Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Boon Island Light

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Year first lit
  
1855 (current tower)

Construction
  
Granite

Automated
  
1980

Added to NRHP
  
14 March 1988

Year first constructed
  
1811

Foundation
  
Surface rock

Opened
  
1811

Material
  
Granite

Current len
  
VRB-25

Boon Island Light

Location
  
Boon Island off York beach

Tower shape
  
Gray conical tower connected to building

Original lens
  
Second order Fresnel lens

Address
  
Boon Island, ME, United States

Similar
  
Halfway Rock Light, Saddleback Ledge Light, Ram Island Ledge Light, Wood Island Light, Browns Head Light

Boon island lighthouse


Boon Island Light is located on the 300-by-700-foot (91 m × 213 m) Boon Island off the southern coast of Maine, United States, near Cape Neddick. Boon Island Light has the distinction of being the tallest lighthouse in both Maine and New England at 133 feet (41 m). The lighthouse has a focal plane at 137 feet (42 m) above mean high water. The light's beacon flashes white every 5 seconds.

Contents

Cape neddick nubble lighthouse and boon island lighthouse 8 18 13


History

Talk of building a lighthouse on Boon Island dates back as early as 1710 when the ship Nottingham Galley ran aground on the barren outcrop that makes up the island. The crew of the Galley were forced to resort to cannibalism before being rescued. In 1799 the first day marker and the station itself were established on the island. In 1811 the station was converted to a full light station and a granite tower was constructed. The first tower along with a subsequent replacement were both washed away in storms.

The current cylindrical brown granite tower was constructed in 1855 and originally had a second order Fresnel lens installed. Boon Island Light suffered extensive damage in a blizzard in 1978. Several stones that make up the tower itself were washed into the sea as were all of the keepers dwellings and other outbuildings that had been on the island. As a result, the station was automated in 1980 and a solar powered beacon was installed by the United States Coast Guard. The station is currently active and controlled by the Coast Guard while the lighthouse itself is on lease to the American Lighthouse Foundation. The lighthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Boon Island Light Station on March 14, 1988, reference number 88000153.

Historical information from Coast Guard web site:

President James Madison authorized the building of Boon Island Lighthouse during the War of 1812. A new lighthouse tower was erected near the old tower in 1855, consisting of a gray granite conical tower, 133 feet above the water, 6.2 nautical miles (11.5 km; 7.1 mi) off the coast of Maine.

As Boon Island is a very flat piece of land, well surrounded by ledges, the tower appears at times to be springing up from the sea from a submerged ledge, especially when low clouds are flying. One of the most isolated stations off the Maine coast, it is also one of the most dangerous.

One story is told of how the keepers were once marooned on the island for several weeks because of storms and rough weather. Their food supplies were low and starvation seemed to be staring them in the face. Just at the point of desperation a boat appeared and they signaled for help. The keeper’s message in a bottle was picked up by the passing schooner which hove to and anchored until the sea went down. Then the crew packed some food in a mackerel barrel and set it afloat. It drifted right into a little cove on the island and then the sea caught it and bounced it well up on the bank, out of the way of the surf. The hunger of the keepers was appeased until they were able to go ashore and get supplies at the village of York. The lighthouse was purchased from the General Services Administration in 2014 for $78,000, by Art Girard, a resident of Portland, Maine.

Legends and lore

During the 19th century a keeper died while on the island leaving his wife alone to tend to the station. She did so until she went insane and was found wandering the island by members of a rescue ship.

Viewing

Boon Island Light is not open to the public. The only way to view the tower is by boat or aircraft.

Keepers

  • David Oliver (c. 1811)
  • Thomas Hanna (c. 1811-1816)
  • Eliphalet Grover (1816–1839)
  • Mark Dennet (1840–1841)
  • John Thompson (1841–1843)
  • Morgan Trafton (1842 assistant keeper, lost in boating accident)
  • John Kennard (1843–1846)
  • Nathaniel Baker (1849)
  • John Thompson (1846–1849)
  • Hiram Tobey (1853)
  • Caleb S. Gould (1853–1854)
  • George Bowden (1854–1855)
  • Josiah Tobey Jr. (assistant, 1855)
  • Samuel S. Tobey (assistant, 1856)
  • Christopher Littlefield (1854)
  • Sam Philbrick (1854)
  • Charles H. Tobey (assistant 1850, keeper 1856)
  • Charles E. Thompson (1858)
  • John S. Baker (assistant, 1858)
  • Nathaniel Baker (1859)
  • William L. Baker (assistant, 1859)
  • Cabin (?) Gray (1861)
  • George B. Wallace (June 1861 – 1866)
  • Benjamin Bridges (1861)
  • George E. Bridges (1864)
  • Richard C. Yeaton (1864)
  • Charles Ramsdell (assistant 1865)
  • Joshua K. Card (1867–1874)
  • George H. Yeaton (assistant 1867)
  • Samuel Meloon (assistant, 1868)
  • Nathan White Jr. (assistant 1870)
  • Alfred J. Leavitt (1874-1886?)
  • Leander White (1st assistant, 1874)
  • Edwin J. Hobbs (assistant, 1874–1876)
  • David R. Grogan (assistant, 1876, keeper 1879)
  • George O. Leavitt (assistant, 1878)
  • Walter S. Amee (Ames?) (2nd assistant, 1878)
  • John Kennard (1884)
  • William C. Williams (1st assistant 1885, then keeper 1885-1911)
  • James Burke (2nd assistant, 1886–1887, 1st assistant 1887-1890)
  • Orrin M. Lamprey (1886)
  • Meshach M. Seaward (2nd assistant, 1886–1900)
  • Leonidas H. Sawyer (2nd assistant, 1889. keeper 1889)
  • Charles W. Allen (2nd assistant, 1907–1911, first assistant 1911-?)
  • Mitchell Blackwood (c. 1911)
  • Harold Hutchins (c. 1923-1933)
  • Fred C. Batty (assistant, c. early 1930s)
  • Clinton Dalzell (assistant c. 1934)
  • George Woodward (assistant?, c. 1920s)
  • C. A. Tracy (c. 1935)
  • Hoyt P. Smith (c. 1935)
  • E. Stockbridge, assistant (c. 1935)
  • Charles U. Gardner (Coast Guard relief keeper, c, 1942–1943)
  • John H. Morris (Coast Guard, c. 1945)
  • Ted Guice (Coast Guard assistant, c. 1945)
  • Kendrick Capon (Coast Guard, c. 1950s)
  • Harold L. Roberts (Coast Guard, 1956)
  • Leonard John "Moon" Mullen (Coast Guard, c.1956)
  • Charles Allen (1st assistant, c. 1957, served 6 years)
  • Robert Brann (c. 1958)
  • Dave Wells (Coast Guard, 1966)
  • August "Gus" Pfister (Coast Guard, 1967–1968)
  • Thomas Lee (Coast Guard, 1970-1971)
  • Bob Roberts (Coast Guard, 1970s)
  • Fred Kendall (1973–1975)
  • References

    Boon Island Light Wikipedia