Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Port Washington Breakwater Light

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Foundation
  
Concrete

Focal height
  
24 m

Year first constructed
  
1889

Opened
  
1889

Automated
  
1975

Constructions
  
Steel, Concrete

Port Washington Breakwater Light httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
End of north breakwater at entrance to Port Washington, Wisconsin harbor

Year first lit
  
1889 (first tower) 1935 (second tower)

Tower shape
  
square pyramidal tower (first) Art Deco tower on square base (second)

Similar
  
Kevich Light, Peshtigo Reef Light, Green Bay Harbor Entrance, Two Rivers Light, Plum Island Range Li

First floor port washington breakwater lighthouse


The Port Washington Breakwater Light is a modern lighthouse at the entrance to the Port Washington, Wisconsin harbor on Lake Michigan. The second tower at this location, it remains an active aid to navigation.

Contents

History

With the dredging of the harbor in the 1870s and the extension of the piers bracketing it, the need was felt for a light to guide ships into the harbor entrance, as the existing lighthouse high above the water did no more than indicate the location of the town. Accordingly, a short wooden tower was constructed at the end of the north pier, equipped with a fourth-order Fresnel lens. This light supplanted the older lighthouse in 1903, but the keepers of the newer light continued to live in the latter, as no dwelling was provided on the pier. The beacon itself was automated in 1924 but the fog signal continued in manual operation.

In 1931 funds were provided to improve the harbor under the Works Progress Administration; Construction was protracted and the new breakwaters took three years to complete. As an addendum to this project a new light was constructed, identical to that built at the same time at the Indiana Harbor East Breakwater Light and a design at several other sites in the Great Lakes. This light, constructed of steel plates in an Art Deco style, stood on an open concrete platform which in turn perched at the end of the breakwater forming the northern limit of the harbor. The fourth order lens was retained. As with its predecessor, no provision was made to house the fog signal's keepers, and they continued to live in the old keeper's dwelling in town. Funds for the light were appropriated in 1934 and first light came the following year.

Full automation came late to this light. The old lens and its lantern were removed at an undetermined date, but keepers continued to operate the fog signal manually until 1975. The light continues in use, with a second but much shorter tower standing on the southern breakwater to mark the other side of the entrance.

References

Port Washington Breakwater Light Wikipedia