Neha Patil (Editor)

Little River Light

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Location
  
Cutler, Maine

Automated
  
1974

Opened
  
1846

Focal height
  
17 m

Current len
  
VRB-25

Year first constructed
  
1846

Deactivated
  
1975-2001

Range
  
24,076 m

Added to NRHP
  
14 March 1988

Little River Light httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Year first lit
  
1876 (current structure)

Tower shape
  
Cylindrical Cast Iron Tower

Architecture firm
  
United States Army Corps of Engineers

Similar
  
Libby Island Light, Lubec Channel Light, Great Duck Island Light Station, Eagle Island Light, Moose Peak Light

Amateur radio broadcasts from little river lighthouse


Little River Light is a lighthouse on an island at the mouth of the Little River, in Cutler, Maine. A light station was first established at this site in 1846, and the present structure was built in 1876. It is one of the only iron lighthouses in the state, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Little River Light Station on March 14, 1988. The light station is now owned by the American Lighthouse Foundation, which offers overnight stays in the keeper's house, and occasional tours of the property.

Contents

Little river lighthouse


Description and history

The Little River is an east-west tidal inlet on the coast of Down East Maine, with the town of Cutler on its northern bank. At the mouth of the inlet stands Little River Island, near whose easternmost point the lighthouse stands. The station consists of a tower, keeper's house, oilhouse, and boathouse. The tower is an iron structure, with a supporting frame of steel and brick. It is 35 feet (11 m) tall, with an octagonal lantern house surrounded by a metal balcony and railing. Entrance is gained via a projecting gable-roofed vestibule. The keeper's house is an L-shaped two-story wood frame structure, with a shed-roof ell across one side. The oilhouse is a small brick gable-roofed structure set a short way inland. The boathouse, a simple wood-frame structure, is located at the western end of the island, connected to the rest of the station by a wooden boardwalk.

The light station on Little River Island was authorized in 1846, and began operation the following year. The present tower was built in 1876 by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, and the house was built in 1888, replacing an earlier stone structure. The boathouse dates to 1881, and the oilhouse was added in 1905. The light was automated in 1975. In 1980 the Fresnel lens was removed and placed in a nearby steel tower. In 2001 the tower was leased to the American Lighthouse Foundation, which restored the tower, allowing the return of the lens. The keeper's house is available through that organization for overnight stays, and it offers periodic tours of the property in the summer months.

References

Little River Light Wikipedia