Owl's Head became a town in 1921; it had previously been part of South Thomaston. The growing lime trade in nearby Rockland and Thomaston led to the establishment of a light station at Owl's Head, at the entrance to Rockland Harbor. President John Quincy Adams authorized the building of Owl's Head Light in 1825. PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE - Home. History, tour information, original photography and much more for nearly 200 lighthouses in the New England states: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. If you're looking for a particular lighthouse, a good place to start is "Lighthouses by State"in the
FIVE MILE POINT LIGHT HISTORY Inside the tower. Built in 1805 on the east side of the harbor entrance, the first New Haven Light was an octagonal 30-foot wooden tower. It was commonly called Five Mile Point Light after its distance from downtown New Haven. The first keeper was Amos Morris Jr., who sold the land for the lighthouse to LONG POINT LIGHT HISTORY Long Point, at the very fingertip of the curling arm of Cape Cod, was visited in 1620 by the Pilgrims after they entered Provincetown Harbor.A settlement began at Long Point in 1818, reaching its peak in the 1850s when about 200 people lived there. As Provincetown became a major fishing port, it was decided a lighthouse at Long Point would greatly aid mariners entering the town's harbor. NARROWS LIGHT HISTORY Two brothers, Tom and Arthur Small, served as keepers. During a winter storm in 1923, a fishing boat went ashore on the bar near the lighthouse. Arthur Small managed to get a line out and pulled two of the men to safety, but the third man perished. Tom Small's boatcapsized during a
POINT GAMMON LIGHT HISTORY Point Gammon, or Great Point, at the southern end of Great Island, had an interesting history before a lighthouse was established there.In 1796, Dr. James Hedge opened a hospital on the point and conducted early experiments in smallpox inoculation, with some success. SABIN POINT LIGHT HISTORY From the collection of Edward Rowe Snow, courtesy of Dorothy Bicknell. On March 3, 1871, Congress appropriated $42,000 for a lighthouse at Sabin Point, at a sharp turn in the shipping channel. The chosen site was near the middle of the river, about a quarter-mile offshore from Sabin Point in the Riverside section of East Providence. BASS HARBOR HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Congress soon appropriated a sum of $5,000, and title to the needed land was secured in 1857. A 32-foot-tall lighthouse was built at rocky Bass Harbor Head in 1858. The cylindrical brick lighthouse tower is attached to the one-and-one-half-story, wood-frame keeper’s house by a covered walkway. A fixed red light went into service on September NASH ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In 1837, Congress authorized the construction of a lighthouse at the mouth of the Pleasant River. The site chosen was Nash Island, the smaller of two islands known locally as Big Nash and Little Nashes Island. The government purchased about four acres of land for the station from the Nash family for $409. During the following year, thefirst
OWLS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY The village called Owl's Head became a town in 1921; it had previously been part of South Thomaston. The growing lime trade in nearby Rockland and Thomaston led to the establishment of a light station at Owl's Head, at the entrance to Rockland Harbor. President John Quincy Adams authorized the building of Owl's Head Light in 1825. PENFIELD REEF LIGHT HISTORY The work was completed in late 2015. Along with needed repairs, the roof was changed back to its historic rusty red color. A new auction was held and a high bid of $282,345 was accepted on October 10, 2016. Penfield Reef Light can be viewed distantly from Fairfield Beach and NASH ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In 1837, Congress authorized the construction of a lighthouse at the mouth of the Pleasant River. The site chosen was Nash Island, the smaller of two islands known locally as Big Nash and Little Nashes Island. The government purchased about four acres of land for the station from the Nash family for $409. During the following year, thefirst
RACE POINT LIGHT HISTORY A lighthouse at Race Point, Cape Cod’s third light station, went into service on November 5, 1816. The rubblestone tower, laid with “common lime mortar,” was 25 feet tall and its light was 27 feet above mean high water. The tower was joined to a small, stone, one-story keeper’s dwelling via a covered passageway connected tothe kitchen.
