Neha Patil (Editor)

Cape Bonavista Light

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Year first lit
  
1966 (current)

Focal height
  
51 m

Phone
  
+1 709-468-7747

Deactivated
  
1966 (first)

Province
  
Newfoundland and Labrador

Year first constructed
  
1843

Cape Bonavista Light

Location
  
Bonavista Peninsula Newfoundland Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

Construction
  
limestone tower (first) steel skeletal tower (current)

Tower shape
  
cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern on the roof of a two story wooden keeper’s house (first) square pyramidal tower (current)

Markings / pattern
  
tower and lantern with vertical red and white stripes (first)

Address
  
505 Cape Shore Rd, Bonavista, NL A0C 1B0, Canada

Similar
  
Ryan Premises, Newfoundland Mockbeggar Plantation, Matthew Legacy, Bonavista Lighthouse, Skerwink Trail

Cape bonavista lighthouse newfoundland


Cape Bonavista Light is a lighthouse located on Cape Bonavista, Newfoundland. The lighthouse, which operated from 1843 until 1962, is now a provincial museum, containing an exhibition about life in a lighthouse during the 1870s.

Contents

Cape bonavista lighthouse newfoundland may 16 2015


HistoryEdit

The lighthouse at Cape Bonavista was built between 1841 and 1843 to mark the entrances to Bonavista and Trinity bays and to aid mariners headed for Labrador. It is the fourth-oldest lighthouse in Newfoundland. The two-story wooden building is constructed around a masonry tower surmounted by a lantern.

The first lamps and reflectors came from the Bell Rock Lighthouse in Scotland. This apparatus was later replaced by a catoptric system from the Isle of May in Scotland, first installed in Newfoundland in 1850 by Robert Oke at the Cape Pine lighthouse, later moved to the Harbour Grace Island lighthouse, and finally to Cape Bonavista. Both the historic light mechanisms that ended up at Cape Bonavista, the one from the Bell Rock and the one from Isle of May were installed by Robert Oke, who served as the first Chief Inspector of the Newfoundland Lighthouse Service. In 1962 the lighthouse went dark, replaced by an electric light on a nearby steel skeleton tower.

In the 1970s the lighthouse was restored for use as a museum by the provincial government. The building contains furniture and artifacts representing the pre-1870 period. The rare catoptrics lighting system, made up of Argand oil lamps and parabolic mirrors of polished silver, is on display. Exhibits on local industry include coopering, fishing, whaling and sealing, as well as the ecological history of Cape Bonavista.

On August 3, 2001 a disastrous electrical storm struck Cape Bonavista. As lightning struck repeatedly all around the cape, the lighthouse tower was hit three times, igniting a fire. Quick action by the fire department prevented more severe damage.

References

Cape Bonavista Light Wikipedia