Brandywine Shoal Light

Brandywine Shoal Light

Infobox_Lighthouse


caption = Brandywine Shoals Light (USCG)
location = lower Delaware Bay
coordinates = coord|38.9864|N|75.1135|W|region:US_type:landmark
yearbuilt = 1828 (1st light)
1850 (2nd light)
1914 (3rd light)
automated = 1974
yeardeactivated =
foundation = wood piles (1st light)
screw-pile (2nd light)
cast iron/concrete caisson (3rd light)
construction = cast iron (2nd light)
reinforced concrete (3rd light)
shape = conical/cylindrical house with lantern on top (2nd and 3rd lights)
focalplane = 54 feet (2nd light)
60 feet (3rd light)
elevation =
lens = third order Fresnel lens
currentlens =
intensity =
range = 13 nm
characteristic = 10s flash
The Brandywine Shoal Light is a lighthouse on the north side of the ship channel in Delaware Bay on the east coast of the United States, west of Cape May, New Jersey. It was the site of the first screw-pile lighthouse in the United States.

History

A lightship was stationed near the shoal starting in 1823; this ship, known as Lightship "N", lasted until 1859, despite an 1838 inspection report characterizing it as being in poor repair. It remained at this station until 1850, with one interruption. In 1827 the first attempt was made to place a fixed light on the shoal. A wood pile structure, it lasted barely a year before heavy seas tore it down. An abortive project, begun in 1835, to design a light on a stone pier at the site was cancelled when the cost proved prohibitive.

The construction of the Maplin Sands Lighthouse in 1838 attracted the attention of American lighthouse designers, who saw the screw-pile technology it introduced as means both to economy of construction and to the simplification of placing foundations in soft bottoms. Major Hartman Bache, who had devised the cancelled stone pier plan, was directed to try the new technique, and assisted by Lt. George Meade he initially constructed a conical iron structure resting on nine piles. This structure was first lit in 1850. It became evident that this was not adequate to resist moving ice, and more piles were sunk in a sort of fence around the light; over the next eight years, sixty-eight piles were placed around the light, and a wooden platform was laid across them. The lighthouse proper rose out of the center of the platform as a short tower.

This light was fitted with a third-order Fresnel lens in 1851, only the third American light to receive the innovation. It was used in a test by the then-nascent Lighthouse Board in which its light was compared with those of the Cape Henlopen and Cape May lights, both fitted with the reflector schemes typical of US lights of the day. The greater brightness of Brandywine Shoals beacon, even though it was much further away from the test point than the other two, was a nail in the coffin for the reflector system, and the board quickly went about installing Fresnel lenses in all lighthouses upon assuming authority in 1852.

The light survived into the the next century, but its cramped facilities and concerns about corrosion of the piles led the Lighthouse Board to obtain an appropriation to construct a caisson light at the site. This light, completed in 1914, featured a reinforced concrete superstructure on a cast iron and concrete caisson, resting upon wooden and precast concrete piles. The superstructure of the old light was removed, but the platform remained into the 1950s, used by the Navy for various purposes. In support of this, a small artificial harbor was constructed using a partial circle of riprap; it remains in place, though the last traces of the old light have since been removed.

The Fresnel lens was moved from the old light to the new when the latter was completed, and has since been transferred to the Tuckerton Seaport museum, where it is on public display. The light was automated in 1974, by which time it was the last manned station on Delaware Bay. It continues to serve as an active aid to navigation.

References

*cite map
title=Chart 12304: Delaware Bay
url=http://www.charts.noaa.gov/OnLineViewer/12304.shtml
publisher=NOAA Office of Coast Survey
date=2008
scale=1:80,000
accessdate= 2008-07-08

*cite web
url=http://www.uscg.mil/history/weblighthouses/LHNJ.asp
title=Historic Light Station Information & Photography: New Jersey
publisher=United States Coast Guard
accessdate= 2008-07-08

*cite web
url=http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=382
title=Brandywine Shoal Lighthouse
publisher=lighthousefriends.com
accessdate=2008-07-08

*cite web
url=http://www.nps.gov/history/maritime/light/brandy.htm
title=Inventory of Historic Light Stations: New Jersey Lighthouses: Brandywine Shoal Light
publisher=National Park Service
accessdate=2008-07-08

*cite book
title= Guarding New Jersey's Shores: Lighthouses and Life-saving Stations
first=David|last=Veasey| coauthors= Dwight A. Veasey
publisher=Arcadia Publishing
date=2000
page=48
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=fU9hwG2GuC4C&pg=PA48&lpg=PA48&dq=%22brandywine+shoal+lighthouse%22&source=web&ots=kBvd6a3W_x&sig=je_PC9xSdj5chXGL9gb-vIGtCRU&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result#PPA48,M1
accessdate=2008-07-08

*cite book
title=America's Lighthouses: An Illustrated History
first= Francis Ross | last= Holland, Jr.|coauthors= Francis Ross Holland
publisher=Courier Dover Publications
date=1988
pages=99-100
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=f3Ej7zqQTM4C&pg=PA100&lpg=PA100&dq=%22brandywine+shoal+lighthouse%22&source=web&ots=voaYQmylFg&sig=HK0tY5Wa527WkYYnFyPYclRTjpY&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=8&ct=result#PPA100,M1
accessdate=2008-07-08


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Miah Maull Shoal Light — (USCG) Location lower Delaware Bay Year first constructed 1913 Automated 1974 Foundation cast iron caisson Construction cast iron …   Wikipedia

  • Ship John Shoal Light — Infobox Lighthouse caption = Ship John Shoal Light (USCG) location = upper Delaware Bay near the Bombay Hook NWR coordinates = coord|39.3053|N|75.3767|W|region:US type:landmark yearbuilt = 1877 automated = 1973 yeardeactivated = foundation =… …   Wikipedia

  • Cross Ledge Light — ca. 1910 (detail of postcard) Location middle Delaware Bay Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • East Point Light — Location Rural Cumberland County, near Heislerville, New Jersey Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Chapel Hill Rear Range Light — as it appeared in service (USCG) Location south of Leonardo, New Jersey Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Lighthouses in the United States — This United States has hundreds of lights as well as light towers, range lights, and pier head lights. Michigan has the most lights of any state with over 130. See also: Lightvessels in the United States, lightvessel, List of lighthouses and… …   Wikipedia

  • Barnegat Lighthouse — This article is about the lighthouse. For the municipality, see Barnegat Light, New Jersey. Barnegat Light Location Barnegat Light, New Jersey Year first constructed 1835 Year first lit 1857 (current tower) Automated 1927 Deactivated 1944 2009 …   Wikipedia

  • Navesink Twin Lights — The historic Twin Lights of Highlands, New Jersey Location Highlands, New Jersey Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Conover Beacon — the present tower (USCG) Location Leonardo, New Jersey Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Cape May County, New Jersey — List of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cape May County, New Jersey Contents: Counties in New Jersey   Atlantic Bergen Burlington Camden Cape May Cumberland Essex Gloucester Hudson Hunterdon Mercer Middlesex Monmouth… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”