LYNDE POINT LIGHT HISTORY To mark the entrance to the Connecticut River and the harbor of Old Saybrook, officials decided to erect a lighthouse in 1802. Land was purchased from William Lynde for $225, and the 35-foot wooden tower was built by New London carpenter Abisha Woodward in 1803. The first lighthouse was criticized by mariners for being too dim and too short. BOON ISLAND LIGHT HISTORY In the summer of 1682, a coastal trading vessel, the Increase, was wrecked on the rocky ledges of barren Boon Island, several miles off the southern Maine coast.The four survivors—three white men and one Indian—spent a month on the island, living on fish and gulls’ eggs. One day the men saw smoke rising from Mount Agamenticus several miles away, so they built a fire in response. BASS HARBOR HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Congress soon appropriated a sum of $5,000, and title to the needed land was secured in 1857. A 32-foot-tall lighthouse was built at rocky Bass Harbor Head in 1858. The cylindrical brick lighthouse tower is attached to the one-and-one-half-story, wood-frame keeper’s house by a covered walkway. A fixed red light went into service on September MAINE - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE Maine - NEW ENGLAND LIGHTHOUSES: A VIRTUAL GUIDE. View Maine Lighthouses in a larger map. You may choose a lighthouse from the interactive map. or choose from the menu below. Lighthouses with an "*" are no longer standing. Maine Lighthouses 2019 Calendar onLulu.com!
BEAVERTAIL LIGHT HISTORY Beavertail Light Station was ceded to the federal government in 1793. Administration of lighthouses on the local level went to the collectors of customs. The customs collector for Newport, William Ellery, became Rhode Island’s first lighthouse superintendent. William Martin was keeper from the 1780s until his death in 1803. CLARKS POINT LIGHT HISTORY Clarks Point is the southernmost extension of the city of New Bedford, in Buzzards Bay on the west side of the entrance to the Acushnet River and New Bedford Harbor.The area's fledgling whaling industry flourished in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, making NewBedford one of
HENDRICKS HEAD LIGHT HISTORY Hendricks Head Light was established on the east side of the entrance to the Sheepscot River in 1829, near the part of Southport Island now known as Cozy Harbor and six miles from Boothbay Harbor. The first lighthouse was a granite keeper's dwelling with the tower on its roof. It exhibited a fixed white light 39 feet above the water. The original fixed white light was changed to a revolvingPEMAQUID POINT
Location: Entrance to Muscongus Bay and John Bay. Coordinates: 43 50 12 N 69 30 21 W. View Pemaquid Point Lighthouse in a larger map. The grounds and keeper's house are owned and managed by the Town of Bristol. The Fishermen's Museum is in the keeper's house: phone (207) 677-2494. A one-bedroom apartment in the keeper's house is availablefor
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* Avery Point Lighthouse > * Avery Point Light history * Avery Point Light Bibliography * Avery Point Light Cruises & Tours * Bridgeport Harbor Lighthouse > * Bridgeport Harbor Light history * Bridgeport Harbor Light Bibliography * Bridgeport Harbor Light postcards * Faulkner's Island Lighthouse > * Faulkner's Island Light history * Faulkner's Island Light bibliography * Faulkner's Island Light postcards * Fayerweather Island Lighthouse > * Faywerweather Island Light history * Fayerweather Island Light cruises * Fayerweather Island Light bibliography * Fayerweather Island Lighthouse postcards * Five Mile Point Lighthouse > * Five Mile Point Light history * Five Mile Point Light photos * Five Mile Point Light bibliography * Five Mile Point Light postcards * Great Captain Island Lighthouse > * Great Captain Island Light History * Great Captain Island Light bibliography * Great Captain Island Light cruises * Great Captain Island Light postcards * Green's Ledge Lighthouse > * Green's Ledge Light History * Green's Ledge Light bibliography * Green's Ledge Light cruises * Green's Ledge Light postcards * Latimer Reef Lighthouse > * Latimer Reef Light history * Latimer Reef Light photos * Latimer Reef Light bibliography * Latimer Reef Light cruises * Latimer Reef Light postcards * Lynde Point Lighthouse > * Lynde Point Light history * Lynde Point Light photos * Lynde Point Light bibliography * Lynde Point Light cruises * Lynde Point Light postcards* M-So >
