Tag: Lighthouse

Picture of the Day for February 25, 2017

Today marks 175th birthday of ‘America’s Bravest Woman’.  Ida Lewis  was an American lighthouse keeper noted for her heroism in rescuing people from the sea. Her family moved to the Lime Rock Light in Rhode Island in 1857. She helped maintain the Lime Rock Light after her father became ill and eventually was the keeper after both parents died. Lewis made her first rescue in 1854 when she was 12 years old and she made her last recorded rescue when she was 63. During her 54 years on Lime Rock, she is credited with saving 18 lives  although unofficial reports suggest the number may have been as high as 25. On July 16, 1881, she was awarded the rare, and prestigious, Gold Lifesaving Medal from the United States government, for her daring rescue on February 4, 1881, of two soldiers.

In 1924 the Rhode Island legislature officially changed the name of Lime Rock to Ida Lewis Rock. The lighthouse service changed the name of the Lime Rock Lighthouse to the Ida Lewis Rock Lighthouse—the only such honor ever paid to a keeper in the United States.

The Lime Rock / Ida Lewis Lighthouse doesn’t catch your eye as a lighthouse, as the beacon is on the side of the wall and is not seen above the roof. The Eagle River Lighthouse in Michigan is another lighthouse which is often overlooked, even though the beacon is above the roof, but it blends in with other houses on the water edge.

Eagle River Lighthouse

Eagle River Lighthouse

Picture of the Day for October 28, 2016

The windy days can help dry the laundry on the lines, but it does cause waves and make a rougher ride on the water. And stormy days are why lighthouses were so important in the past as a navigation aid. The Eagle Harbor lighthouse was built in 1851 and replaced with the present red brick structure in 1871. A fog signal was added in 1895 to the lighthouse complex.

Eagle Harbor Lighthouse

Eagle Harbor Lighthouse

Picture of the Day for January 17, 2016

On a very cold morning, the newly painted Marquette Harbor Light would stand out against the white snow. But with temperatures near -20 and -40 wind chills, I don’t venture out to the lighthouses in the winter time for a picture.

This lighthouse was constructed in 1866, after replacing the original light built in 1853, and a second story added in 1909. Until the opening of the major Minnesota mines in the 1890s, Marquette, Michigan, was the premier shipping port for iron ore on the Great Lakes and the lighthouse in the harbor was critical for the safe navigation.

Marquette Harbor Light

Marquette Harbor Light

Picture of the Day for December 27, 2015

With a winter storm approaching tomorrow and gusty winds, the beacon light may not cut through the blowing snow. The Lake Mighigan thirty-five foot Manistique East Breakwater Light was lit on August 17, 1916. Settlers arrived in 1852 and settled on the Monistique River (name came from the Native American word Onamanitikong meaning “vermilion” as the water had a reddish hue). When the name was registered with the state, an “a” was used instead of an “o” and the town and river became Manistique. As the century progressed, Manistique’s importance as a port waned and the light was automated in 1969. In 2013, the lighthouse was bought by a private individual.

Manistique East Breakwater Light 

Manistique East Breakwater Light

Picture of the Day for November 9, 2015

The freighter, SS Edmund Fitzgerald, left the port of Superior, Wisconsin at 2:15 pm on the afternoon of November 9, 1975 with a cargo of 26,116 of taconite ore pellets headed for towards Detroit, Michigan. The freighter sank the next day, with the loss of the entire crew, during a Lake Superior storm when she was about 15 miles from reaching the Whitefish Point Light.

Didn’t Reach Whitefish Point

Didn't Reach Whitefish Point

Picture of the Day for October 31, 2015

Today I saw little kids (and adults) dressed up in costumes for Halloween when you might see the spooks, ghosts and goblins. One might find a ghost haunting a lighthouse like at Seul Choix Point Lighthouse which is said to be haunted by a former keeper Captain Joseph Willy Townshend (1902 to 1910) who died in the upstairs bedroom. Joseph was a cigar smoker in life, but his wife refused to let him smoke in the house. Now cigar smoke is often smelled in the house, as well as other strange happenings, including moving silverware, rocking chairs moving on their own, pictures with hazy figures, images in windows, footsteps, and the sound of someone climbing the lighthouse steps.

The Gulliver History Society, which maintains this lighthouse, has kept detailed records of each ghostly occurrence at the lighthouse recorded in a logbook which has more than 300 entries thus far. It is believed that in addition to the ghost of Townshend , there are three other spirits, including young girls.

So while visiting the keeper’s house of the Seul Choix Point Lighthouse, take an extra peek at the mirrors and windows and see if you spot a spirit.

Seul Choix Point Keeper’s House

Seul Choix Point Keeper's House

Picture of the Day for October 30, 2015

A lighthouse might provide the light that the missing sun hasn’t on another cloudy day. First lit in 1849, Whitefish Point Light was one of the first lighthouses on the shores of Lake Superior and is currently the oldest active light on the lake. It is arguably the most important light on Lake Superior. All vessels entering and leaving Lake Superior must pass the light. It stands on the treacherous southern shoreline of Lake Superior known as the “Graveyard of the Great Lakes” in an area with more shipwrecks than any other area of the lake. It is the closest lighthouse to the wreck site of the Edmund Fitzgerald. The view from the top of the 76 foot tower was spectacular even on a cloudy day.

Whitefish Point Light

Whitefish Point Light