Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Brenton Reef Light

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Year first lit
  
1962

Foundation
  
steel tower

Opened
  
1962

Deactivated
  
1989

Height
  
26 m

Brenton Reef Light httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb5

Location
  
Narragansett, Rhode Island, U.S.

Tower shape
  
square platform with tower at one corner

Original lens
  
Crouse Hinds DCE-36 airways beacon

Similar
  
Nayatt Point Lighthouse, Conanicut Island Light, Sabin Point Light, Poplar Point Light, Musselbed Shoals Light

The Brenton Reef Light was a Texas tower lighthouse at the entrance to Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, United States, south of Beavertail Point. Erected to replace a lightship in 1962, it was decommissioned in 1989 due to its deteriorating condition.

History

This offshore station was marked by a succession of lightships beginning in 1853, with new vessels being assigned to the station in 1856, 1897, and 1935. In the early 1960s the United States Coast Guard initiated a program to replace these lightships with large steel towers, commonly known as Texas towers. Brenton reef was selected for such replacement, but a somewhat smaller facility was constructed instead. This light was originally a manned station, with living quarters and galley, as well as engine room to supply power to the light and living quarters. It was connected to the Beavertail Light by submarine cables and maintained by Coast Guardsmen out of the Newport, Rhode Island station, and was converted to fully automatic operation during its active lifetime. At its activation in 1962, it became the second such light tower on the east coast.

These towers deteriorated relatively quickly, and in 1983 the Coast Guard first suggested decommissioning it. It was retained, however, due to the proximity of the America's Cup races. In 1989 the Coast Guard announced that the light was to be removed, and in 1992 it was dismantled. The following year the pieces were sunk off Long Island as part of an artificial reef. A lighted buoy replaced the tower at a position somewhat further south, where it remains at present.

References

Brenton Reef Light Wikipedia