* Morgan Point Lighthouse > * Morgan Point history * Morgan Point photos * Morgan Point bibliography * Morgan Point cruises * Morgan Point postcards * New London Harbor Lighthouse > * New London Harbor Light history * New London Harbor Light photos * New London Harbor Light bibliography * New London Harbor Light cruises * New London Harbor Light postcards * New London Ledge Lighthouse > * New London Ledge Light history * New London Ledge Light photos * New London Ledge Light bibliography * New London Ledge Light cruises * New London Ledge Light postcards * Pecks Ledge Lighthouse > * Pecks Ledge Light history * Pecks Ledge Light photos * Pecks Ledge Light bibliography * Pecks Ledge Light cruises * Pecks Ledge Light postcards * Penfield Reef Lighthouse > * Penfield Reef Light history * Penfield Reef Light bibliography * Penfield Reef Light photos * Penfield Reef Light cruises * Penfield Reef Light postcards * Saybrook Breakwater Lighthouse > * Saybrook Breakwater Light history * Saybrook Breakwater Light bibliography * Saybrook Breakwater Light cruises * Saybrook Breakwater Light postcards * Sheffield Island Lighthouse > * Sheffield Island Light history * Sheffield Island Light photos * Sheffield Island Light bibliography * Sheffield Island Light cruises * Sheffield Island Light postcards * Southwest Ledge Lighthouse > * Southwest Ledge Light history * Southwest Ledge Light photos * Southwest Ledge Light bibliography * Southwest Ledge Light postcards* Sp-T >
* Sperry Lighthouse > * Sperry Light history * Sperry Light bibliography * Sperry Light postcards * Stamford Harbor Lighthouse > * Stamford Harbor Light history * Stamford Harbor Light photos * Stamford Harbor Light bibliography * Stamford Harbor Light cruises * Stamford Harbor Light postcards * Stonington Harbor Lighthouse > * Stonington Harbor Light history * Stonington Harbor Light photos * Stonington Harbor Light bibliography * Stonington Harbor Light postcards * Stratford Point Lighthouse > * Stratford Point Light history * Stratford Point Light bibliography * Stratford Point Light photos * Stratford Point Light postcards * Stratford Shoal Lighthouse > * Stratford Shoal Light history * Stratford Shoal Light bibliography * Stratford Shoal Light photos * Stratford Shoal Light cruises * Stratford Shoal Postcards * Tongue Point Lighthouse > * Tongue Point Light history * Tongue Point Light bibliography * Tongue Point Light photos * Tongue Point Light cruises * Tongue Point Light postcards* Rhode Island >
* B-F >
* Beavertail Lighthouse > * Beavertail Light history * Beavertail Light bibliography * Beavertail Light cruises * Beavertail Light postcards * Block Island North Lighthouse > * Block Island North Light history * Block Island North bibliography * Block Island North cruises * Block Island North postcards * Block Island Southeast Lighthouse > * Block Island Southeast Light history * Block Island Southeast Light bibliography * Block Island Southeast Light cruises * Block Island Southeast Light postcards * Bristol Ferry Lighthouse > * Bristol Ferry Light history * Bristol Ferry Light bibliography * Bristol Ferry Light Cruises * Bristol Ferry Light postcards * Bullocks Point Lighthouse > * Bullocks Point Light history * Bullocks Point Light bibliography * Bullocks Point Light postcards * Castle Hill Lighthouse > * Castle Hill Light history * Castle Hill Light bibliography * Castle Hill Light cruises * Castle Hill Light postcards * Conanicut Lighthouse > * Conanicut Light history * Conanicut Light bibliography * Conanicut Light cruises * Conanicut Light postcards * Conimicut Lighthouse > * Conimicut Light history * Conimicut Light photos * Conimicut Light bibliography * Conimicut Light cruises * Conimicut Light postcards * Dutch Island Lighthouse > * Dutch Island Light history * Dutch Island Light photos * Dutch Island Light bibliography * Dutch Island Light cruises * Dutch Island Light postcards * Fuller Rock Lighthouse > * Fuller Rock Light history * Fuller Rock Light Bibliography * Fuller Rock Light postcards* G-Pom >
