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Stonington Light


This lighthouse was built in 1840 using the materials from the 1824 original lighthouse that was on this spot. It is a 35 ft octagonal granite tower with lantern and gallery, attached church-style to a 1-1/2 story granite keeper's house. The lantern is painted gray. This is the oldest lighthouse in the country with a light tower attached in the "church" or "schoolhouse" style.

The building is notable among lighthouses of its period for its fanciful stonework, with ornamental cornices around the tower and weighty granite lintels above doorways and windows. When it was built in 1840 it had a nearly flat roof with simulated battlements, but it leaked so badly that two years later local craftsmen were called in to install the gabled roof it has today.


It was deactivated in 1889 when it was supplanted by beacons on the harbor breakwaters.
Through the window


Through the window

After deactivation, it remained in service as the keeper's house for the Stonington Breakwater Light until 1908, when a new keeper's house was built next door.
House/museum

House/museum

The lighthouse was purchased by the local historical society in 1925 and renovated. When it opened in 1927, it was the first lighthouse museum in the nation. Visitors may climb the 29 circular steps and a short ladder to reach the top of the tower,
Stairs


Stairs


which looks over three states
Lighthouse room with people

Lighthouse room with people

We didn't climb up to the top of the tower.
 
This lighthouse looked so new that I thought it must be a replica, and did not take but two pictures of it. It IS a fairly new lighthouse and was only active as a navigational aid from 1944 to 1967), and it never had a resident keeper.
Avery Point Lighthouse

Avery Point Lighthouse


Avery Point Lighthouse was the last to be built in Connecticut. It was finished in 1943, during World War II, and was not lighted right away due to concerns about possible enemy invasions by sea. It finally went into service on May 2, 1944. The unusual lighting consisted of eight 200-watt bulbs showing a fixed white light at 55 feet above sea level. Later on the light was changed to flashing green. The unique design has made it a favorite among lighthouse aficionados. The lighthouse is located on shore at Avery Point, at the east side of the Thames River entrance in Groton, Connecticut. Avery Point was originally named for an early settler to the area named Captain James Avery. The 73-acre site served as the estate of Morton F. Plant. Plant died in 1918, and in 1942 the land was sold to the state of Connecticut, which in turn handed it over to the Coast Guard. From 1942 to 1967 it was the site of the United States Coast Guard Training Center.


In 1969, the land was returned to the state of Connecticut at no cost, and it became part of the University of Connecticut at Avery Point campus.
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Given the designation of Building #41 by the university, the former lighthouse building has been used as a physics laboratory and an air sampling station.

By the late 1990s, the condition of the tower had deteriorated to the point where it was considered unsafe. The tower’s concrete blocks were found to be crumbling, the result of high sand content. The APLS was formed to save the Avery Point light, and the concrete blocks were the first things to be replaced. The original lantern was lifted by crane and transported to the West Mystic Wooden Boat Building Company, which is owned by a former lighthouse keeper and a current English professor at the University of Connecticut. The company graciously donated its time and materials for the restoration project. The old wooden lantern was used as a template for the construction of the new replica lantern, which was lowered into place on September 30, 2005 as about fifty cheering spectators looked on.
 
discovered that I could see four lighthouses from this location. Not only could we see the Avery Point Lighthouse, but the New London Harbor or Pequot Lighthouse was across the river, and the New London Ledge lighthouse was outside the harbor. Way in the distance I identified the Race Rock Lighthouse.
Race Rock Lighthouse - NY - 8 miles across sound


Race Rock Lighthouse - NY - 8 miles across sound

The original 1760 New London Harbor Lighthouse was the fourth lighthouse to be built in America. It is about 3.5 miles from downtown. When I read the description of how to get there, I did not think I could or would visit this lighthouse. Lighthouse Friends page says

"The keeper's residence is privately owned, and the grounds are not open to the public. In fact, during our visit, there was a "No Trespassing and No Photographs Sign" at the entrance to the property. I'm not sure how they can prohibit photographs..."
So I thought I might as well take photos from here where they couldn't forbid me.
Pequot Avenue Lighthouse


Pequot Avenue Lighthouse


New London Harbor Lighthouse is Connecticut’s oldest and tallest lighthouse and provides an interesting architectural counterpoint to its much newer and flashier neighbor, the New London Ledge Lighthouse. It’s also a reminder of the glory days early in the country’s history when New London was the third busiest whaling port, behind New Bedford and Nantucket. The busy port also attracted several immigrants, leading to the beach area near where the lighthouse stands being used as quarantine ground in the 1750’s for recent arrivals to the New World infected with smallpox, a recurring problem at the time.
 
New London Harbor Lighthouse is Connecticut’s oldest and tallest lighthouse and provides an interesting architectural counterpoint to its much newer and flashier neighbor, the New London Ledge Lighthouse. It’s also a reminder of the glory days early in the country’s history when New London was the third busiest whaling port, behind New Bedford and Nantucket. The busy port also attracted several immigrants, leading to the beach area near where the lighthouse stands being used as quarantine ground in the 1750’s for recent arrivals to the New World infected with smallpox, a recurring problem at the time.


