Neha Patil (Editor)

Mile Rocks Light

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Year first lit
  
1966 (current rebuilt)

Opened
  
1906

Focal height
  
15 m

Year first constructed
  
1906 (first)

Construction
  
steel tower

Automated
  
1966

Material
  
Steel


Location
  
offshore Lands End San Francisco California United States

Foundation
  
massive reinforced concrete enclosed with steel plates basement

Tower shape
  
cylindrical tower with aerobeacon and helipad on the top (current) 3-stage cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern (first)

Markings / pattern
  
white and red horizontal bands tower (current) white tower

Similar
  
Mile Rock Beach, Lime Point Light, Point Bonita Lighthouse, Point Diablo Light, Oakland Harbor Light

Mile rocks lighthouse


Mile Rocks Lighthouse is a lighthouse on a rock about 2 miles (3.2 km) southwest of the Golden Gate Bridge, California. It's now an automated and unnatural looking lighthouse with a flat top and red (barberpole-like) painted rings that tends to stand out very obviously between the Golden Gate Bridge and the Cliff House to the south. To one side is a smaller, though clearly visible, rock.

Contents

Map of Mile Rocks Lighthouse, San Francisco, CA, USA

History

In 1889, the United States Lighthouse Service placed a bell buoy near the rocks. However, the strong currents in the area would pull the buoy beneath the surface of the water and set it adrift. The lighthouse was completed in 1906 after considerable difficulty caused by the heavy seas and strong currents occurring at this point. The rock upon which the lighthouse is built measured only 40 by 30 feet (12.2 by 9.1 m) at high water. The base of the tower is a large block of concrete protected by steel plating. Steel and concrete in the foundation alone weighed 1,500 tons. The superstructure is of steel, and houses the fog signal apparatus and the quarters for the keepers, with the lantern above.

It was on this rock that the SS City of Rio de Janeiro was wrecked shortly before the building of the lighthouse. One hundred and twenty-eight persons, of 209 aboard, lost their lives when the City of Rio de Janeiro sank on February 2, 1901.

The original third order Fresnel lens was transferred to the Old Point Loma lighthouse in San Diego. In 1966, all of the tower was removed and only the first story was left, and the light automated. The top of the first story is now a landing pad.

References

Mile Rocks Light Wikipedia