* Gould Island Lighthouse > * Gould Island Light history * Gould Island Light bibliography * Gould Island Light postcards * Gull Rocks Lighthouse > * Gull Rocks Light history * Gull Rocks Light bibliography * Gull Rocks Light postcards * Hog Island Shoal Lighthouse > * Hog Island Shoal history * Hog Island Shoal photos * Hog Island Shoal bibliography * Hog Island Shoal Light Cruises * Hog Island Shoal postcards * Lime Rock Lighthouse > * Lime Rock Light history * Lime Rock Light bibliography * Lime Rock Light cruises * Lime Rock Light postcards * Musselbed Shoals Lighthouse > * Musselbed Shoals Light history * Musselbed Shoals Light bibliography * Musselbed Shoals Light postcards * Nayatt Point Lighthouse > * Nayatt Point Light history * Nayatt Point Light photos * Nayatt Point Light bibliography * Nayatt Point Light Cruises * Nayatt Point Lighthouse postcards * Newport Harbor Lighthouse > * Newport Harbor Light history * Newport Harbor Light bibliography * Newport Harbor Light cruises * Newport Harbor Light postcards * Plum Beach Lighthouse > * Plum Beach Light history * Plum Beach Light bibliography * Plum Beach Light cruises * Plum Beach Light postcards * Point Judith Lighthouse > * Point Judith Light history * Point Judith Light bibliography * Point Judith Light cruises * Point Judith Light postcards * Pomham Rocks Lighthouse > * Pomham Rocks Light history * Pomham Rocks Light bibliography * Pomham Rocks Cruises * Pomham Rocks Light postcards* Pop-W >
* Poplar Point Lighthouse > * Poplar Point Light history * Poplar Point Light photos * Poplar Point Light bibliography * Poplar Point Light cruises * Poplar Point Light postcards * Prudence Island Lighthouse > * Prudence Island Light history * Prudence Island Light bibliography * Prudence Island Light cruises * Prudence Island Light postcards * Rose Island Lighthouse > * Rose Island Light history * Rose Island Light bibliography * Rose Island Light cruises * Rose Island Light postcards * Sabin Point Lighthouse > * Sabin Point Light history * Sabin Point Light bibliography * Sabin Point Light postcards * Sakonnet Point Lighthouse > * Sakonnet Point Light history * Sakonnet Point Light bibliography * Sakonnet Point Light postcards * Sassafras Point Lighthouse > * Sassafras Point Light history * Sassafras Point Light bibliography * Sassafras Point Light postcards * Warwick Lighthouse > * Warwick Light history * Warwick Light bibliography * Warwick Light cruises * Warwick Light postcards * Watch Hill Lighthouse > * Watch Hill Light history * Watch Hill Light photos * Watch Hill Light bibliography * Watch Hill Light cruises * Watch Hill Light postcards * Whale Rock Lighthouse > * Whale Rock Light history * Whale Rock Light bibliography * Whale Rock Light postcards * Wickford Harbor Lighthouse > * Wickford Harbor Light history * Wickford Harbor Light bibliography * Wickford Harbor Light postcards* Massachusetts >
* A-B >
* Annisquam Lighthouse > * Annisquam Light history * Annisquam Light bibliography * Annisquam Light cruises * Annisquam Light postcards * Bakers Island Lighthouse > * Bakers Island Light history * Bakers Island Light bibliography * Bakers Island Light cruises * Bakers Island Light postcards * Bass River Lighthouse (Lighthouse Inn) > * Bass River Light history * Bass River Light bibliography * Bass River Light postcards * Billingsgate Lighthouse > * Billingsgate Light history * Billingsgate Light bibliography * Billingsgate Light postcards * Bird Island Lighthouse > * Bird Island Light history * Bird Island Light bibliography * Bird Island Light postcards * Bishop and Clerks Lighthouse > * Bishop and Clerks Light history * Bishop and Clerks Light bibliography * Bishop and Clerks Light postcards * Borden Flats Lighthouse > * Borden Flats Light history * Borden Flats Light bibliography * Borden Flats Light postcards* Boston Light >
* Boston Light history * Boston Light bibliography * Boston Light cruises * Boston Light postcards * Brant Point Lighthouse > * Brant Point Light history * Brant Point Light bibliography * Brant Point Light cruises * Brant Point Light postcards * Broad Sound Channel Inner Range Lights > * Broad Sound Channel Inner Range Lights history * Broad Sound Channel Inner Range Lights bibliography * Butler Flats Lighthouse > * Butler Flats Light history * Butler Flats Light bibliography * Butler Flats Light cruises * Butler Flats Light postcards* C-E >
