Puneet Varma (Editor)

Nauset Light

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Year first constructed
  
1838

Foundation
  
Concrete

Construction started
  
1838

Phone
  
+1 508-240-2612

Automated
  
1955

Height
  
15 m

Opened
  
1838

Nauset Light

Location
  
Nauset Beach, Eastham, Massachusetts

Year first lit
  
1877 (current tower in Chatham) 1923 (current tower here)

Deactivated
  
1996-97 now a private aid

Address
  
Nauset Light Beach,, Eastham, MA 02642, United States

Similar
  
Highland Light, Race Point Light, Coast Guard Beach, Chatham Light, Nobska Light

Nauset light give you the world feat julie hardy


Nauset Light, officially Nauset Beach Light, is a lighthouse in Eastham, Massachusetts. It is a cast iron plate shell lined with brick and stands 48 feet (15 m) high.

Contents

Aerials nauset lighthouse cape cod ma 4k res


History

Nauset Light was constructed in 1877 and was originally one of two lights in Chatham. It was moved to Eastham in 1923 to replace the Three Sisters of Nauset, three small wood lighthouses that had been decommissioned. They have since been relocated to a small field about 1,000 feet (300 m) west of the Nauset Light. Nauset Light was originally all white, but in the 1940s was painted with the red section at the top, creating the iconic appearance of the lighthouse.

The light was automated and the keeper's house was sold in 1955. The original Fresnel lens removed at that time can still be seen in the Salt Pond Visitor Center of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Due to coastal erosion, by the early 1990s Nauset Light was less than 50 feet (15 m) from the edge of the 70-foot (21 m) cliff on which it stood. In 1993, the Coast Guard proposed decommissioning the light. Following a great public outcry, the non-profit Nauset Light Preservation Society was formed and funded, and in 1995, it leased the lighthouse from the Coast Guard. The organization arranged for the light to be relocated, in November 1996, to a location 336 feet (102 m) west of its original position – which by then was only 37 feet (11 m) from the cliff's edge. The move was accomplished successfully by International Chimney Corporation, which had moved the larger Highland Light a similar distance earlier that year.

In 1998, Mary Daubenspeck, who had owned the keeper's house since 1955, agreed to donate it to the National Park Service with the right to live in it for 25 years. It was agreed that the house would be moved from its original location, then only 23 feet (7.0 m) from the edge of the cliff, to a new location near the relocated tower. This was accomplished in October, 1998. At about the same time, the Coast Guard gave the tower to the National Park Service and the Nauset Light Preservation Society agreed to maintain it as a private aid to navigation. Visitors to the Cape Cod National Seashore can tour the tower during the summer months.

The lighthouse is the logo for Cape Cod Potato Chips. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987 as Nauset Beach Light.

References

Nauset Light Wikipedia