Friday, October 2, 2009

Lighthouse of the Week - Bullock's Point Light, Rhode Island


From the time the first European settlers arrived until the Civil War, the area along the east bank of the Providence River from Watchemoket down to Bullock’s Point was sparsely populated by farmers and fishermen. Bullock's Point got its name from Richard Bullock, who established a farm on the neck of land in 1666.

The point, which juts southward toward the mouth of the river, was surrounded by shoals that proved treacherous for the growing shipping traffic heading to and from Providence in the nineteenth century. After a Congressional appropriation of $1000 in 1872, a small lighted beacon was placed on a granite pier.

It was soon deemed a necessity to have a keeper living full time at Bullock’’s Point Light. An additional appropriation of $15,000 was obtained on June 23, 1874, for the building of a new combined lighthouse and dwelling. The station was finished in the early spring of 1876.

This lighthouse was unlike any other in New England—an attractive Victorian dwelling on a rectangular granite pier, with the short lighthouse tower and lantern centered on its roof. The sixth-order Fresnel lens exhibited a fixed red light.

Joseph P. Eddy was keeper from 1886 to 1892. His four children rowed to shore to attend school in the Drownville section of Barrington every day. The Eddys had many visitors, and Mrs. Eddy said she enjoyed living at the lighthouse better than living on land. The family endured a brutally cold winter in 1892, when even a steamer bound for New York City became lodged in the ice.

Captain William Thomas Tengren, who was born in Sweden, was keeper from 1901 to 1909 and again from 1918 to 1926. Tengren had gone to work on ships at the age of nine, and his travels eventually landed him in the United States.

Tengren lived at the six-room lighthouse with his wife, Charlotta, and their three children, Anton, Agnes, and Mary. The Tengrens added a deck to the lighthouse to serve as a “yard” so that the children could play outside.

Anton Tengren’s son, Thomas William Tengren, spent some time at the lighthouse with his grandparents when Anton was overseas during World War I. Years later Thomas would say, “You ain’t been cold till you’ve sat in that outhouse in January with a good stiff breeze coming in off the bay.” The outhouse, of course, hung over the river outside the lighthouse.

The next keeper was Andrew Zuius, who had been stationed at various locations including the Delaware River. On May 27, 1930, a sailboat capsized in a squall near the lighthouse, and Keeper Zuius rescued the two persons on board.

The hurricane of September 21, 1938, the greatest storm of the twentieth century in southern New England, undermined the pier beneath the lighthouse and did great damage to the building itself. Zuius survived, somehow keeping the light burning through the storm. In the morning he found that the wall facing the wind had been ripped away and the stairs had been washed out, and all his belongings were swept away.

Bullock's Point Light was discontinued shortly after the great storm and the structure was torn down a few years later.

For more, visit this page and this article.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Portland Head Light This Morning


463_6325adj, originally uploaded by nelights.

Portland Head Light was breathtaking, as always, today.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Nubble Light on a Blustery Day

I shot this video of the Cape Neddick "Nubble" Lighthouse yesterday. It was extremely windy and the seas were churned up. The Nubble is always beautiful, regardless of the conditions.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Arts & Crafts Fair for Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse on Dec. 6

Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse will be holding a Holiday Arts & Crafts Fair on Sunday, December 6, from 9 to 3, at the Casey Function Center, 1950 Lafayette Road (Route 1) in Portsmouth, NH. You're invited to take part!

Are you an artist or photographer, or do you create some kind of craft items? If you have arts/crafts items you'd like to sell, we'd love to have you as a vendor for this event. The cost for a table will be $20, and a minimum of 25% of all proceeds must be donated to Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse.

If you're an artist or photographer, we encourage you to have plenty of low-cost items like small prints and note cards. If you bring larger paintings or photographic prints, they'll need to be kept to a small number and you'll need to bring easels, etc., to display them.

If you're interested in having a table, please email nelights@gmail.com and describe what kind of merchandise you'll be selling. This event will be combined with Casey's usual Sunday flea market, which is generally very well attended during the Christmas season. We'll also be publicizing it in the local media and online.

This is a chance to help us in our mission to preserve our lighthouses, and to have fun and make some money at the same time.

We hope to hear from you soon -- space is limited!

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

More on Whaleback

You can see galleries of photos of Whaleback Lighthouse from two site visits on pages posted by architect Deane Rykerson:

Whaleback Aug. 09

Whaleback Sept. 09

Friday, September 18, 2009

Hurricane Damage at Mount Desert Rock


A few years ago, I had the pleasure of visiting Mount Desert Rock Lighthouse with some faculty and students from the College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, Maine. The light station is more than 20 miles from the nearest port on Mount Desert Island; it's nothing more than a stark pile of granite out in the ocean. When I was there, I felt like I was on another planet.

The light station was leased to the College of the Atlantic back in the late 1970s, after the light was automated and the Coast Guard removed its keepers. Under the Maine Lights Program coordinated by the Island Institute of Rockland, Mount Desert Rock Light, along with Great Duck Island Light, became the property of the College of the Atlantic in 1998. The college's Allied Whale program compiles and maintains catalogs for the North Atlantic populations of finback and humpback whales.

Mount Desert Rock suffered badly from the effects of Hurricane Bill in August 2009. The boathouse was mostly destroyed, and two walls of the generator shed were swept away. There was also water damage inside the keeper's house. This is a major setback for the College of the Atlantic's programs on the island. As Andrew Peterson, marine facilities superintendent for the college, aptly put it, "When it comes down to it, the ocean always wins."

You can read much more detail about the damage on this Facebook page.

If you would like to find out more about how you can help the whale research effort at Mount Desert Rock, please call Allied Whale at 207-288-5644.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Another Trip to Whaleback


Time is running out before the rough seas of fall and winter will make it difficult and dangerous to access Whaleback Lighthouse, located on a rocky ledge off Kittery, Maine, at the mouth of the Piscataqua River. Today, six of us visited the lighthouse -- Deane Rykerson, architect; Sara Wermiel, historic preservation consultant; John Wathne, president of Structures North Consulting Engineers, Inc.; Ivan Myjer, masonry consultant; William Marshall, board of directors member of Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse; and me, in my role as operations manager of Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse. We were taken out to the ledge by Neil Odams of Captain & Patty's Cruises of Kittery Point, and we transfered to a rubber inflatable boat to land at the ledge.

Above, paddling to the lighthouse. Photo by William Marshall.


Deane Rykerson is principal of Rykerson Architecture of Kittery Point, Maine. He has been involved in building, environment, and design for more than 30 years. With the help of the other consultants, he is heading up the Historic Structure Report of Whaleback Lighthouse that will serve as a blueprint for the restoration of the 1872 lighthouse, which is now owned by the American Lighthouse Foundation and its local chapter, Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse. With the guidance of the report, we will be prioritizing and pricing out the various aspects of restoration in the coming years.

Landing at the ledge:















A compilation of quick video clips from today's visit:

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L to R: Deane Rykerson, John Wathne, Sara Wermiel, Ivan Myjer.