* Cape Poge Lighthouse > * Cape Poge Light history * Cape Poge Light bibliography * Cape Poge Light cruises * Cape Poge Light postcards * Chatham Lighthouse > * Chatham Light history * Chatham Light bibliography * Chatham Light cruises * Chatham Light postcards * Clarks Point Lighthouse > * Clarks Point Light history * Clarks Point Light bibliography * Clarks Point Light cruises * Clarks Point Light postcards * Cleveland Ledge Lighthouse > * Cleveland Ledge Light history * Cleveland Ledge Light photos * Cleveland Ledge Light bibliography * Cuttyhunk Lighthouse > * Cuttyhunk Light history * Cuttyhunk Light bibliography * Cuttyhunk Light postcards * Deer Island Lighthouse > * Deer Island Light history * Deer Island Light bibliography * Deer Island Light cruises * Deer Island Light postcards * Derby Wharf Lighthouse > * Derby Wharf Light history * Derby Wharf Light bibliography * Derby Wharf Light cruises * Derby Wharf Light postcards * Dumpling Rock Lighthouse > * Dumpling Rock Light history * Dumpling Rock Light bibliography * Dumpling Rock Light postcards * Duxbury Pier Lighthouse > * Duxbury Pier Light history * Duxbury Pier Light bibliography * Duxbury Pier Light cruises * Duxbury Pier Light postcards * East Chop Lighthouse > * East Chop Light history * East Chop Light bibliography * East Chop Light cruises * East Chop Light postcards * Eastern Point Lighthouse > * Eastern Point Light history * Eastern Point Light bibliography * Eastern Point Light cruises * Eastern Point Light postcards * Edgartown Lighthouse > * Edgartown Light history * Edgartown Light bibliography * Edgartown Light cruises * Edgartown Light postcards * Egg Rock Lighthouse (Massachusetts) > * Egg Rock Light history * Egg Rock Light bibliography * Egg Rock Light postcards* F-L >
* Fort Pickering Lighthouse > * Fort Pickering Light history * Fort Pickering Light bibliography * Fort Pickering Light cruises * Fort Pickering Light postcards * Gay Head Lighthouse > * Gay Head Light history * Gay Head Light bibliography * Gay Head Light cruises * Gay Head Light postcards * Graves Lighthouse > * Graves Light history * Graves Light bibliography * Graves Light cruises * Graves Light postcards * Great Point Lighthouse > * Great Point Light history * Great Point Light bibliography * Great Point Light cruises * Great Point Light postcards * Highland Lighthouse > * Highland Light history * Highland Light bibliography * Highland Light postcards * Hospital Point Lighthouse > * Hospital Point Light history * Hospital Point Light bibliography * Hospital Point Light cruises * Hospital Point Light postcards * Hyannis Harbor Lighthouse > * Hyannis Harbor Light history * Hyannis Harbor Light bibliography * Hyannis Harbor Light cruises * Hyannis Harbor Light postcards * Ipswich Range Lights > * Ipswich Range Lights history * Ipswich Range Lights bibliography * Ipswich Range Lights postcards * Long Island Head Lighthouse > * Long Island Head Light history * Long Island Head Light biblography * Long Island Head Light cruises * Long Island Head Light postcards * Long Point Lighthouse > * Long Point Light history * Long Point Light bibliography * Long Point Light cruises * Long Point Light postcards * Lovells Island Range Lights > * Lovells Island Range Lights history * Lovells Island Range Lights bibliography * Lovells Island Range Lights postcards* M-P >
* Marblehead Lighthouse > * Marblehead Light history * Marblehead Light bibliography * Marblehead Light cruises * Marblehead Light postcards * Mayo's Beach Lighthouse > * Mayos Beach Light history * Mayos Beach Light bibliography * Mayos Beach Light postcards * Minots Ledge Lighthouse > * Minots Ledge Light history * Minots Ledge Light bibliography * Minots Ledge Light cruises * Minots Ledge Light postcards * Monomoy Point Lighthouse > * Monomoy Point Light history * Monomoy Point Light bibliography * Monomoy Point Light cruises * Monomoy Point Light postcards * Narrows "Bug" Lighthouse > * Narrows Light history * Narrows Light bibliography * Narrows Light postcards * Nauset Lighthouse > * Nauset Light history * Nauset Light bibliography * Nauset Light postcards * Neds Point Lighthouse > * Neds Point Light history * Neds Point Light bibliography * Neds Point Light postcards * Newburyport Range LIghts > * Newburyport Range Lights history * Newburyport Range Lights bibliography * Newburyport Range Lights cruises * Nobska Point Lighthouse > * Nobska Point Light history * Nobska Point Light bibliography * Nobska Point Light cruises * Nobska Point Light postcards * Palmers Island Lighthouse > * Palmers Island Light history * Palmers Island Light bibliography * Palmers Island Light cruises * Palmers Island Light postcards * Plum Island Lighthouse > * Plum Island Light history * Plum Island Light bibliography * Plum Island Light cruises * Plum Island Light postcards * Plymouth Lighthouse > * Plymouth Light history * Plymouth Light bibliography * Plymouth Light cruises * Plymouth Light postcards * Point Gammon Lighthouse > * Point Gammon Light history * Point Gammon Light bibliography * Point Gammon Light cruises * Point Gammon Light postcards* R-W >
