Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Tater Du Lighthouse

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Construction
  
concrete block tower

Height
  
15 m

Range
  
37,040 m

Automated
  
1965

Intensity
  
96,000 candela

Opened
  
July 1965

Focal height
  
34 m

Year first constructed
  
1965

Tater Du Lighthouse

Location
  
PenzanceCornwallEngland

Tower shape
  
cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern

Markings / pattern
  
white tower and lantern

Current lens
  
4th Order 250Mm Rotating Catadioptric Optic

Address
  
Penwith Heritage Coast, St Buryan, Penzance TR19 6BH, UK

Similar
  
Wolf Rock - Cornwall, Round Island Light - Isle, Hilbre Island Lighthouse, Lynmouth Foreland Lighthouse, Peninnis Lighthouse

Tater du lighthouse


Tater Du Lighthouse is Cornwall's most recently built lighthouse. The construction of the lighthouse came out of the tragedy of losing a small Spanish coaster called the Juan Ferrer on the 23rd of October 1963, on the nearby Boscawen Point, the vessel capsized with the loss of 11 lives. After the tragedy the Newlyn and Mousehole Fishermen's Association put pressure on Trinity House for a lighthouse to be built, stating that similar tragedies could happen again.

Contents

Duke of gloucester opens tater du lighthouse 1965


History

Designed by Michael H. Crisp, the lighthouse was constructed with a completely automatic installation which is remotely controlled from the Trinity House depot in Penzance. The lighthouse, built with concrete blocks, was completed by July 1965.

The short building houses a 7-foot 1 inch lantern with an electric light which is powered from batteries which are charged from mains electricity during the day. The light is 3 white lights flashed every 15 seconds, with a range of 23 miles. There is a separate red fixed light that shows in the line over the Runnelstone Rock. The fog signal was originally a series (72 in total) of Tannoy units built into the lighthouse tower. This was replaced by a short-range Pharos Marine Omnidirectional electric emitter sounding the same characteristic of two one second blasts every 30 seconds during fog.

This lighthouse looks out over the Inner and Outer Bucks, two rocks that partially show at low water, and where in 1868 the SS Garonne was lost. They form a popular sub-aqua dive site. The nearest point for launching a dive-boat is Penzance, as Lamorna Cove just around the corner from The Bucks, does not allow launching from there.

The coastal slope and cliffs around the lighthouse are designated the Tater–du SSSI (a Site of Special Scientific Interest) notified in 1992 because ″... it provides unique evidence of the geological history of SW England during the Variscan orogeny, in particular because of the occurrence of pillow lavas.″ The cliffs are also a Geological Conservation Review site.

References

Tater Du Lighthouse Wikipedia


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