The current
lighthouse is the fourth tower at this station, though neither of the its first
two predecessors were lit. The first tower was built at the direction of James
Oglethorpe and was constructed of wood; erected in 1736, it was felled by a
storm in 1741.
The Tybee
Island Lighthouse is one of America's most intact having all of its historic
support buildings on its five-acre site. Rebuilt several times the current
lightstation displays its 1916 day mark with 178 stairs and a First Order
Fresnel lens (nine feet tall).
In 1933 the
tower was electrified. The beacon was automated in 1972.
In 1999 a
major restoration project was begun. As part of this project the tower was
repainted in the 1916-1966 black-white-black daymark. The beacon is still a
functioning navigational aid, still using its original lens.
This
postcard came from Margie (17 September 2014) Swap-bot.
No comments:
Post a Comment