* Race Point Lighthouse > * Race Point Light history * Race Point Light bibliography * Race Point Light postcards * Sandy Neck Lighthouse > * Sandy Neck Light history * Sandy Neck Light bibliography * Sandy Neck Light cruises * Sandy Neck Light postcards * Sankaty Head Lighthouse > * Sankaty Head Light history * Sankaty Head Light bibliography * Sankaty Head Light cruises * Sankaty Head Light postcards * Scituate Lighthouse > * Scituate Light history * Scituate Light bibliography * Scituate Light cruises * Scituate Light postcards * Spectactle Island Range Lights > * Spectactle Island Range Lights history * Spectactle Island Range Lights bibliography * Spectactle Island Range postcards * Stage Harbor Lighthouse > * Stage Harbor Light history * Stage Harbor Light bibliography * Stage Harbor Light postcards * Straitsmouth Island Lighthouse > * Straitsmouth Island Light history * Straitsmouth Island Light bibliography * Straitsmouth Island Light cruises * Straitsmouth Island Light postcards * Tarpaulin Cove Lighthouse > * Tarpaulin Cove Light history * Tarpaulin Cove Light bibliography * Tarpaulin Cove Light postcards * Ten Pound Island Lighthouse > * Ten Pound Island Light history * Ten Pound Island Light bibliography * Ten Pound Island Light cruises * Ten Pound Island Light postcards * Thacher Island Twin Lights > * Thacher Island Twin Lights history * Thacher Island Twin Lights bibliography * Thacher Island Twin Lights cruises * Thacher Island Twin Lights postcards * West Chop Lighthouse > * West Chop Light history * West Chop Light bibliography * West Chop Light cruises * West Chop Light postcards * Wings Neck Lighthouse > * Wings Neck Light history * Wings Neck Light bibliography * Wings Neck Light postcards * Wood End Lighthouse > * Wood End Light history * Wood End Light bibliography * Wood End Light cruises * Wood End Light postcards* Vermont >
* Burlington Breakwater > * Burlington Breakwater Lights history * Burlington Breakwater Lights bibliography * Burlington Breakwater Lights cruises * Burlington Breakwater Lights postcards* Colchester Reef >
* Colchester Reef Light history * Colchester Reef Light bibliography* Isle la Motte >
* Isle la Motte Light history * Isle la Motte Light bibliography * Isle la Motte Light postcards* Juniper Island >
* Juniper Island Light history * Juniper Island Light bibliography * Juniper Island Light cruises* Maxfield Point
* Whipple Point >
* Whipple Point Light history * Whipple Point Light bibliography* Windmill Point >
* Windmill Point Light history * Windmill Point Light bibliography* New Hampshire >
* Burkehaven Lighthouse > * Burkehaven Light history * Burkehaven Light bibliography * Burkehaven Light cruises * Burkehaven Light postcards * Herrick Cove Lighthouse > * Herrick Cove Light history * Herrick Cove Light photos * Herrick Cove Light bibliography * Herrick Cove Light cruises * Loon Island Lighthouse > * Loon Island Light history * Loon Island Light photos * Loon Island Light bibliography * Loon Island Light cruises * Loon Island Light postcards * Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse > * Portsmouth Harbor Light history * Portsmouth Harbor Light bibliography * Portsmouth Harbor Light cruises * Portsmouth Harbor Light postcards * White Island Lighthouse > * White Island Light history * White Island Light bibliography * White Island Light cruises * White Island Light postcards* Maine >
* A-B >
* Avery Rock >
* Avery Rock Light history * Avery Rock Light bibliography * Avery Rock Light postcards* Baker Island >
* Baker Island Light history * Baker Island Light bibliography * Baker Island Light cruises * Baker Island Light postcards * Bass Harbor Head > * Bass Harbor Head Light history * Bass Harbor Head Light bibliography * Bass Harbor Head Light cruises * Bass Harbor Head Light postcards* Bear Island >
* Bear Island Light history * Bear Island Light bibliography * Bear Island Light cruises * Bear Island Light postcards* Blue Hill Bay >
* Blue Hill Bay Light history * Blue Hill Bay Light bibliography * Blue Hill Bay Light cruises * Blue Hill Bay Light postcards* Boon Island >
* Boon Island Light history * Boon Island Light bibliography * Boon Island Light cruises * Boon Island Light postcards* Browns Head >