In 1760, the colonial legislature of Connecticut passed an act creating a committee to pursue the funding, construction, and staffing of a new lighthouse for the harbor entrance at New London. The following year, thousands of lottery tickets were sold to pay for the lighthouse (a popular method of raising funds for construction projects in those days). The lighthouse, a 64-foot stone tower with a wooden lantern at the top, was finished that same year at the west side of the harbor entrance. It was the first lighthouse in the harbor and only the fourth to be built in the American colonies.
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Pequot Avenue Lighthouse


Pequot Avenue Lighthouse


By 1800, the New London Lighthouse had a crack extending ten feet down from the lantern. In addition, the light was so dim as to often be indistinguishable from the lights of the surrounding homes, and from the west the beacon was completely obscured by a point of land. Congress allocated funds for a replacement light, and in 1800 a New Londoner by the name of Abisha Woodward began construction on the current octagonal, tapered 80-foot tower. Sitting on a foundation of a mixture of granite, brownstone, and native stone, the tower was built of freestone, hammered smooth and laid in courses. The walls were nine inches thick and lined with brick inside. A wooden spiral staircase led up to the lantern room. Since construction of the tower, various renovations have been affected such as installing a new lantern with a copper dome, repainting the exterior walls with hydraulic cement and whitewash, and replacing the interior stairway.


When the new station opened in 1801, its flashing light was produced by oil lamps and an eclipser. This apparatus was replaced in 1834 by eleven lamps with 14-inch reflectors. Finally, a fourth-order Fresnel lens, which remains in the lighthouse today, was installed in the late 1850s. The first keeper’s house deteriorated quickly and was replaced in 1818. The current gable-roofed, 2 ½ story keeper’s residence was built in 1863.
New London Harbor Lighthouse or Pequot Lighthouse


New London Harbor Lighthouse or Pequot Lighthouse


During the War of 1812, the New London Harbor Lighthouse was extinguished. The British did not attack the station during the conflict, as it was guarded by colonial troops, but instead invaded the undefended Little Gull Island Light, taking all of its lamps and reflectors.


New London was not the first town where landlubbers found themselves at odds with the maritime community. In 1904, the thorn in the town residents’ side was the fog siren newly installed in the New London Harbor Lighthouse. The sizable number of seasonal summer residents was especially dismayed after arriving for their annual period of rest and recuperation from big-city stresses only to have the new fog signal prevent any possibility of a good night’s sleep. While city residents complained about the “horrible groaning and shrieking,” local ship captains found the sound of the long-requested signal to be sweet music to their ears indeed when attempting to navigate the harbor through a typical pea-soup fog. The problem was finally resolved in 1906 when a Daboll trumpet replaced the maligned fog siren. The whole issue became moot in 1911 when the New London Ledge Lighthouse was activated, and the Harbor light’s fog signal was turned off for good.
 
New London Ledge Lighthouse was built in 1909 in a unique French Second Empire style which was meant to blend with the houses on shore. with its square red brick quarters topped with a mansard roof and a circular lantern room, is one of the most striking and unusual-looking lighthouses in the United States. Local residents reportedly did not want to gaze out to sea at a structure that would be out of place among their large and historic homes; hence the Colonial and French architectural influences found in the lighthouse.
New London Ledge Lighthouse

ailing past New London Ledge Lighthouse

New London Ledge lighthouse

New London Ledge lighthouse

To provide the foundation for the New London Ledge Lighthouse, a timber crib made of southern yellow pine and held together with nine tons of iron and steel, was first constructed on shore at Groton. Four tugboats towed the crib to Southwest Ledge, a short journey that took eight hours, and the wooden crib was then filled with concrete, gravel, and riprap and sunk into place in 28 feet of water. A concrete pier, rising 18 feet above low water, was constructed on top of the crib foundation, and the lighthouse, 52 square feet and 34 feet high, was constructed of brick on top of the pier.
New London Ledge Lighthouse


New London Ledge Lighthouse


Every thirty seconds, the station’s fourth-order Fresnel lens, crafted in Paris by Henry Lepaute, repeated the distinctive signature of three white flashes followed by one red flash.
New London Ledge Lighthouse
 
I took photos of the Sleepy Hollow lighthouse from the Tappen Zee bridge.


Tarrytown or Kingsland Point, or Sleepy Hollow Lighthouse was built in 1883 - prefabricated by the G.W. & F. Smith Iron Co. of Boston. It is a round spark-plug tower with lantern and double gallery, including 4-story round keeper's quarters, mounted on cast iron caisson. Tower painted white, lantern black, caisson red. The light is 54 feet above the river with a white flash every 3 seconds.
Sleepy Hollow Light


Sleepy Hollow Light


Originally the lighthouse was a half mile from the east shore of the river but landfill in connection with a now-demolished General Electric plant brought the shoreline within a few feet of the lighthouse.
From the Tappen Zee bridge

From the Tappen Zee bridge


Sleepy Hollow Lighthouse (my preferred name) was inactive from 1961 to 2013, so my photos are of the inactive lighthouse. The lighthouse has been owned by Westchester County since 1974. The interior has been restored and furnished. A replica 4th order Fresnel lens was installed in 2015.
 
Lighthouses are one of my favorite things, and I was able to photograph one when I was at the Cliffs of Mohr. I believe that this one was Inisheer lighthouse
Inisheer lighthouse


which is actually one of the Aran Islands Lighthouses.

The Aran Islands are located in the mouth of Galway Bay. This lighthouse was built originally in 1857 and is active. A red light is shown over rocks to the east. It consists of a 112 ft round white masonry tower with lantern and gallery, with a single broad horizontal black band. There are two keeper's houses enclosed by a stone wall. Inisheer is accessible by passenger ferry from Doolin, and the lighthouse is accessible by hiking trail. It is located on the southeastern point of the island.
 
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