Trisha Shetty (Editor)

St. Mary's Lighthouse

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Deactivated
  
1984

Range
  
17 nmi (31 km; 20 mi)

Opened
  
1898

Phone
  
+44 191 200 8650

Construction
  
brick tower

Height
  
46 m

Automated
  
1982

Year first constructed
  
1898

St. Mary's Lighthouse

Location
  
St Mary's Island Tyne and Wear England

Tower shape
  
tapered cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern

Markings / pattern
  
white tower and lantern

Address
  
St Mary's Island Causeway, Whitley Bay NE26 4RS, UK

Similar
  
Tynemouth Castle and Priory, Wet N Wild, Weetslade Country Park, Segedunum, Seaton Delaval Hall

St mary s lighthouse whitley bay


St. Mary's Lighthouse is on the tiny St Mary's (or Bait) Island, just north of Whitley Bay on the coast of North East England. The small rocky tidal island is linked to the mainland by a short concrete causeway which is submerged at high tide.

Contents

History

The lighthouse and adjacent keepers' cottages were built in 1898 by the John Miller company of Tynemouth, using 645 blocks of stone and 750,000 bricks. It was built on the site of an 11th-century monastic chapel, whose monks maintained a lantern on the tower to warn passing ships of the danger of the rocks. The lamp was powered by paraffin, and was not electrified until 1977, St Mary's was by then the last Trinity House lighthouse lit by oil.

Decommissioning

The lighthouse was decommissioned in 1984 (just two years after its conversion to automatic operation). At the time, its fine first-order fresnel lens was removed by Trinity House and put on display in their museum in Penzance. A few years later, St Mary's was opened as a visitor attraction by the local council. In place of the original, Trinity House offered a smaller optic from their decommissioned lighthouse at Withernsea, and this can still be seen at the top of the tower. Following closure of the Penzance lighthouse museum, the original lens was returned to St Mary's in 2011 to be put on display.

The lighthouse today

Since 2012 St Mary's lighthouse has been grade II listed. While it no longer functions as a working lighthouse, it is easily accessible (when the tide is out) and regularly open to visitors; in addition to the lighthouse itself there is a small museum, a visitor's centre, and a cafe.

Another Victorian lighthouse may be found a few miles to the south of the River Tyne. Souter Lighthouse is also now decommissioned, and open to visitors. Souter Lighthouse can be seen with the naked eye from the top of St Mary's Lighthouse.

References

St. Mary's Lighthouse Wikipedia


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