* Browns Head Light history * Browns Head Light photos * Browns Head Light bibliography * Browns Head Light cruises * Browns Head Light postcards * Burnt Coat Harbor > * Burnt Coat Harbor Light history * Burnt Coat Harbor Light photos * Burnt Coat Harbor Light bibliography * Burnt Coat Harbor Light cruises * Burnt Coat Harbor Light postcards* Burnt Island >
* Burnt Island Light history * Burnt Island Light photos * Burnt Island Light bibliography * Burnt Island Light cruises * Burnt Island Light postcards* C-F >
* Cape Elizabeth >
* Cape Elizabeth Light history * Cape Elizabeth Light bibliography * Cape Elizabeth Light postcards * Cape Neddick (Nubble) > * Cape Neddick (Nubble) Light history * Cape Neddick (Nubble) Light bibliography * Cape Neddick (Nubble) Light cruises * Cape Neddick (Nubble) Light postcards* Crabtree Ledge >
* Crabtree Ledge Light history * Crabtree Ledge Light bibliography * Crabtree Ledge Light postcards* Cuckolds >
* Cuckolds Light history * Cuckolds Light bibliography * Cuckolds Light cruises * Cuckolds Light postcards* Curtis Island >
* Curtis Island Light history * Curtis Island Light photos * Curtis Island Light bibliography * Curtis Island Light cruises * Curtis Island Light postcards * Deer Island Thorofare > * Deer Island Thorofare Light history * Deer Island Thorofare Light bibliography * Deer Island Thorofare Light cruises * Deer Island Thorofare Light postcards* Dice Head >
* Dice Head Light history * Dice Head Light photos * Dice Head Light bibliography * Dice Head Light cruises * Dice Head Light postcards* Doubling Point >
* Doubling Point Light history * Doubling Point Light bibliography * Doubling Point Light cruises * Doubling Point Light postcards * Doubling Point Range > * Doubling Point Range Lights history * Doubling Point Range Lights bibliography * Doubling Point Range Lights cruises * Doubling Point Range Lights postcards* Eagle Island >
* Eagle Island Light history * Eagle Island Light photos * Eagle Island Light bibliography * Eagle Island Light cruises * Eagle Island Light postcards* Egg Rock >
* Egg Rock Light history * Egg Rock Light bibliography * Egg Rock Light cruises * Egg Rock Light postcards* Fort Point >
* Fort Point Light history * Fort Point Light bibliography * Fort Point Light cruises * Fort Point Light postcards* Franklin Island >
* Franklin Island Light history * Franklin Island Light photos * Franklin Island Light bibliography * Franklin Island Light cruises * Franklin Island Light postcards* G-L >
* Goat Island >
* Goat Island Light history * Goat Island Light bibliography * Goat Island Light cruises * Goat Island Light postcards* Goose Rocks >
* Goose Rocks Light history * Goose Rocks Light bibliography * Goose Rocks Light cruises * Goose Rocks Light postcards * Great Duck Island > * Great Duck Island Light history * Great Duck Island Light bibliography * Great Duck Island Light cruises* Grindle Point >
* Grindle Point Light history * Grindle Point Light biblography * Grindle Point Light cruises * Grindle Point Light postcards* Halfway Rock >
* Halfway Rock Light history * Halfway Rock Light bibliography * Halfway Rock Light cruises * Halfway Rock Light postcards* Hendricks Head >
* Hendricks Head Light history * Hendricks Head Light bibliography * Hendricks Head Light cruises * Hendricks Head Light postcards* Heron Neck >
* Heron Neck Light history * Heron Neck Light bibliography * Heron Neck Light cruises * Heron Neck Light postcards* Indian Island >
* Indian Island Light history * Indian Island Light bibliography * Indian Island Light cruises * Indian Island Light postcards* Isle au Haut >
* Isle au Haut Light history * Isle au Haut Light bibliography * Isle au Haut Light cruises * Isle au Haut Light postcards* Libby Island >
* Libby Island Light history * Libby Island Light bibliography * Libby Island Light cruises * Libby Island Light postcards* Little River >
* Little River Light history * Little River Light bibliography * Little River Light cruises * Little River Light postcards* Lubec Channel >
* Lubec Channel Light history * Lubec Channel Light bibliography * Lubec Channel Light cruises * Lubec Channel Light postcards* M-Pe >
* Marshall Point >
* Marshall Point Light history * Marshall Point Light bibliography * Marshall Point Light cruises * Marshall Point Light postcards* Matinicus Rock >
* Matinicus Rock Light history * Matinicus Rock Light bibliography * Matinicus Rock Light cruises * Matinicus Rock Light postcards* Monhegan >
