Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Greenbury Point Light

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Year first lit
  
1848

Construction
  
wood frame

First lit
  
1848

Deactivated
  
1891

Height
  
12 m

Material
  
Wood


Location
  
Greenbury Point at the mouth of the Severn River in Annapolis, Maryland

Tower shape
  
House with tower on roof

Original lens
  
sixth-order Fresnel lens

Similar
  
Bodkin Island Light, Great Shoals Light, Hawkins Point Light, Holland Island Bar Light, Craighill Channel Upper Ra

Greenbury Point Light was the name of two lighthouses in the Chesapeake Bay, both located at the mouth of the Severn River in Annapolis, Maryland.

Contents

Map of Greenbury Point, 3, MD 21402, USA

History

The first light on this site was constructed in 1848 and bears little resemblance to other lights in the area. Original equipped with Argand lamps and reflectors, it was upgraded in 1855 with a sixth order Fresnel lens, later replaced with a fourth order lens. By 1878 the Lighthouse Board was reporting that erosion at the point threatened the light, and that it was ill-located and too small to be seen against the lights of the town. An appropriation to replace the light was made in 1889, and in 1892 a new screw-pile lighthouse was activated. This sat on the shoal about half a mile south of the point, and was sometimes referred to as "Greenbury Point Shoal Light".

Like many such lights in the bay, the screwpile foundation proved vulnerable to ice, and in 1918 it was badly damaged. In 1934 the house was removed and a skeleton tower erected on the piles. This light is still in use.

References

Greenbury Point Light Wikipedia