Puneet Varma (Editor)

Northwest Passage Light

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Deactivated
  
Before 1971

ARLHS number
  
USA-557

Automated
  
1911

Material
  
Wood

Foundation
  
Iron pilings

Height
  
14 m

Construction
  
Wood

Year first lit
  
1855

Northwest Passage Light httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Westerly side of the northerly end of the northwest channel to Key West harbor

Tower shape
  
Square high-peaked house on pilings

Original lens
  
Fifth order Fresnel lens

Similar
  
Amelia Island North Ra, Charlotte Harbor Light, Dog Island Light, Volusia Bar Light, St Joseph Point Light

The Northwest Passage Light was a lighthouse located eight miles (13 km) from Key West, Florida, at the entrance to the northwest channel to the Key West harbor. The first light was a lightship put on station in 1838. It is not known if the lightship survived the Great Havana Hurricane of 1846, which destroyed the Sand Key and Key West lighthouses. The United States Lighthouse Board requested funds to replace the lightship in 1852, citing the expense of maintaining it. The lightship was repaired and funding for a replacement lighthouse was delayed until 1854. The new lighthouse was completed in 1855.

The original fifth order Fresnel lens was replaced with a fourth order lens after the Civil War. In 1879 the deteriorating wooden structure was replaced with a new structure on the original iron pilings. The light was automated with acetylene gas in 1911. The light was deactivated some time between then and 1971, when the wooden structure burned. The iron pilings remain, but are deteriorating. It is known locally as the "Hemingway house on the water", or "Hemingway Stilts", based on a legend that Ernest Hemingway used to own or, at least, fish from the structure.

References

Northwest Passage Light Wikipedia