* Monhegan Island Light history * Monhegan Island Light bibliography * Monhegan Island Light cruises * Monhegan Island Light postcards* Moose Peak >
* Moose Peak Light history * Moose Peak Light bibliography * Moose Peak Light cruises * Moose Peak Light postcards * Mount Desert Rock > * Mount Desert Rock history * Mount Desert Rock bibliography * Mount Desert Rock postcards* Narraguagus >
* Narraguagus Light history * Narraguagus Light bibliography * Narraguagus Light cruises * Narraguagus Light postcards* Nash Island >
* Nash Island Light history * Nash Island Light bibliography * Nash Island Light cruises * Nash Island Light postcards* Owls Head >
* Owls Head Light history * Owls Head Light bibliography * Owls Head Light cruises * Owls Head Light postcards* Pemaquid Point >
* Pemaquid Point Light history * Pemaquid Point Light bibliography * Pemaquid Point Light cruises * Pemaquid Point Light postcards* Perkins Island >
* Perkins Island Light history * Perkins Island Light bibliography * Perkins Island Light cruises * Perkins Island Light postcards* Petit Manan >
* Petit Manan Light history * Petit Manan Light bibliography * Petit Manan Light cruises * Petit Manan Light postcards* Po-Se >
* Pond Island >
* Pond Island Light history * Pond Island Light bibliography * Pond Island Light cruises * Pond Island Light postcards * Portland Breakwater > * Portland Breakwater Light history * Portland Breakwater Light bibliography * Portland Breakwater Light cruises * Portland Breakwater Light postcards* Portland Head >
* Portland Head Light history * Portland Head Light bibliography * Portland Head Light cruises * Portland Head Light postcards* Prospect Harbor >
* Prospect Harbor Light history * Prospect Harbor Light bibliography * Prospect Harbor Light cruises * Prospect Harbor Light postcards* Pumpkin Island >
* Pumpkin Island Light history * Pumpkin Island Light bibliography * Pumpkin Island Light cruises * Pumpkin Island Light postcards* Ram Island >
* Ram Island Light history * Ram Island Light bibliography * Ram Island Light cruises * Ram Island Light postcards * Ram Island Ledge > * Ram Island Ledge Light history * Ram Island Ledge Light bibliography * Ram Island Ledge Light cruises * Ram Island Ledge Light postcards * Rockland Breakwater > * Rockland Breakwater Light history * Rockland Breakwater Light bibliography * Rockland Breakwater Light cruises * Rockland Breakwater Light postcards * Rockland Harbor Southwest > * Rockland Harbor Southwest Light history * Rockland Harbor Southwest Light bibliography * Saddleback Ledge > * Saddleback Ledge Light history * Saddleback Ledge Light bibliography * Saddleback Ledge Light cruises * Saddleback Ledge Light postcards* Seguin >
* Seguin Light history * Seguin Light bibliography * Seguin Light cruises * Seguin Light postcards* Sp-W >
* Spring Point Ledge > * Spring Point Ledge Light history * Spring Point Ledge Light bibliography * Spring Point Ledge Light cruises * Spring Point Ledge Light postcards* Squirrel Point >
* Squirrel Point Light history * Squirrel Point Light bibliography * Squirrel Point Light cruises * Squirrel Point Light postcards* St. Croix River >
* St. Croix River Light history * St. Croix River Light bibliography * St. Croix River Light postcards* Tenants Harbor >
* Tenants Harbor Light history * Tenants Harbor Light bibliography * Tenants Harbor Light cruises * Tenants Harbor Light postcards* Two Bush Island >
* Two Bush Island Light history * Two Bush Island Light bibliography * Two Bush Island Light cruises * Two Bush Island Light postcards * West Quoddy Head > * West Quoddy Head Light history * West Quoddy Head Light bibliography * West Quoddy Head Light cruises * West Quoddy Head Light postcards* Whaleback >
* Whaleback Light history * Whaleback Light bibliography * Whaleback Light cruises * Whaleback Light postcards* Whitehead >
* Whitehead Light history * Whitehead Light bibliography * Whitehead Light cruises * Whitehead Light postcards* Whitlocks Mill >
* Whitlocks Mill Light history * Whitlocks Mill Light bibliography * Whitlocks Mill Light postcards* Winter Harbor >
* Winter Harbor Light history * Winter Harbor Light bibliography * Winter Harbor Light cruises * Winter Harbor Light postcards* Wood Island >
* Wood Island Light history * Wood Island Light bibliography * Wood Island Light cruises * Wood Island Light postcards* State Maps
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